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Frank Tietze

Researcher at University of Cambridge

Publications -  92
Citations -  1647

Frank Tietze is an academic researcher from University of Cambridge. The author has contributed to research in topics: Intellectual property & Innovation management. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 86 publications receiving 1116 citations. Previous affiliations of Frank Tietze include University of Kiel & Hamburg University of Technology.

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Green innovation in technology and innovation management – an exploratory literature review†

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a current overview of the existing body of literature in the field of green innovations, identifying the most active scholars, institutions, and relevant publications, and stimulate discussion about the adequacy of research in this subject area and the dearth of comprehensive literature reviews.
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The state-of-the-art on Intellectual Property Analytics (IPA): A literature review on artificial intelligence, machine learning and deep learning methods for analysing intellectual property (IP) data

TL;DR: This literature review presents the state of the art in intellectual property analytics by reviewing 57 recent articles and follows a narrative approach with search strategy, where the state-of-the-art is presented.
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Managing ecosystems for service innovation: A dynamic capability view

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine ecosystem-related capabilities for developing service innovation in product-centric firms using a mixed-methods approach focusing on the energy utility sector and derive a set of 12 ecosystem related capabilities for service innovation.
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The emergence of care robotics — A patent and publication analysis

TL;DR: The emergence of care robotics technology is reviewed and answers to two research questions are offered: which organizations and individuals in which countries have been and are active in research and development and how has research andDevelopment emerged with regard to activity focus, intensity levels and cooperation.
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Reconceptualizing the paradox of openness: How solvers navigate sharing-protecting tensions in crowdsourcing

TL;DR: The paradox of openness describes the fundamental tension between knowledge sharing and knowledge protection in open innovation as mentioned in this paper, where sharing is vital for value creation, while protecting is critical for value appropriation.