Surveying inventors listed on patents to investigate determinants of innovation

This paper reviews the methods and findings of studies surveying inventors on nationally representative sample of patents or patent applications. These studies show that the most common inventor is a middle-aged man with a postgraduate qualification, with women representing only 0.4% to 3.5% of inve...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mattes, E., Stacey, M., Marinova, Dora
Format: Journal Article
Published: Springer 2006
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47187
Description
Summary:This paper reviews the methods and findings of studies surveying inventors on nationally representative sample of patents or patent applications. These studies show that the most common inventor is a middle-aged man with a postgraduate qualification, with women representing only 0.4% to 3.5% of inventors. They demonstrate that 43% to 68% of granted patents become innovations (52% on average). Despite such findings this body of work has only been cited 61 times in scientific journals. Thus, surveys of inventors provide good insights into the process of commercialising patents and yet are an underutilised method especially within the literature on innovation.