1 research outputs found
Technological novelty profile and invention's future impact
We consider inventions as novel combinations of existing technological
capabilities. Patent data allow us to explicitly identify such combinatorial
processes in invention activities. Unconsidered in the previous research, not
every new combination is novel to the same extent. Some combinations are
naturally anticipated based on patent activities in the past or mere random
choices, and some appear to deviate exceptionally from existing invention
pathways. We calculate a relative likelihood that each pair of classification
codes is put together at random, and a deviation from the empirical observation
so as to assess the overall novelty (or conventionality) that the patent brings
forth at each year. An invention is considered as unconventional if a pair of
codes therein is unlikely to be used together given the statistics in the past.
Temporal evolution of the distribution indicates that the patenting activities
become more conventional with occasional cross-over combinations. Our analyses
show that patents introducing novelty on top of the conventional units would
receive higher citations, and hence have higher impact.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figure