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Mapping Nanotechnology Innovations and Knowledge: Global and Longitudinal Patent and Literature Analysis

Mapping Nanotechnology Innovations and Knowledge: Global and Longitudinal Patent and Literature Analysis Hsinchun Chen, Ph.D. Director, Artificial Intelligence Lab University of Arizona Acknowledgement: National Science Foundation (NSF) About this book:

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Mapping Nanotechnology Innovations and Knowledge: Global and Longitudinal Patent and Literature Analysis

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  1. Mapping Nanotechnology Innovations and Knowledge: Global and Longitudinal Patent and Literature Analysis Hsinchun Chen, Ph.D. Director, Artificial Intelligence Lab University of Arizona Acknowledgement: National Science Foundation (NSF)

  2. About this book: Reflects recent growth in nanoscale science and engineering Analyzes an industry expected to reach $1 trillion by 2015 Includes analysis of Patent Office databases in the US, Europe and Japan

  3. Knowledge Mapping

  4. Invisible Colleges and Knowledge Mapping • Invisible college, which consists of a small group of highly productive and networked scientists and scholars, is believed to be responsible for growth of scientific knowledge (Crane, 1972). • “Knowledge Mapping” or “Science Mapping” techniques, based on content analysis, citation network analysis, and information visualization, has become an active area of research that helps reveal such an inter-connected, invisible college or network of scholars and their seminal publications and ideas (Chen, 2003).

  5. Online Resources for Knowledge Mapping • Abstracts & Indexes: MEDLINE (medicine), TOXLINE (toxicology), BIOSIS (biology), COMPENDEX (engineering and technology), ERIC (education), etc. • Commercial full-text journal articles and digital libraries: Thomson Scientific Web of Science, ACM Digital Library, The IEEE Computer Society Digital Library, etc. • Free full-text articles and e-prints: Free Medical Journals, HighWire Press, arXiv.org service, etc. • Citation indexing systems and services: Thomson Science Citation Index, Google Scholar, CiteSeer, etc. • Electronic Theses and Dissertations (ETD): Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations (NDLTD), etc. • Patents: USPTO, EPO, JPO, etc. • Business and industry articles and reports: Forrester, IDC, and Gartner, etc. • Web sites, forums, blogs, social networking sites, etc.

  6. Units of Analysis and Representations • Authors or inventors • Publications and publication outlets • Institutions • Countries or regions • Subject and topic areas • Timeline

  7. Knowledge Mapping: Analysis Framework • Text Mining • Natural Language Processing: automatic indexing, information extraction • Content Analysis: clustering algorithms, self-organizing map (SOM), multi-dimensional scaling (MDS), principal component analysis (PCA), co-word analysis, PathFinder network (PFNET) • Network Analysis • Social Network Analysis: subgroup detection, discovery of pattern of interaction, roles of individuals • Complex Networks: network models, topological properties, evolving networks • Information Visualization • Information Representations: 1D, 2D 3D, multi-dimensional, tree, network, temporal • User-interface Interaction: overview + detail, focus + context

  8. Co-authorship Network (Krempel)

  9. SOM-based Cancer Map (Chen et al.)

  10. ThemeView (PNL)

  11. Galaxy visualization (PNL)

  12. Mapping Nanotechnology Innovations and Knowledge

  13. Nanotechnology Commercialization Timeline

  14. Worldwide Nanotechnology Market

  15. Nanotechnology • Nanotechnology • A fundamental technology. • Critical for a nation’s technological competence. • Revolutionizes a wide range of application domains. • In recent years, nanotechnology research experienced rapid growth: • (Huang et al., 2003) used patent publications from the USPTO for the longitudinal analysis of this field. • Many communities have an interest in assessing the R&D status of nanotechnology.

  16. Assessing Nanotechnology Research Status • Patent analysis • We developed a framework (Huang et al., 2003) to systematically assess nanotechnology’s research status using: • Bibliometric analysis, • Content map analysis, and • Citation network analysis. • Literature analysis • Bibliometric analysis is the major approach (Braun et al., 1997); other methods are seldom used in this kind of study. • There is a lack of research which conduct longitudinal analysis of nanotechnology's research status in recent years using scientific literature.

  17. USPTO, EPO, and JPO Patent Analysis(Nature Nanotechnology, 2008, forthcoming)

  18. Background and Research Objectives Research Objectives • Assess the nanotechnology development status represented by USPTO, EPO, and JPO patents. • Compare and contrast the differences in the nanotechnology patents in the three repositories.

