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The APE‐INV Project: An Introduction Francesco Lissoni DIMI-Univ. of Brescia & KITES-Bocconi Univ., Milan APE-INV workshop “Disambiguation of inventors' names and addresses from patent data” -- DISCo - Università Milano Bicocca, May 30 2011
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Outline 1. What is academic patenting? Why are we interested? 2. Importance of inventors’ name disambiguation 3. APE-INV’s contribution to name disambiguation 4. APE-INV’s contribution to creation of an Academic Patent Database
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1. What is academic patenting? Academic patent = Patent signed by (at least one) academic scientist University may/may not own the patent: - business companies - public research organizations & funding agencies likely owners - individual scientists Key indicator for: - technology transfer activity - university-industry ties (collaboration, consultancy) - academic entrepreneurship - markets for technologies
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1. What is academic patenting? (cont.) University-invented vs. university-owned… …it reflects institutional peculiarities of European countries: - professor’s privilege (Germany, Austria, Scandinavia…) - universities’ lack of managerial autonomy / expertise - high status (lack of control) of academic profession … it has been the key for a recent & successful research programme Survey in: Foray D., Lissoni F. (2011), “University research and public-private interaction”, in: Rosenberg N., Hall B. (eds.), Handbook of Economics of Technical Change, North Holland/Elsevier
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1. Scientists in European universities produce many patents… … Relative to all domestic patents … Especially in science-based technologies 2. Most academic patents in Europe are owned by companies 3. Relative importance of other owners (universities, PROs, individuals..) depends upon: - role of PROs vs universities in the national science system - existence/abolition of the professor’s privilege - degree of autonomy of universities - technology (more university-ownership in life sciences) Key findings so far 1. What is academic patenting? (cont.)
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2. How to identify academic patents: the importance of disambiguation TWO-STEP procedure: 1. Reclassification of patents by inventor 2. Name+matching between inventors and academic scientists Additional STEP: 3. Survey work (homonimity & employment check; ad hoc questions) Collect matched professors-inventors’ emails Submit matched patents and ask: 1. Confirmation of inventorship 2. Confirmation of academic status at the time of invention
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2. THE KEINS DATABASE INVENTOR-PROFESSOR MATCHING EXERCISE
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All EPO patent applications (from EPO-Bulletin, then PatStat) Standardisation of company names/addresses/parent co. Company-level data (~140k organizations) Standardisation of inventors’ names /addresses + Massacrator © routine Inventor-level data set Publicaton number, priority date, IPC class, citations etc. An example: the EP-KITES database
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2. …disambiguation (cont.) further applications Geography of innovation Social network analysis of invention Breschi S., Lissoni F. (2009) “Mobility of skilled workers and co-invention networks: an anatomy of localized knowledge flows”, Journal of Economic Geography 9: 439 - 468 Patent-Publication studies Lissoni F., Montobbio F. (2008)“Inventorship and Authorship as Attribution Rights: An Enquiry in the Economics of Scientific Credit”, CESPRI Working Paper 224, Università “L.Bocconi”, Milano
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2. …disambiguation (cont.) Shortcomings of research so far 1.Duplication of disambiguation efforts, and no coordination Trajtenberg M., Shiff G., Melamed R. (2006), “The “Names Game”: Harnessing Inventors’ Patent Data for Economic Research”, NBER Working Paper 12479, National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge MA 2. Lack of quality controls of disambiguation exercise little/no use of benchmarking very different results for both academic patenting and other applications, depending on the algorithms used Raffo J., Lhuillery S. (2009), “How to play the “Names Game”: Patent retrieval comparing different heuristics”, Research Policy 38(10), pp. 1617‐1627
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3. THE APE-INV PROJECT Main Objectives 1.Creation of a common inventor database (EPO! USPTO? JPO?) 2.Production of a Database on Academic Patenting in Europe (APE-INV Database) 3.Editing joint publications using the APE-INV Database Subsidiary Objectives 1.Designing a method to allow users to correct data 2.Cooperating with established institutions in the field of patent data
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1.Creation of a common inventor database NameGame workshops: next in Brussels, September 5-6 2011 http://www.esf-ape-inv.eu/index.php?page=10 Benchmark database: available from APE-INV website ( http://www.esf-ape-inv.eu/download/Benchmark_document.pdf) http://www.esf-ape-inv.eu/download/Benchmark_document.pdf Expected deliverable: November 15, 2011 PatStat conference in Washington DC KEY DATA SOURCE: “Worldwide Patent Statistical Database” (PATSTAT), 2 issues per year PERSON_ID as the key variable for identification of inventors (see benchmark documentation) October 2009 edition as chosen starting material
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2.Production of a Database on Academic Patenting in Europe All parties interested contribute by producing so-called PROFLISTs (list of academics from ministerial records, university administrative records, publication data...) APE-INV offers: - patent data - matching methodology and expertise -Google-group ( https://groups.google.com/group/Ape_Inv?hl=it ) https://groups.google.com/group/Ape_Inv?hl=it Guidelines for database structure and intellectual property soon to be published on APE-INV website
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3. Editing joint publications using the APE-INV Database Soon to appear: call for papers, special issue of Industry and Innovation (expected publication: April 2013) Ongoing negotiations: World Patent Information, for methodological papers
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Subs- 1. Designing a method to allow users to correct data Draft document: http://www.francescolissoni.com/prova_ g00002b.pdf http://www.francescolissoni.com/prova_ g00002b.pdf
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Subs 2. Cooperating with established institutions EPO (PatStat producer) Accessibility of APE-INV database via PatStat forums and conferences Project for a permanent PERSON_ID? USPTO Invitation to “ USPTO-NSF Patent Data Workshop”, June 17 Pre-conference event at PatStat conference, November 15 (both in Washington DC)
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GRANTS : 1 or 2 calls a year, open to both social and computer scientists
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