In 2007, the Georgia Tech School of Public Policy (John Walsh, Project Director), sponsored by the Georgia Research Alliance/Kauffman Foundation
and the Research Institute of Economics, Trade and Industry (RIETI), conducted the Georgia Tech Inventor Survey.
This research was conducted in parallel with a sister survey in Japan, sponsored by RIETI and directed by Professor Sadao Nagaoka, Hitotsubashi University.
Working papers and technical reports giving detailed results
and comparisons between the US and Japan are now available below.
We would like to thank all of the inventors
who gave their time to the survey.
We deeply appreciate your cooperation.
If you have any comments or questions, please contact John Walsh: john.walsh@pubpolicy.gatech.edu.
RESULTS FROM THE GEORGIA TECH/RIETI INVENTOR SURVEY
Working Papers
II) The R&D process in the US and Japan
III) How “Open” is Innovation in the US and Japan?
IV) Commercialization and Other Uses of Patents in Japan and the US
Publications
2016. Walsh, John P., You-Na Lee, and Sadao Nagaoka. “Openness and innovation in the US: Collaboration form, idea generation and implementation.” Research Policy 45(8): 1660-1671.
2016. Walsh, J.P., Lee, Y.-N., Jung, T., “Win, lose or draw? The fate of patented inventions.” Research Policy 45(7): 1362-1373.
2016. You-Na Lee and John P. Walsh. “Inventing while you work: Knowledge, non-R&D learning and innovation.” Research Policy 45(1):345-359.
APPENDIX
A2) Detailed question by question results, broken out by technology class [large file]
A3) Detailed question by question results, broken out by organization type [large file]
This page has been accessed
times.