  19. Research Design Research Design We developed a framework to assess the R&D status of a a science and engineering domain based on the patents in the three repositories: USPTO, EPO, and JPO. USPTO dataset Data acquisition Patent parsing Research status analysis USPTO database Number of patents Patent publication Collected by keywords EPO dataset Average number of cites Patent importance/ strength of a repository EPO database EPO+JPO patent Collected by keywords Topic coverage Content map JPO patent JPO dataset Knowledge diffusion Citation Network Patent status JPO database Patent statuschecking

  20. Dataset Data: USPTO Patents • Comparing with "full-text" search and "title-claims" search, “title-abstract” search provides fewer search results but with higher accuracy. • From “title-abstract” search: • 5,363 unique patents were collected. • Submitted by 2,196 assignee institutions, 8,405 inventors, and 46 countries.

  21. Dataset Data: USPTO Patents (cont.) • Top 20 nanotechnology patent assignees (with average patent age) and countries based on “title-abstract” search of patents published from 1976 to 2004

  22. Dataset Data: EPO Patents (cont.) • Top 20 nanotechnology patent assignees (with average patent age) and countries based on “title-abstract” search of patents published from 1978 to 2004

  23. Dataset Data: JPO Patents (cont.) • Top 20 nanotechnology patent assignees based on “title-abstract” search of patents published from 1976 to 2004

  24. Dataset Data: USPTO, EPO, and JPO Patents • The numbers of nanotechnology patents published in USPTO, EPO and JPO by year (log scale)

  25. Basic Bibliographic Analysis Basic Analysis- USPTO Patents by Country • Top 20 nanotechnology patent assignee countries in USPTO (“title-abstract” search) and their patents by year, 1976-2004 (log scale)

  26. Basic Bibliographic Analysis Basic Analysis- EPO Patents by Country • Top 20 nanotechnology patent assignee countries in EPO (“title-abstract” search) and their patents by year, 1978-2004 (log scale)

  27. Basic Bibliographic Analysis Basic Analysis- USPTO Patents by Country Group • Assignee country group analysis by year, 1976-2004 (“title-abstract” search) (log scale)

  28. Basic Bibliographic Analysis Basic Analysis- EPO Patents by Country Group • Assignee country group analysis by year, 1978-2004 (“title-abstract” search) (log scale)

  29. Content Map Analysis Content Map Analysis (USPTO) • USPTO Content Map (1976-1989) (“title-abstract” search)

  30. Content Map Analysis Content Map Analysis (USPTO) 4.18 5.39 6.036.51 6.93 7.33 7.75 8.23 8.869.3210.07 NEW REGION -0.800.41 1.051.53 1.95 2.35 2.77 3.25 3.88 4.34 5.09 NEW REGION • USPTO Content Map (1990-1999) (“title-abstract” search) • USPTO Content Map (2000-2004) (“title-abstract” search)

  31. Content Map Analysis Findings –Content Map (USPTO) • From 1976 to 1989, the major research topics of USPTO nanotechnology patents included: “carbon atoms,” “optical fibers,” and “thin films.” • From 1990 to 1999, several new research topics appeared from 1990 to 1999, including: “aqueous solutions,” “composite materials,” “laser beams,” “nucleic acids,” “optical waveguide,” “organic colvents,” “reverse osmosis,” “self-assembled monolayer,” “semiconductor substrate,” “silicon carbide,” and “substrate surfaces.” • From 2000 to 2004, the numbers of patents related to several topics had increased significantly, such as “aqueous solutions,” “composite materials,” “carbon nanotubes,” “nucleic acids,” “self-assembled monolayer,” and “thin films.” Some new topics also became major research topics in this time period, such as “atomic force microscope,” “clay materials,” “dielectric layers,” “nanocomposite materials,” “naphtha stream,” “polymeric materials,” and “semiconductor devices.”

  32. Citation Network Analysis Citation Network Analysis- USPTO Countries

  33. Citation Network Analysis Citation Network Analysis- EPO Countries

  34. Citation Network Analysis Findings – Country Citation Network • In the USPTO dataset, the United States is the most significant citation center on the network. Japan, Republic of Korea, the United Kingdom, China (Taiwan) and Germany are the secondary citation centers and constructed a cluster with close citations. • In the EPO dataset, the United States, France, Japan, Germany, and the United Kingdom are large citation centers and construct a citation cluster on the network. • In both repositories, the countries have close citation relationships. In EPO most assignee countries have more than one citing/cited country. In USPTO several countries only have citation relationship with the United States. Many of the countries that only had citations with the United States were relatively new in the nanotechnology domain.

