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  • All HBS Web  (4,799)
    • News  (1,263)
    • Research  (3,507)
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    • Multimedia  (9)
  • Faculty Publications  (2,860)

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  • All HBS Web  (4,799)
    • News  (1,263)
    • Research  (3,507)
    • Events  (9)
    • Multimedia  (9)
  • Faculty Publications  (2,860)
← Page 2 of 4,799 Results →
  • 24 Jul 2012
  • News

Necessity Really Does Mother Invention

  • 18 Sep 2019
  • Working Paper Summaries

Female Inventors and Inventions

Keywords: by Rembrand Koning, Sampsa Samila, and John-Paul Ferguson; Health; Biotechnology; Medical Devices & Supplies
  • 17 Mar 2011
  • News

The Spluttering Invention Machine: America’s Patent System has Problems; A New Law Would Fix only a Few

  • 2021
  • Working Paper

Who Do We Invent for? Patents by Women Focus More on Women's Health, but Few Women Get to Invent

By: Rembrand Koning, Sampsa Samila and John-Paul Ferguson
Has the increase in female medical researchers led to more medical advances for women? In this paper, we investigate if the gender of inventors shapes their types of inventions. Using data on the universe of U.S. biomedical patents, we find that patents with women... View Details
Keywords: Innovation; Biomedical Research; Innovation and Invention; Diversity; Gender; Research; Health; United States
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Koning, Rembrand, Sampsa Samila, and John-Paul Ferguson. "Who Do We Invent for? Patents by Women Focus More on Women's Health, but Few Women Get to Invent." Working Paper. (Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 19-124, June 2019; SSRN Working Paper Series, No. 3401889, June 2019.)
  • June 2016 (Revised August 2019)
  • Case

Numenta: Inventing and (or) Commercializing AI

By: David B. Yoffie, Liz Kind and David Ben Shimol
In March 2016, Donna Dubinsky (co-founder and CEO) and Jeff Hawkins (co-founder) were struggling with a key question: Could Numenta be successful in both creating fundamental technology and building a commercial business? Located in Redwood City, CA, Numenta was... View Details
Keywords: Artificial Intelligence; Machine Intelligence; Machine Learning; Strategy; Business Model; Entrepreneurship; Information; Technological Innovation; Research; Research and Development; Information Technology; Applications and Software; Technology Adoption; Digital Platforms; Commercialization; AI and Machine Learning
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Yoffie, David B., Liz Kind, and David Ben Shimol. "Numenta: Inventing and (or) Commercializing AI." Harvard Business School Case 716-469, June 2016. (Revised August 2019.)
  • July 26, 2010
  • Article

Wanted: A New Approach to Inventiveness

By: Ranjay Gulati
Keywords: Innovation and Invention
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Gulati, Ranjay. "Wanted: A New Approach to Inventiveness." Financial Times (July 26, 2010).
  • 27 Jul 2010
  • News

Wanted: a new approach to inventiveness

  • June 18, 2021
  • Article

Who Do We Invent for? Patents by Women Focus More on Women's Health, but Few Women Get to Invent

By: Rembrand Koning, Sampsa Samila and John-Paul Ferguson
Women engage in less commercial patenting and invention than do men, which may affect what is invented. Using text analysis of all U.S. biomedical patents filed from 1976 through 2010, we found that patents with all-female inventor teams are 35% more likely than... View Details
Keywords: Innovation; Gender Bias; Health; Innovation and Invention; Research; Patents; Gender; Prejudice and Bias
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Koning, Rembrand, Sampsa Samila, and John-Paul Ferguson. "Who Do We Invent for? Patents by Women Focus More on Women's Health, but Few Women Get to Invent." Science 372, no. 6548 (June 18, 2021): 1345–1348.
  • 01 Aug 2021
  • News

Kominers’s Conundrums: An Invention Puzzle — and That’s Not All!

  • 18 Jun 2021
  • News

Who do we invent for? Patents by women focus more on women’s health, but few women get to invent

    Inventing the Future of Management

    Bhaskar Chakravorti speaks on a "design flaw" in large organizations and the need to renew a business by selectively "burning down" elements of the model to enable islands of entrepreneurial activity that will regenerate its ability... View Details

      Agglomeration of Invention in the Bay Area: Not Just ICT

      Does invention agglomerate, and if so, where does it agglomerate? In this paper we examine changes in patterns of agglomeration in invention over time, using data on patent applications from all granted US patents. View Details
      • 08 Jul 2021
      • News

      Inventor Gender Gap Means Women Have Lost Out on 6,500 Inventions

      • 21 Jun 2017
      • News

      Meet the Oddball Entrepreneurs Who Invented Green Businesses

      • August 2011
      • Article

      Independent Invention During the Rise of the Corporate Economy in Britain and Japan

      By: Tom Nicholas
      Independent inventors accounted for approximately half of all patents in Britain and Japan by 1930, despite the rise of the corporate economy and the spread of industrial R&D. A mixture of patent renewal and historical citations data reveals that the quality of... View Details
      Keywords: Independent Innovation and Invention; Development Economics; Research and Development; Patents; System; Motivation and Incentives; Tokyo; London; United States
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      Nicholas, Tom. "Independent Invention During the Rise of the Corporate Economy in Britain and Japan." Economic History Review 64, no. 2 (August 2011).
      • 09 Jun 2003
      • Research & Ideas

      The Benefits of “Not Invented Here”

      The best ideas and innovations are probably not invented by your company. But learning to find and work with leading partners in R&D calls for a massive cultural change, beginning with getting past the "not View Details
      Keywords: by Sean Silverthorne
      • 21 Jun 2017
      • Book

      Meet the Oddball Entrepreneurs Who Invented Green Businesses

      Keywords: by Sean Silverthorne; Green Technology
      • 2015
      • Chapter

      Information Technology and the Distribution of Inventive Activity

      By: Chris Forman, Avi Goldfarb and Shane Greenstein
      We examine the relationship between the diffusion of advanced Internet technology and the geographic concentration of invention, as measured by patents. First, we show that patenting became more concentrated from the early 1990s to the early 2000s and, similarly, that... View Details
      Keywords: Patents; Geographic Location; Internet and the Web; Innovation and Invention
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      Forman, Chris, Avi Goldfarb, and Shane Greenstein. "Information Technology and the Distribution of Inventive Activity." In The Changing Frontier: Rethinking Science and Innovation Policy, edited by Adam Jaffe and Benjamin Jones, 169–196. University of Chicago Press, 2015.
      • March 2019
      • Teaching Note

      Numenta: Inventing and (or) Commercializing AI

      By: David B. Yoffie
      This teaching notes accompanies the Numenta case, HBS No. 716-469. The focus is how to scale a new artificial intelligence technology, how to build a platform and overcome chicken-or-the-egg problems, and how to utilize open source software and licensing. View Details
      Keywords: Artificial Intelligence; Strategy; Information Technology; Technological Innovation; Commercialization; AI and Machine Learning
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      Yoffie, David B. "Numenta: Inventing and (or) Commercializing AI." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 719-462, March 2019.
      • 09 Jan 2014
      • Research & Ideas

      The Entrepreneurs Who Invented Economic Forecasting

      In the severe economic, social, and scientific turbulence churning at the dawn of the twentieth century, people were eager for any semblance of stability and predictability. From this need for certainty emerged a group of entrepreneurs who promised to apply scientific... View Details
      Keywords: by Sean Silverthorne
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