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Knowledge markets or knowledge spillovers in Canadian Human Health Biotechnology Johanne Queenton UQAM, Canada Research Chair in MOT ISRN 6 th Annual Meeting, Vancouver May 15, 2004
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Plan of the presentation Introduction Research Some results Discussion Conclusion
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Knowledge economy Access to relations with strong intensity of knowledge (Foray, 2000) = Competitive advantage Innovation sources : Interactions between firm scientists, universities and public institutions (Powell, 1996). Key feature: Interdependence in the development of technological innovations
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Knowledge Spillovers Study of two forms: 1. Knowledge production function – codified forms of knowledge 2. Movement of people: Interactions are more geographically delimited when a bioscientist is really involved in the creation of a SBFs (Audretsch & Stephan, 1996)
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Localised Knowledge Spillovers « Knowledge spillovers geographically delimited allowing near important knowledge sources to introduce more rapidly innovations than firms located elsewhere » (Breschi & Lissoni, 2001).
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Knowledge spillovers vs knowledge markets « Pure knowledge externalities do not applied in biotechnology, it is more and more market and non-market transactions » (Zucker et al., 1998). « More and more contractual and proprietary links in competitive markets » (Zucker et al., 1998)
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4 observations Geographical proximity researchers networks/SBFs + Knowledge markets, - pure knowledge spillovers Interest for knowledge transfer role of « Star Scientists » Study of their SBFs relations not very elaborated
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Two questions Types of relationships between bioscientists and SBFs Geographical proximity of bioscientists and SBFs
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Research Determination of the nature of innovation activities in Canadian biotechnology agglomerations – Specific types of links of bioscientists with SBFs 430 Canadian researchers (inventors, co-inventors & authors, co-authors of scientific publications and discoveries of genetic sequences) - 2 typologies 151 Canadian SBFs having patents and patent citations
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Data Collection 1. Canadian SBFs assignees patents (USPTO, CIPO, EPO) inventory and identification of inventors and co-inventors 2. Inventors and co-inventors affiliation (SBFs, PRIs, or universities) 3. Genetic sequences discoveries inventory (1990-2002, GenBank) 4. Bio-scientists publications enumeration (SCI, MedLine, Derwent Biotechnology Abstracts)
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Data Collection Database on Canadian SBFs in human health: Sampling with assignees patents Goal: Relate knowledge flows within innovation systems and biotechnology clusters Sources: Canadian Biotech. Directory 2001,2002, B2B Industry Guide - Contact Canada, Canadian Biotech. Firms Annual Reports, SBFs Web Sites, Strategis – Industry Canada, Statistics Canada
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2 typologies of researchers in Biotechnology Star Scientist Model N (Researchers with genetic sequences, patents & scientific publications ) Bioscientists Model N (Researchers with patents and scientific publications) Superstars 25 Stars 26 Collaborators type A 156 Collaborators type B 223 Total 430 Bio-Superstars 72 Bio-Stars 181 Bio-Collabo. Type A 90 Bio-Collabo. Type B 87 Total 430
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Number of researchers by category Star Scientist Model NBio-Scientists Model N Superstars 25 Stars 26 Collaborators type A 156 Collaborators type B 223 Total 430 Bio-Superstars 72 Bio-Stars 181 Bio-Collaborators Type A 90 Bio-Collaborators Type B 87 Total 430
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Links of bio-scientists with Canadian SBFs 3 types of involved researchers in economic development of biotechnology: Scientist with a simple affiliation to a SBFs (member of the board); Connected scientist: Linked to a SBF by invention or co-invention of a patent ; Scientist with double affiliations: affiliated to a SBF and to a university or a PRI
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Distribution of the studied population of Canadian SBFs by CMAs in 2002
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Distribution of the studied population of Canadian bioscientists by CMA in 2002
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Bioscientists U.S. Patents by Canadian CMAs in 2002
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Bioscientists publications by Canadian CMAs in 2002
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Bioscientists publications by year in Canadian CMAs in 2002
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Bioscientists discoveries of genetic sequences by Canadian CMAs in 2002
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Distribution of Canadian Bioscientists SBFs links by CMAs in 2002 CMA Montreal Toronto Vancouver Edmonton #Connections 40 44 66 25 #Affiliations/ ESB 63 36 42 4 #Nboth* 10 6 7 1 #/CMA 113 86 115 30 Quebec City Calgary Ottawa London Winnipeg Sum 17 15 2 3 16 229 7 6 3 1 166 5 1 5 0 35 29 22 13 5 17 430
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Distribution of Canadian bioscientists according to specific profiles by CMAs in 2002 CMAProf./researcherFunction SBFFounder Vancouver364912 Montreal247325 Toronto154219 Edmonton1652 Calgary872 Quebec City16126 Winnipeg710 Ottawa6119 London230 Total13420375
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Bioscientists Specific Profiles by Canadian CMAs in 2002
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Discussion Type of externality in biotechnology: + than just knowledge spillovers, + and + market and non-market transactions Among the studied population: 54% of Canadian bioscientists with patents or publications are linked to SBFs; 37% are affiliated to SBFs (direction, founders); 9% wear two hats (direction & university professors)
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Discussion Observations Agglomeration phenomenon around great urban areas Importance of geographical proximity of affiliated and linked Bio-scientists Affiliation phenomenon = measure of relational intensity researchers/SBFs
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Conclusion Measures of 2 I (innovation & interdependence) Innovation: Canadian SBFs Patents Interdependence: interaction of scientific & technological development, entrepreneurship – central in biotechnology
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Conclusion In summary, Involved stakeholders - Connections Contractactual Relationships or proprietary links Challenges in competitive markets
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Future research Superstars & Stars affiliation dynamic in other countries Study of the percentage of academic Superstars & Stars having patents and no links with Canadian SBFs
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Research: Definition of researchers categories Star Scientists Typology Bio-Scientists Typology Star Scientists 1. Superstars: + 40 sequences génétiques, + 5 patents & + 5 publications/year 2. Stars: + 40 sequences, - 5 patents or - 5 publ./year Star Scientists 1. Bio-Superstars: 5 patents + & + 1 publ./year 2. Bio-Stars: 2-4 patents & – 1 publ./year Collaborators 3. Collaborators type A: 1-39 sequences, 1 patent + or 1 publ./year + 4. Collab. type B: 1 patent or + or 1 publ./year or + Collaborators 3. Bio-collaborators type A: 1 patent & – 1 publ./year 4. Bio-collab. type B: 1 patent & + or – 1 publ./year
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Discussion
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