The technological origins of radical inventions

[1]  J. Schumpeter The Theory of Economic Development: An Inquiry into Profits, Capital, Credit, Interest, and the Business Cycle , 1934 .

[2]  J. Schumpeter,et al.  Business Cycles: A Theoretical, Historical, and Statistical Analysis of the Capitalist Process , 1940 .

[3]  O. Morgenstern,et al.  Business Cycles: A Theoretical, Historical, and Statistical Analysis of the Capitalist Process. , 1940 .

[4]  Henry L. Tosi Theories of Organization , 1975 .

[5]  Francis Narin,et al.  Citation rates to technologically important patents , 1981 .

[6]  S. Winter,et al.  An evolutionary theory of economic change , 1983 .

[7]  B. Tabachnick,et al.  Using Multivariate Statistics , 1983 .

[8]  Araújo,et al.  An Evolutionary theory of economic change , 1983 .

[9]  F. Narin,et al.  Patents as indicators of corporate technological strength , 1987 .

[10]  Joel Mokyr,et al.  Punctuated Equilibria and Technological Progress , 1990 .

[11]  M. Trajtenberg A Penny for Your Quotes : Patent Citations and the Value of Innovations , 1990 .

[12]  Daniel A. Levinthal,et al.  ABSORPTIVE CAPACITY: A NEW PERSPECTIVE ON LEARNING AND INNOVATION , 1990 .

[13]  Manuel Trajtenberg,et al.  Economic Analysis of Product Innovation: The Case of CT Scanners , 1990 .

[14]  Kim B. Clark,et al.  Architectural Innovation: The Reconfiguration of Existing Product Technologies and the Failure of , 1990 .

[15]  F. Narin,et al.  Direct validation of citation counts as indicators of industrially important patents , 1991 .

[16]  David B. Audretsch,et al.  Innovation and Technological Change: An International Comparison , 1991 .

[17]  Robert E. Hoskisson,et al.  A mid-range theory of interfunctional integration, its antecedents and outcomes , 1993 .

[18]  D. Leonard-Barton,et al.  Wellsprings of Knowledge: Building and Sustaining the Sources of Innovation , 1995 .

[19]  O. Granstrand,et al.  Multi-Technology Corporations: Why They Have “Distributed” Rather Than “Distinctive Core” Competencies , 1997 .

[20]  K. Pavitt,et al.  The technological competencies of the world''s largest firms , 1997 .

[21]  Andrew B. Hargadon,et al.  Technology brokering and innovation in a product development firm. , 1997 .

[22]  A. Jaffe,et al.  Evidence from Patents and Patent Citations on the Impact of Nasa and Other Federal Labs on Commercial Innovation , 1997 .

[23]  G. M. Duijsters,et al.  Knowledge flows between multinational companies: a patent data analysis , 1998 .

[24]  R. Chandy,et al.  Organizing for Radical Product Innovation: The Overlooked Role of Willingness to Cannibalize , 1998 .

[25]  D. Harhoff,et al.  Citation Frequency and the Value of Patented Inventions , 1999, Review of Economics and Statistics.

[26]  Manuel Trajtenberg,et al.  Market Value and Patent Citations: A First Look , 2000 .

[27]  Manuel Trajtenberg,et al.  THE NBER/SLOAN PROJECT ON INDUSTRIAL TECHAIOLOGY AND PRODUCTIVITY: INCORPORATING LEARNING FROM PLANT VISITS AND INTERVIEWS INTO ECONOMIC RESEARCHt Knowledge Spillovers and Patent Citations: Evidence from a Survey of Inventors , 2000 .

[28]  Jesper B. Sørensen,et al.  Aging, Obsolescence, and Organizational Innovation , 2000 .

[29]  K. Pavitt,et al.  Knowledge Specialization, Organizational Coupling, and the Boundaries of the Firm: Why Do Firms Know More than They Make? , 2001 .

[30]  Curba Morris Lampert,et al.  Entrepreneurship in the large corporation: a longitudinal study of how established firms create breakthrough inventions , 2001 .

[31]  J. Ruiz Moreno [Organizational learning]. , 2001, Revista de enfermeria.

[32]  L. Fleming Recombinant Uncertainty in Technological Search Lee Fleming , 2001 .

[33]  A. Nerkar,et al.  Beyond local search: boundary‐spanning, exploration, and impact in the optical disk industry , 2001 .

[34]  Lee Fleming,et al.  Special Issue on Design and Development: Recombinant Uncertainty in Technological Search , 2001, Manag. Sci..

[35]  Bart Verspagen,et al.  The Spatial Dimension of Patenting by Multinational Firms in Europe , 2002 .

[36]  Atul Nerkar,et al.  Old Is Gold? The Value of Temporal Exploration in the Creation of New Knowledge , 2003, Manag. Sci..

[37]  Megan MacGarvie,et al.  How well do patent citations measure flows of technology? Evidence from French innovation surveys , 2005 .

[38]  Kathleen M. Eisenhardt,et al.  How Breakthroughs Happen: The Surprising Truth About How Companies Innovate , 2003 .

[39]  Ibo van de Poel,et al.  The transformation of technological regimes , 2003 .

[40]  Jacques Michel,et al.  Patent citation analysis.A closer look at the basic input data from patent search reports , 2001, Scientometrics.

[41]  Mark Fichman,et al.  Today's Edisons or Weekend Hobbyists: Technical Merit and Success of Inventions by Independent Inventors , 2004 .

[42]  Bart Verspagen,et al.  Does it matter where patent citations come from? Inventor versus examiner citations in European patents , 2005 .

[43]  Kristina Dahlin,et al.  When is an Invention Really Radical? Defining and Measuring Technological Radicalness , 2005 .

[44]  M. Gittelman,et al.  Patent Citations as a Measure of Knowledge Flows: The Influence of Examiner Citations , 2006, The Review of Economics and Statistics.

[45]  Toby E. Stuart,et al.  Local search and the evolution of technological capabilities , 2007 .

[46]  Rajesh Chandy,et al.  Radical Innovation across Nations: The Preeminence of Corporate Culture , 2009 .