Authorship and inventorship are "attribution rights" upon which individual scientists build their reputation and career. Social and legal norms concerning their distribution within research teams are currently criticized for failing to inform third parties on individual contributions. We examine the case of teams engaged in the "double disclosure" of their research results through both publications and patents, and model the negotiation process taking place between junior or female team members and the senior (male) ones. We suggest that the former may give up inventorship in order to secure authorship, even when entitled to the both. Based on a sample of 680 "patent-publication pairs" (related sets of patents and publications) we show that...
Increasing entrepreneurial activity within academia has raised concerns that the number of publicati...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
none3siAuthorship and inventorship are “attribution rights” upon which individual scientists build t...
Authorship and inventorship are "attribution rights" upon which individual scientists build their re...
Authorship and inventorship are "attribution rights" upon which individual scientists build their re...
Authorship and inventorship are attribution rights that contribute to the reputation of individual s...
Background: Authorship and inventorship are the key attribution rights that contribute to a scientis...
Background: Authorship and inventorship are the key attribution rights that contribute to a scientis...
Background: Authorship and inventorship are the key attribution rights that contribute to a scientis...
We extend the results in Lissoni et al. (2013, J. Econ. Behav. Organ., 95, 49-69) on scientific cred...
Background: Authorship and inventorship are the key attribution rights that contribute to a scientis...
This is an undergraduate senior thesis submitted in 2014 by Stephanie Chen, a student at Duke Univer...
Increasing entrepreneurial activity within academia has raised concerns that the number of publicati...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
Increasing entrepreneurial activity within academia has raised concerns that the number of publicati...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
none3siAuthorship and inventorship are “attribution rights” upon which individual scientists build t...
Authorship and inventorship are "attribution rights" upon which individual scientists build their re...
Authorship and inventorship are "attribution rights" upon which individual scientists build their re...
Authorship and inventorship are attribution rights that contribute to the reputation of individual s...
Background: Authorship and inventorship are the key attribution rights that contribute to a scientis...
Background: Authorship and inventorship are the key attribution rights that contribute to a scientis...
Background: Authorship and inventorship are the key attribution rights that contribute to a scientis...
We extend the results in Lissoni et al. (2013, J. Econ. Behav. Organ., 95, 49-69) on scientific cred...
Background: Authorship and inventorship are the key attribution rights that contribute to a scientis...
This is an undergraduate senior thesis submitted in 2014 by Stephanie Chen, a student at Duke Univer...
Increasing entrepreneurial activity within academia has raised concerns that the number of publicati...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
Increasing entrepreneurial activity within academia has raised concerns that the number of publicati...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...