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News & Events

Seminars Information

2017.9.11[Mon]

The 85th GIST Seminar “Star Scientists: their Roles in Knowledge Transfer and Entrepreneurship”

GRIPS Innovation, Science and Technology Policy Program (GIST) will hold the 85th GIST Seminar, inviting Prof. Lynne G. Zucker(Professor in the Departments of Sociology and Policy Studies, UCLA) and Prof. Michael R. Darby(Professor, UCLA Anderson School of Management, Warren C. Cordner Chair in Money and Financial Market).

 

 

Please register at this registration form by September 8th at 5 p.m.  

 

If you cannot open the form, please send email to GIST Secretariat, gist-mlhttp://gist.grips.ac.jp/img/at.gifgrips.ac.jp Registration email must include:

 

1) your name, 2) institution, 3) position, and 4) e-mail address. 

 

The application will be closed as soon as the number of applicants reaches the capacity.

 

In the field of Economics of Science, Zucker and Darby have pointed out the existence of “star scientists.” The term “star scientists” refers to the selected few scientists who can produce excellent results. They publish more articles than typical scientists. Their articles are cited more often than typical scientists. They apply for more patents than typical scientists. Star scientists also tend to found start-ups more often than typical scientists. Their start-ups can perform better than others. Linkage between star scientists and companies are observed not only in the U.S. but also partially in Japan in the 80s.
In this seminar we invite Professor Lynne Zucker and Michael Darby who established a series of star scientists’ studies. They will talk about a history of their research, including star scientists’ studies, and a future prospects of this field of research.

 

Program

Moderator: Professor Koichi Sumikura, GRIPS; Assistant Professor Kanetaka Maki, GRIPS

13:20-13:50           Lecture by Professor Lynne Zucker, UCLA

13:50-14:20           Lecture by Professor Michael Darby, UCLA

14:20-14:45           Q&A, Discussion

14:45-14:50           Wrap-up and Closing

 

Speaker’s Biography

Prof. Lynne G. Zucker

My training is in organizational sociology, institutional theory, economic sociology, and social psychology. My current major interests are on processes and impact of knowledge transmission from basic science to commercial use, especially impact on economic performance of firms, creation of new organizational populations (some of which become new industries), and on productivity growth. I share with Michael Darby an interest in identifying the major mechanisms of knowledge transfer and the institutional infrastructure that cause metamorphic industry change and rapid economic growth. Within the context of basic scientific breakthroughs that are commercially applicable, we are exploring other measures of success such as IPO returns and examining the impact of other means of knowledge transfer such as joint ventures. We are now studying many of  the same processes in nanoscience, a newly emerging basic research area with significant commercial potential. To identify institutional infrastructure effects, we are completing a comparative study of biotech in Japan and the U.S. and embarking on a set of major international analyses of the transmission of scientific breakthroughs to commercial use in nanotechnology.

http://www.sociology.ucla.edu/sites/default/files/Zucker.pdf.

 

Prof. Michael R. Darby

A recognized authority in macroeconomics and international finance, Michael Darby has achieved great success in both the academic and public sectors. From 1986 to 1992, Darby served in a number of senior positions in the Reagan and Bush administrations including Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy, Member of the National Commission on Superconductivity, Under Secretary of Commerce for Economic Affairs, and Administrator of the Economics and Statistics Administration. During his appointment, he received the Treasury’s highest honor, the Alexander Hamilton Award.
Dr. Darby is the widely-cited author of eleven books and monographs and numerous other professional publications. His most recent research has examined the growth of the biotechnology and nanotechnologies industry in the United States and in California, all science and engineering fields and high-technology industries in the world, and the role that universities and their faculties play in encouraging local economic development. Concurrently he holds appointments as chairman of The Dumbarton Group, research associate with the National Bureau of Economic Research, and adjunct scholar with the American Enterprise Institute. He is also director of UCLA’s John M. Olin Center for Public Policy, a position he has held since 1993. Previous to his Anderson School appointment in 1987, Darby held faculty positions or fellowships with UCLA’s department of economics, Stanford University, and Ohio State University. From his schooling to 1982, he also was vice president and director of Paragon Industries, Inc., a Dallas manufacturer of high-temperature kilns, furnaces, and refractories.

http://luskin.ucla.edu/person/michael-darby/
http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/faculty-and-research/strategy/faculty/darby

 

Related Events

Please visit following URL to find more seminars by Prof. Zucker and Darby in the afternoon on the same day at GRIPS: http://www3.grips.ac.jp/~sumikura-mostip/GRIPS_conference_20170911.pdf

If you are interested in, please register from here (https://krs.bz/scirex/m?f=116).

 

Date / Time September 11, 2017 13:20-14:50 *Doors open at 13:00
SpeakerProf. Lynne G. Zucker, Prof. Michael R. Darby
TitleStar Scientists: their Roles in Knowledge Transfer and Entrepreneurship
Venue National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS), Room 4A
Fee Free (Pre-registration required)
Language English
Entry

7-22-1 Roppongi, Minato-ku, Tokyo 106-8677

TEL : +81-(0)3-6439-6000     
FAX : +81-(0)3-6439-6010

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