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Titel / Titel:

Science and technology in the region: The output of regional science and technology, its strengths and its leading institutions.

Author / Autor

Nicole Altvater-Mackensen, Gregor Balicki, Lucie Bestakowa, Bianca Bocatius, Johannes Braun, Lars Brehmer, Verena Brune, Kirstina 
Eigemeier, Füsun Erdem, Ralf Fritscher, Anne Jacobs, Bernd Klingsporn, Marcin Konsinski, Julia Kuntze, Ju-Ra Lee, Anna Osterhage,
Martin Probost, Thorsten Risch, Tobias Schmitt, Wolfgang G. Stock, Anja Sturm, Katrin Weller, Kerstin Werner

 

Source / Quelle

Altvater-Mackensen, N., Balicki, G., Bestakowa, L. et al (2005): Science and technology in the region. The output of regional science and technology, its strengths and its leading institutions. In: Scientometrics 63 (63), S. 463-529.

Language / Sprache

English / Englisch

 

Science and technology in the region: The output of regional science and technology, its strengths and its leading institutions.

This paper is a comparative analysis of scientific output of seven German regions during the years 1995-2000. We operationalize scientific output in a region by means of the number of articles (as in the SciSearch database) per year and technology output by means of the number of patent applications (as in the database of the European Patent Office) per priority year. All informetric analyses were done using the DIALOG online-system. The main research questions are the following: Which scientific and technological fields or topics are most influent within a region and which institutions or companies are mainly publishing articles or holding patents? Do the distributions of regional science and technology fields and of publishing institutions follow the well-known informetric function? Are there - as it is expected - only few fields and few institutions which dominate the region? Is there a connection between the economic power of a region and the regional publication and patent output? Examples studied in detail are the German regions: Aachen, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Köln (Cologne), Leipzig-Halle-Dessau, München (Munich), and Stuttgart. Three different indicators were used, science and technology attraction of a region (number of scientific articles and patents), science and technology intensity (articles and patents per 1,000 inhabitants), and science and technology density (articles and patents per 1 billion EURO gross value added). Top region concerning both attraction and intensity is Munich, concerning density it is Aachen.

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