Intermetropolitan Networks of Co-invention in American Biotechnology

abstract: Regional differences of inventive activity and economic growth are important in economic geography. These differences are generally explained by the theory of localized knowledge spillovers, which argues that geographical proximity among economic actors fosters invention and innovation. Ho...

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Other Authors: Lee, Der-Shiuan (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14248
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-14248
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-142482018-06-22T03:02:11Z Intermetropolitan Networks of Co-invention in American Biotechnology abstract: Regional differences of inventive activity and economic growth are important in economic geography. These differences are generally explained by the theory of localized knowledge spillovers, which argues that geographical proximity among economic actors fosters invention and innovation. However, knowledge production involves an increasing number of actors connecting to non-local partners. The space of knowledge flows is not tightly bounded in a given territory, but functions as a network-based system where knowledge flows circulate around alignments of actors in different and distant places. The purpose of this dissertation is to understand the dynamics of network aspects of knowledge flows in American biotechnology. The first research task assesses both spatial and network-based dependencies of biotechnology co-invention across 150 large U.S. metropolitan areas over four decades (1979, 1989, 1999, and 2009). An integrated methodology including both spatial and social network analyses are explicitly applied and compared. Results show that the network-based proximity better defines the U.S. biotechnology co-invention urban system in recent years. Co-patenting relationships of major biotechnology centers has demonstrated national and regional association since the 1990s. Associations retain features of spatial proximity especially in some Midwestern and Northeastern cities, but these are no longer the strongest features affecting co-inventive links. The second research task examines how biotechnology knowledge flows circulate over space by focusing on the structural properties of intermetropolitan co-invention networks. All analyses in this task are conducted using social network analysis. Evidence shows that the architecture of the U.S. co-invention networks reveals a trend toward more organized structures and less fragmentation over the four years of analysis. Metropolitan areas are increasingly interconnected into a large web of networked environment. Knowledge flows are less likely to be controlled by a small number of intermediaries. San Francisco, New York, Boston, and San Diego monopolize the central positions of the intermetropolitan co-invention network as major American biotechnology concentrations. The overall network-based system comes close to a relational core/periphery structure where core metropolitan areas are strongly connected to one another and to some peripheral areas. Peripheral metropolitan areas are loosely connected or even disconnected with each other. This dissertation provides empirical evidence to support the argument that technological collaboration reveals a network-based system associated with different or even distant geographical places, which is somewhat different from the conventional theory of localized knowledge spillovers that once dominated understanding of the role of geography in technological advance. Dissertation/Thesis Lee, Der-Shiuan (Author) Ó Huallacháin, Breandán (Advisor) Ó Huallacháin, Breandán (Advisor) Anselin, Luc (Committee member) Kuby, Michael (Committee member) Lobo, José (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Geography Social structure Biotechnology Co-invention Exploratory spatial data analysis Intermetropolitan networks Knowledge exchange Patents eng 186 pages Ph.D. Geography 2011 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14248 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2011
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Geography
Social structure
Biotechnology
Co-invention
Exploratory spatial data analysis
Intermetropolitan networks
Knowledge exchange
Patents
spellingShingle Geography
Social structure
Biotechnology
Co-invention
Exploratory spatial data analysis
Intermetropolitan networks
Knowledge exchange
Patents
Intermetropolitan Networks of Co-invention in American Biotechnology
description abstract: Regional differences of inventive activity and economic growth are important in economic geography. These differences are generally explained by the theory of localized knowledge spillovers, which argues that geographical proximity among economic actors fosters invention and innovation. However, knowledge production involves an increasing number of actors connecting to non-local partners. The space of knowledge flows is not tightly bounded in a given territory, but functions as a network-based system where knowledge flows circulate around alignments of actors in different and distant places. The purpose of this dissertation is to understand the dynamics of network aspects of knowledge flows in American biotechnology. The first research task assesses both spatial and network-based dependencies of biotechnology co-invention across 150 large U.S. metropolitan areas over four decades (1979, 1989, 1999, and 2009). An integrated methodology including both spatial and social network analyses are explicitly applied and compared. Results show that the network-based proximity better defines the U.S. biotechnology co-invention urban system in recent years. Co-patenting relationships of major biotechnology centers has demonstrated national and regional association since the 1990s. Associations retain features of spatial proximity especially in some Midwestern and Northeastern cities, but these are no longer the strongest features affecting co-inventive links. The second research task examines how biotechnology knowledge flows circulate over space by focusing on the structural properties of intermetropolitan co-invention networks. All analyses in this task are conducted using social network analysis. Evidence shows that the architecture of the U.S. co-invention networks reveals a trend toward more organized structures and less fragmentation over the four years of analysis. Metropolitan areas are increasingly interconnected into a large web of networked environment. Knowledge flows are less likely to be controlled by a small number of intermediaries. San Francisco, New York, Boston, and San Diego monopolize the central positions of the intermetropolitan co-invention network as major American biotechnology concentrations. The overall network-based system comes close to a relational core/periphery structure where core metropolitan areas are strongly connected to one another and to some peripheral areas. Peripheral metropolitan areas are loosely connected or even disconnected with each other. This dissertation provides empirical evidence to support the argument that technological collaboration reveals a network-based system associated with different or even distant geographical places, which is somewhat different from the conventional theory of localized knowledge spillovers that once dominated understanding of the role of geography in technological advance. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Geography 2011
author2 Lee, Der-Shiuan (Author)
author_facet Lee, Der-Shiuan (Author)
title Intermetropolitan Networks of Co-invention in American Biotechnology
title_short Intermetropolitan Networks of Co-invention in American Biotechnology
title_full Intermetropolitan Networks of Co-invention in American Biotechnology
title_fullStr Intermetropolitan Networks of Co-invention in American Biotechnology
title_full_unstemmed Intermetropolitan Networks of Co-invention in American Biotechnology
title_sort intermetropolitan networks of co-invention in american biotechnology
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14248
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