Publication detail

Are Patenting Activities in U.S. Universities Still Affected by Bayh-Dole Act?

TSENG, A. RAUDENSKÝ, M.

Original Title

Are Patenting Activities in U.S. Universities Still Affected by Bayh-Dole Act?

English Title

Are Patenting Activities in U.S. Universities Still Affected by Bayh-Dole Act?

Type

journal article - other

Language

en

Original Abstract

Based on four data sources, the trends of the patent activities of US universities in the last 40 years are quantitatively assessed. It has been found that patenting activities in U.S. universities slowed down greatly after 2000 and remained flat until the period from 2010 to 2012, when activities recover to the level of strength characterizing the period before 2000 and after the enactment of the Bayh-Dole Act. The affects of the (Bayh-Dole) Act on the university patenting activities (UPAs) are specifically analyzed for the time span considered. We found that the impacts of the Act had been remaining strong until the year of 1999 and then greatly diminished. We also identify that economic recessions are the major cause to the flatness of the patenting activities during 2000s. Recently, many concerns on university patent activities have been raised; these concerns are reviewed and recommendations to resolute to these concerns are provided.

English abstract

Based on four data sources, the trends of the patent activities of US universities in the last 40 years are quantitatively assessed. It has been found that patenting activities in U.S. universities slowed down greatly after 2000 and remained flat until the period from 2010 to 2012, when activities recover to the level of strength characterizing the period before 2000 and after the enactment of the Bayh-Dole Act. The affects of the (Bayh-Dole) Act on the university patenting activities (UPAs) are specifically analyzed for the time span considered. We found that the impacts of the Act had been remaining strong until the year of 1999 and then greatly diminished. We also identify that economic recessions are the major cause to the flatness of the patenting activities during 2000s. Recently, many concerns on university patent activities have been raised; these concerns are reviewed and recommendations to resolute to these concerns are provided.

Keywords

Bayh-Dole Act, commercialization, innovation disclosure, patent, patent share, technology transfer, universities

RIV year

2014

Released

01.03.2014

Publisher

David publishing Company

Location

New York, USA

ISBN

1537-1514

Periodical

China - USA Business Review

Year of study

13

Number

3

State

US

Pages from

141

Pages to

156

Pages count

15

Documents

BibTex


@article{BUT108516,
  author="Ampere An-Pei {Tseng} and Miroslav {Raudenský}",
  title="Are Patenting Activities in U.S. Universities Still Affected by Bayh-Dole Act?",
  annote="Based on four data sources, the trends of the patent activities of US universities in the last 40 years are
quantitatively assessed. It has been found that patenting activities in U.S. universities slowed down greatly after
2000 and remained flat until the period from 2010 to 2012, when activities recover to the level of strength
characterizing the period before 2000 and after the enactment of the Bayh-Dole Act. The affects of the (Bayh-Dole)
Act on the university patenting activities (UPAs) are specifically analyzed for the time span considered. We found
that the impacts of the Act had been remaining strong until the year of 1999 and then greatly diminished. We also
identify that economic recessions are the major cause to the flatness of the patenting activities during 2000s.
Recently, many concerns on university patent activities have been raised; these concerns are reviewed and
recommendations to resolute to these concerns are provided.",
  address="David publishing Company",
  chapter="108516",
  doi="10.17265/1537-1514/2014.03.001",
  howpublished="print",
  institution="David publishing Company",
  number="3",
  volume="13",
  year="2014",
  month="march",
  pages="141--156",
  publisher="David publishing Company",
  type="journal article - other"
}