Bridging Fields to Tackle Grand Mountains: The Path to Unconventional Inventions and Interdisciplinary Collaboration towards Impact
Interdisciplinarity is essential for tackling grand societal challenges, as it harnesses diverse expertise to develop holistic solutions capable of addressing multifaceted problems. However, the integration of diverse perspectives into actionable solutions is often hindered by a lack of common language and cognitive distance among experts from different fields.
Milad Abbasiharofteh, Dieter F. Kogler, and Balazs Lengyel studied what drives successful interdisciplinary collaborations. They measured interdisciplinarity based on an ‘atypical’ combination of technologies used to develop an invention; an unusual combination of technologies mentioned in a single patent document compared to the total corpus of patented inventions.
The findings indicate that the success of regional economies in introducing atypical inventions lies neither at the individual nor at the regional level. Similarly, the results reveal that having specialized or diverse technological capabilities in local economies does not necessarily lead to atypical inventions. Instead, the study shows that a region’s power in promoting atypical inventions lies at the meso level, inventor communities. The optimal environment for developing this type of invention includes disciplinary inventor communities, connected by interdisciplinary co-inventor relations. This meso-level attribute of regional co-inventor networks plays a crucial role in simultaneously yielding the strengths of specialization and diversity.
The study suggests that not the diversity of various technological capabilities or inventors per se, but the presence of multiple, diversely specialized, and interlinked inventor communities favour interdisciplinary outcomes in regional economies.
This research provides valuable insights for regional innovation policy. It shows that we can stimulate the development of successful interdisciplinary collaboration by supporting a specific mix of collaboration types. This entails promoting specialized (disciplinary) and bridging (interdisciplinary) collaborations in tandem. It highlights the importance of cultivating interconnected inventor communities with diverse specializations to drive regional innovation and address complex challenges effectively.
Learn more
Abbasiharofteh, M., Kogler, D. F., & Lengyel, B. (2023). Atypical combinations of technologies in regional co-inventor networks. Research Policy, 52, 104886. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.respol.2023.104886
Last modified: | 03 October 2023 10.07 a.m. |
More news
-
22 October 2024
The threatening chasm in the countryside
The supposed chasm between city and countryside is not that bad, according to Felix Pot. ‘A threatening chasm in the countryside is more likely: between car owners and the people who do not have their own mode of transport.'
-
25 September 2024
Smart energy transition calls for inclusive approach
UG scientist Christian Zuidema discusses how we can jointly move towards a sustainable society. A smart transition requires a better distribution of advantages and disadvantages, he argues.
-
22 August 2024
NWO awards grant to major research into the relationship between rural areas and cities
The relation between rural areas and cities have been under pressure in recent years and require future-proof spatial solutions. This is why the Fertile Soils project, in which 10 knowledge institutes and 30 practical partners work together,...