International Knowledge Flows: Evidence From Patent Citations
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Economics of Innovation and New Technology
- Vol. 8 (1-2) , 105-136
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10438599900000006
Abstract
This paper explores the patterns of citations among patents taken out by inventors in the U.S., the U.K., Francc. Germany and Japan. We find (I) patents assigned to the same firm are more likely to cite each other, and come sooncr than other citations; (2) patents in the same patent class are approxinlatcly 100 titlles as likely to cite each other as ydtents froin different patent classes, but there is not a strong time pattern to this effect; (3) patents whose inventors reside in the same country are typically 30 to 80% more likely to cite each other than inventors from othcr countrics, and these citations come sooner; and (4) there are clear country-specific citation tendencies, e.g., Japanese citations typically come sooner than those of othcr countries.Patents, Citations, Spillovers JEL Classification: 031,Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evidence from Patents and Patent Citations on the Impact of NASA and Other Federal Labs on Commercial InnovationJournal of Industrial Economics, 1998
- University Versus Corporate Patents: A Window On The Basicness Of InventionEconomics of Innovation and New Technology, 1997
- Flows of knowledge from universities and federal laboratories: Modeling the flow of patent citations over time and across institutional and geographic boundariesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996
- INTERNATIONAL R&D SPILLOVERS AND OECD ECONOMIC GROWTHEconomic Inquiry, 1995
- International R&D spilloversEuropean Economic Review, 1995
- Geographic Localization of Knowledge Spillovers as Evidenced by Patent CitationsThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1993
- Endogenous Technological ChangeJournal of Political Economy, 1990
- Issues in Assessing the Contribution of Research and Development to Productivity GrowthThe Bell Journal of Economics, 1979