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Auteur Dirk Czarnitzki
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[article]
in Management science > Vol. 56 N° 9 (Septembre 2010) . - pp. 1599-1614
Titre : Commercializing science : Is there a university "brain drain" from academic entrepreneurship? Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Andrew A. Toole, Auteur ; Dirk Czarnitzki, Auteur Année de publication : 2010 Article en page(s) : pp. 1599-1614 Note générale : Management Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Academic entrepreneurship SBIR NIH Brain drain Research productivity University mission Index. décimale : 658 Organisation des entreprises. Techniques du commerce Résumé : When academic researchers participate in commercialization using for-profit firms, there is a potentially costly trade-off—their time and effort are diverted away from academic knowledge production. This is a form of brain drain on the not-for-profit research sector that may reduce knowledge accumulation and adversely impact long-run economic growth. In this paper, we examine the economic significance of the brain drain phenomenon using scientist-level panel data. We identify life scientists who start or join for-profit firms using information from the Small Business Innovation Research program and analyze the research performance of these scientists relative to a control group of randomly selected research peers. Combining our statistical results with data on the number of university spin-offs in the United States from 1994 to 2004, we find the academic brain drain has a nontrivial impact on knowledge production in the not-for-profit research sector. DEWEY : 658 ISSN : 0025-1909 En ligne : http://mansci.journal.informs.org/cgi/content/abstract/56/9/1599 [article] Commercializing science : Is there a university "brain drain" from academic entrepreneurship? [texte imprimé] / Andrew A. Toole, Auteur ; Dirk Czarnitzki, Auteur . - 2010 . - pp. 1599-1614.
Management
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Management science > Vol. 56 N° 9 (Septembre 2010) . - pp. 1599-1614
Mots-clés : Academic entrepreneurship SBIR NIH Brain drain Research productivity University mission Index. décimale : 658 Organisation des entreprises. Techniques du commerce Résumé : When academic researchers participate in commercialization using for-profit firms, there is a potentially costly trade-off—their time and effort are diverted away from academic knowledge production. This is a form of brain drain on the not-for-profit research sector that may reduce knowledge accumulation and adversely impact long-run economic growth. In this paper, we examine the economic significance of the brain drain phenomenon using scientist-level panel data. We identify life scientists who start or join for-profit firms using information from the Small Business Innovation Research program and analyze the research performance of these scientists relative to a control group of randomly selected research peers. Combining our statistical results with data on the number of university spin-offs in the United States from 1994 to 2004, we find the academic brain drain has a nontrivial impact on knowledge production in the not-for-profit research sector. DEWEY : 658 ISSN : 0025-1909 En ligne : http://mansci.journal.informs.org/cgi/content/abstract/56/9/1599