Title :
Why patents have lower citation on non-patent references?: A case study from Taiwan
Author :
Ya-Lan Chin ; Feng-Shang Wu ; Tien-Chi Lin ; Bou-Wen Lin ; Te-Yi Chan
Author_Institution :
Grad. Inst. of Technol. & Innovation Manage., Nat. Chengchi Univ., Taipei, Taiwan
fDate :
July 29 2012-Aug. 2 2012
Abstract :
In the recent years, we have witnessed the increasing on importance of researches in patent analysis, especially in non-patent references (NPRS), as patents become the key intangible assets of enterprises. While many people want to know the degree of linkage between the science and technology through the analysis of NPRS, some of the scholars did show that the number of NPR citations is positively correlated with the degree of science linkage. Other related studies also investigate the issue mainly by looking at the process of how science is transformed into technology. Nevertheless, there remain a lot of questions, such as how the characteristics of technologies in patent and the types of patent affect the number of NPRs, which are still unknown to both academia and industrial practitioners.
Keywords :
educational institutions; government policies; patents; NPR citations; Taiwan; USPTO; academia practitioners; biotechnology; degree of science linkage; electronics; enterprises; government IPO; government policy makers; high-technology companies; industrial practitioners; intellectual property office; key intangible assets; law firms; nonpatent references; patent; research institutes; universities; Databases; Educational institutions; Industries; Interviews; Patents; Technological innovation;
Conference_Titel :
Technology Management for Emerging Technologies (PICMET), 2012 Proceedings of PICMET '12:
Conference_Location :
Vancouver, BC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2853-1