  35. Thomson SCI Literature Analysis

  36. Research Methodology Documents Topic Similarity Visualization Topics Topic Relation Analysis Keyword Extraction Arizona NounPhraser SOM Algorithm Research Methodology (cont.) • Use content maps to study the active research topics and their relations in different time spans. • Technology topics are extracted from the papers’ abstracts using the Arizona Noun Phraser (Tolle and Chen, 2000). The topics are organized by the multi-level self-organization map algorithm (Chen et al., 1996; Ong et al., 2005), which positions similar topics closer together according to their co-occurrence patterns.

  37. Research Methodology Country Citation Network Documents Topological Analysis Visualization Paper Citation Relationships Institution Citation Network Citation Aggregation CitationExtraction Core Network Extraction Research Methodology (cont.) • Use citation network analysis to study knowledge spillover patterns between countries/regions and between institutions. • Using network topological measures to infer the global characteristics of knowledge spillover in the nanotechnology field (Li et al., forthcoming). • Visualize the core citation network and identify the important patterns in the network: • citations.

  38. Dataset Data: Thomson SCI Nanotechnology Papers, 1976-2004 • Paper collections • 213,847 papers • 120,687 first authors • 24,468 institutions • 4,175 journals/conferences • 156 countries/regions • The identifiers of the papers that cited or were cited by the nanotechnology papers are also retrieved.

  39. I. Bibliographic Analysis Bibliographic Analysis

  40. I. Bibliographic Analysis Papers by Country/Region • Top 20 countries/regions based on number of papers published from 1976 to 2004 (log scale)

  41. I. Bibliographic Analysis Papers by Country/Region (cont.) • Top countries/regions (without USA) based on number of papers published from 1976 to 2004 (normal scale)

  42. I. Bibliographic Analysis Papers by Institution • Top 20 institutions based on number of papers published from 1976 to 2004 (normal scale)

  43. Dataset Data: Productive Countries • Top 20 countries/regions based on number of papers published from 1976 to 2004

  44. Dataset Data: Productive Institutions • Top 20 institutions based on number of papers published from 1976 to 2004

  45. II.Content Map Analysis Content Map (1990-1999)

  46. II.Content Map Analysis Findings • Nanotechnology papers published between 1990 and 1999 covered the topics related to • Tools • E.g., “Scanning Tunneling Microscope,” “Transmission Electron Microscopy,” “Atomic Force Microscope,” and so forth. • Physical phenomena • E.g., “Quantum Dots,” “Single Crystals,” “Self-Assembled Monolayers,” “Nanomolar Concentrations,” “Porous Silicon,” “Surface Morphologies,” and so forth. • Experiment environments • E.g., “Electric Fields,” “Room Temperatures,” “X-Ray Diffraction,” “Temperature Dependences,” “Activation Energies,” and so forth.

  47. II.Content Map Analysis Content Map (2000-2004) -1.51-0.300.330.811.23 1.632.05 2.53 3.163.624.37 NEW REGION

  48. II.Content Map Analysis Findings • Nanotechnology papers published between 2000 and 2004 also covered the topics related to tools (e.g., “Scanning Tunneling Microscopy,” “Transmission Electron Microscopy,” “Atomic Force Microscope”), physical phenomena (e.g., “Quantum Dots,” “Self-Assembled Monolayers”), and experiment environments (e.g., “Aqueous Solution,” “X-Ray Diffraction”). • The topics on experiment environments became less active compared with the other two kinds of topics. • There were some new topics like: “X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy,” “Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes,” “Carbon Nanotubes,” “Monte Carlo Simulations,” and “Chemical Vapor Deposition.”

  49. III.Citation Network Analysis Country Citation Network (1976-2004) • The country citation network (1976-2004) consists of • 66 countries, • 348 inter-country citation relations, and • 9 self-citation relations. • The country citation network contains one component. • Different countries’ knowledge influences each other directly or indirectly. • Much larger clustering coefficient (0.693) than the random network (0.162). • Some countries tend to form communities from thepaper citation perspective.

  50. III.Citation Network Analysis Country Citation Network (1976-2004)

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