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Philip Shapira

Researcher at Manchester Institute of Innovation Research

Publications -  205
Citations -  6307

Philip Shapira is an academic researcher from Manchester Institute of Innovation Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Emerging technologies & Commercialization. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 202 publications receiving 5662 citations. Previous affiliations of Philip Shapira include Arizona State University & Georgia Institute of Technology.

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Building an innovation hub: A case study of the transformation of university roles in regional technological and economic development

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of the university has evolved from performing conventional research and education functions to serving as an innovation-promoting knowledge hub though the case of Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech).
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Refining search terms for nanotechnology

TL;DR: In this article, a modularized Boolean approach is proposed to define nanotechnology, which has been applied to several research and patenting databases and compared with other nanotechnology search formulations.
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Organizational and institutional influences on creativity in scientific research

TL;DR: This article explored institutional and organizational influences on creativity in scientific research using a method for identifying creative scientific research accomplishments in two fields of science (nanotechnology and human genetics) in Europe and the US.
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Capturing new developments in an emerging technology: an updated search strategy for identifying nanotechnology research outputs

TL;DR: The findings indicate that the updated nanotechnology search approach offers an incremental improvement over the original strategy in terms of recall and precision, and reveals the importance for nanotechnology of several emerging cited-subject categories, particularly in the biomedical sciences, suggesting a further extension of the nanotechnology knowledge domain.
Book

Rethinking Regional Innovation and Change: Path Dependency or Regional Breakthrough?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the role of global demand in local innovation processes and the regionalization of innovation policy in the context of knowledge-intensive services as a key sector for processes of regional economic innovation.