When Collaboration Bridges Institutions: The Impact of University-Industry Collaboration on Academic Productivity

被引:87
作者
Bikard, Michael [1 ]
Vakili, Keyvan [1 ]
Teodoridis, Florenta [2 ]
机构
[1] London Business Sch, Strategy & Entrepreneurship Dept, London NW1 4SA, England
[2] Univ Southern Calif, Marshall Sch Business, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA
关键词
university-industry collaboration; division of labor; scientific productivity; innovation; interorganizational relationships; simultaneous discoveries; knowledge production; PUBLIC RESEARCH; KNOWLEDGE; SCIENCE; TECHNOLOGY; INNOVATION; LIFE; SCIENTISTS; ECONOMICS; NETWORKS; COMMERCIALIZATION;
D O I
10.1287/orsc.2018.1235
中图分类号
C93 [管理学];
学科分类号
12 ; 1201 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
Prior research suggests that academic scientists who collaborate with firms may experience lower publication rates in their collaborative lines of work because of industry's insistence on intellectual property protection through patenting or secrecy. In contrast, we posit that university-industry collaboration can sometimes foster specialization and boost academic contribution to open science. Specifically, research lines with both scientific and commercial potential (i.e., in Pasteur's quadrant) provide an opportunity for a productive division of tasks between academic scientists and their industry counterparts, whereby the former focus on exploiting the scientific opportunities and the latter focus on the commercial ones. The main empirical challenge of examining this proposition is that research projects that involve industry collaborators may be qualitatively different from those that do not. To address this issue, we exploit the occurrence of simultaneous discoveries where multiple scientists make roughly the same discovery around the same time. Following a simultaneous discovery, we compare the follow-on research output of academic scientists who collaborated with industry on the discovery with that of academic scientists who did not. We find that academic scientists with industry collaborators produced more follow-on publications and fewer follow-on patents than did academic scientists without industry collaborators. This effect is particularly salient when the research line has important commercial implications and when the industry partner is an established firm.
引用
收藏
页码:426 / 445
页数:20
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