Key Inventors and Key Firms in Fuel Cell Development: A Patent Analysis

Alan Pilkington

(2006)

Alan Pilkington (2006) Key Inventors and Key Firms in Fuel Cell Development: A Patent Analysis.

Our Full Text Deposits

Full text access: Open

Full Text - 860.05 KB

Abstract

This paper summarises a piece of work undertaken a few years ago which employed patent data to investigate the development of the fuel cell. The paper’s main aim is to record the investigation and method used and explore whether patent data could be employed to determine the main players, both inventors and firms, in fuel cell innovation. The original work using 2001 data has been utilised in a number of further studies (Pilkington, 2004; Pilkington and Liston-Heyes, 2004; Pilkington and Dyerson, 2001b; Dyerson and Pilkington, 2002, 2004), but its main findings in terms of classifying the main contributors to fuel cell development was never really fully explored. Updating the study and extending the analysis of the groups of inventors and firms to isolate differences, is the starting point for a new piece of work which is just being planned.

Information about this Version

This is a Published version
This version's date is: 10/2006
This item is peer reviewed

Link to this Version

https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/00358d72-b0c5-0ddb-560a-a799a12f53bb/1/

Item TypeMonograph (Working Paper)
TitleKey Inventors and Key Firms in Fuel Cell Development: A Patent Analysis
AuthorsPilkington, Alan
Uncontrolled KeywordsFuel Cell, Patent, Inventor, Innovation
DepartmentsFaculty of History and Social Science\Management

Identifiers

isbn1-905846-07-X

Deposited by () on 19-May-2010 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 14-Apr-2011

Notes

References

Albert, M, Avery, D, Narin, F, and McAllister, P. (1990) “Direct Validation of Citation Counts
as Indicators of Industrially Important Patterns”, Research Policy, vol.20, no.3, pp. 251-
259.


Basberg, B. (1982) “Technological change in the Norwegian whaling industry,” Research Policy, 11 (3), pp. 163-171.


Basberg, B. (1987) “Patents as the measure of technological change,” Research Policy, 16 (3), pp. 131-141.

Bowyer, J.L. and Christensen, C.M. (1995) ‘Disruptive Technologies: Catching the Wave’,
Harvard Business Review, Jan-Feb, pp. 43-53.


Brockhoff, K. (1992) “Instruments for Patent Data”, Technovation, vol.12, no.1, pp. 451-458.

Culnan, M. (1986), “The intellectual development of management information systems”,
Management Science, Vol. 32, pp. 156-72.


Dyerson, R. and Pilkington, A. (2000) “Innovation in Complex Systems: Regulation and
Technology towards the Electric Vehicle”, International Journal of Innovation
Management, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 33-49.


Dyerson, R. and Pilkington, A. (2002) “Patent Data as a Source for Technological Roadmaps”,IEEE Engineering Management Conference, Cambridge.


Dyerson, R. and Pilkington, A. (2004) "All Steering in the Same Direction? Patterns of Patent
Activity and the Development of Fuel Cell Technology," Strategic Management Society
24th International Conference, Puerto Rico.


Ernst, H. (1999) “Key inventors: Implications for Human Resource Management in R&D”, in D.


Kocaoglu, T. Anderson (eds.) Technology and Innovation Management, PICMET,
Portland, USA, pp.420-427.


Girliches, Z., (1998) R & D Productivity – The Econometric Evidence, University of Chicago
Press, Chicago IL.


Grupp, H., and U. Schmooh, (1999) “Patent statistics in the age of globalisation,“ Research
Policy, 28, pp. 377-396.


Henderson, R.M. and Clark, K.B. (1990) ‘Architectural Innovation: the Reconfiguration of
Existing Product Technologies and the Failure of Established Firms’, Administrative
Science Quarterly, vol. 35, pp. 9 - 30.


Melera F. and Orsenigo, L. (1999) “Technological Entry, Exit and Survival: An Empirical
Analysis of Patent Data”, Research Policy, vol. 28, no. 6, pp. 643--660.

Narin, F. and Olivastro, D. (1988) “Technology Indicators Based on Patents and Patent
Citations” in A.F.J. van Raan (ed) Handbook of Quantitative Studies of Science and
Technology, Elsevier, pp 465- 507.


Pavitt, K., (1983) “R & D Policy and Innovative Activity,” Research Policy, 11 (1), pp. 33-51.


Pavitt, K., (1985) “Patent statistics as indicators of innovative activities,” Scientometrics, 7, pp.77-99.


Pilkington, A., (2004) “Technology portfolio alignment as an indicator of commercialisation: An investigation of fuel cell patenting,” Technovation, Vol.24, No.1, pp.761-771.


Pilkington, A., (1998) “The Fit and Misfit of Technological Capability: Responses to Vehicle
Emission Regulation in the United States”, Technology Analysis and Strategic
Management, 10 (2), pp. 211-224.


Pilkington, A. and Dyerson, R. (2001a) “Patent Data as Indicators of Technological
Development”, in D. Kocaoglu, T. Anderson (eds.) Technology Management in the
Knowledge Era, PICMET, Portland, USA.


Pilkington, A. and Dyerson, R. (2001b) “All Steering in the Same Direction? Patterns of Patent Activity and the Development of Fuel Cell Technology”, EVS18, Berlin, October 2001.


Pilkington, A., and C. Liston-Heyes, (2004) “Inventive Concentration: An Analysis of Fuel Cell
Patents,” with C.Liston-Heyes, Science and Public Policy, Vol. 31, No. 1, pp.15-25.


Seglen, P.O., 1992, ‘The Skewness of Science’, Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 43(9), pp. 628-638.


Sharplin, A. and Mabry, R. (1985), “The relative importance of journals used in management
research: an alternative ranking”, Human Relations, Vol. 38, pp. 139-49.


Soete, L., and S. Wyatt, (1983) “The use of foreign patenting as an international comparable
science and technological indicator,” Scientometrics, 5 (1), pp. 31-54.


Teichert, T, and Ernst, H. (1999) “Assessment of R&D Collaboration by Patent Data” in D.
Kocaoglu, T. Anderson (eds.) Technology and Innovation Management, PICMET,
Portland, USA, pp.78-86.


Watanabe, C., Y. Tsuji, and C. Griffy-Brown, (2001) “Patent statistics: deciphering a real versus pseudo proxy for innovation,” Technovation, 21, pp. 783-790.


Details