Understanding the organization of R&D activities requires the simultaneous consideration of scientific workers' talent and tastes, companies' organizational choices, and the characteristics of the relevant industry. We develop a model of the provision of incentives to corporate scientists, in an environment where (1) scientists engage in multiple activities when performing research; (2) knowledge is not perfectly appropriable; (3) scientists are responsive to both monetary and non-monetary incentives; and (4) firms compete on the product market. We show that both knowledge spillovers and market competition affect the incentives given to scientists, and these effects interact. First, high knowledge spillovers lead firms to soften incentives ...
Beginning in the late 1980s, American corporations began increasingly linking the compensation of ce...
We introduce a two-armed bandit model to study firms ’ incentives in choosing co-operative vs. nonco...
We investigate the relationship between R&D incentives and product market competition in a model whe...
Understanding the organization of R&D activities requires the simultaneous consideration of scientif...
Understanding the organization of R&D activities requires the simultaneous consideration of scientif...
This paper models the optimal provision of incentives to corporate scientists, within an environment...
This paper models the provision of incentives to company scientists for the performance of applied a...
This paper examines the intensity of researchers incentives to innovate in a context with involuntar...
This paper proposes a framework to analyze the effects of scientific and commercial incentives in R&...
In a general setting with uncertainty and spillovers in R&D activity, we consider the incentive ...
This dissertation deals with the design of optimal incentive schemes in the presence of collaborativ...
Firms hire scientists to increase their absorptive capacity and generate new knowledge and innovatio...
Scientific knowledge production and commercialization involves a range of actors, each bringing valu...
An earlier version of this paper was circulated under the title "Commercial Incentives in Academia."...
When effort is multi-dimensional, firms will optimally “balance ” the provision of incentives. Setti...
Beginning in the late 1980s, American corporations began increasingly linking the compensation of ce...
We introduce a two-armed bandit model to study firms ’ incentives in choosing co-operative vs. nonco...
We investigate the relationship between R&D incentives and product market competition in a model whe...
Understanding the organization of R&D activities requires the simultaneous consideration of scientif...
Understanding the organization of R&D activities requires the simultaneous consideration of scientif...
This paper models the optimal provision of incentives to corporate scientists, within an environment...
This paper models the provision of incentives to company scientists for the performance of applied a...
This paper examines the intensity of researchers incentives to innovate in a context with involuntar...
This paper proposes a framework to analyze the effects of scientific and commercial incentives in R&...
In a general setting with uncertainty and spillovers in R&D activity, we consider the incentive ...
This dissertation deals with the design of optimal incentive schemes in the presence of collaborativ...
Firms hire scientists to increase their absorptive capacity and generate new knowledge and innovatio...
Scientific knowledge production and commercialization involves a range of actors, each bringing valu...
An earlier version of this paper was circulated under the title "Commercial Incentives in Academia."...
When effort is multi-dimensional, firms will optimally “balance ” the provision of incentives. Setti...
Beginning in the late 1980s, American corporations began increasingly linking the compensation of ce...
We introduce a two-armed bandit model to study firms ’ incentives in choosing co-operative vs. nonco...
We investigate the relationship between R&D incentives and product market competition in a model whe...