• 제목/요약/키워드: Lie model

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특허자료를 이용한 우리나라 대학 연구의 특성 분석 (Empirical Analysis of University Patenting in Korea)

  • 서중해
    • KDI Journal of Economic Policy
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    • 제32권4호
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    • pp.115-151
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    • 2010
  • 본 논문은 대학의 연구활동을 특허라는 창을 통하여 들여다보고자 하였다. 특허인용정보가 있는 미국 특허를 이용하여 우리나라의 대학 특허를 기업 특허와 대비시켜 대학 특허의 특성을 분석하였다. 일반적으로 기업 특허와 대학 특허는 전자는 전유성(appropriability) 측면에서 그리고 후자는 기초성(basicness) 측면에서 차이가 있는 것으로 본다. 그런데 기초성 측면에서 우리나라 대학 특허는 기업 특허와 크게 두드러진 차이를 보이지 않는 것으로 나타났다. 다음으로 특허인용함수모형을 이용하여 특허의 질 또는 수준을 기업과 대학 사이에 비교해 보았다. 기업 특허는 자체인용이 상당수 포함되어 있는데, 이를 감안하면 전방인용에 있어서는 대학 특허와 기업 특허는 큰 차이를 보이지 않는 것으로 나타났다. 자체인용 비중이 높을수록 특허의 전유성 정도가 높은 경향이 있다는 선행연구를 상기하면, 기업 특허의 전유성 정도가 높게 나오는 것을 확인할 수도 있었다. 미국과 유럽을 대상으로 한 선행연구에서는 대학 특허가 대체로 기업 특허와 비교하여 인용빈도 측면에서 뒤지지 않는 것으로 분석되고 있다. 외국의 대학 특허 분석결과와 본 논문의 우리나라 대학 특허 분석결과를 대비시키면, 우리나라 대학 특허는 전반적인 수준이나 영향력 측면에서는 기업 특허에 미치지 못하며, 이는 우리나라대학의 특허활동이 최근에야 활성화된 데 기인한 것으로 추론된다. 이러한 분석 결과는 향후 대학의 연구수준을 제고하기 위한 노력을 보다 체계화해야 한다는 것을 시사하며, 최근 진행되고 있는 정부의 기초연구 정책방향 전환이나 대학 내의 자체적인 개혁 움직임을 간접적으로 지지한다. 정부의 정책 전환과 함께 학내의 개선 노력이 합치되면 향후 우리나라 대학의 특허인용도 및 영향력이 훨씬 높아지게 될 것으로 기대할 수 있다.

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신기술 사용 과정에 관한 비교 사례 연구: 기술 전유 과정의 근거이론적 접근 (A Comparative Case Study on the Adaptation Process of Advanced Information Technology: A Grounded Theory Approach for the Appropriation Process)

  • 최희재;이준기
    • Asia pacific journal of information systems
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    • 제19권3호
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    • pp.99-124
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    • 2009
  • Many firms in Korea have adopted and used advanced information technology in an effort to boost efficiency. The process of adapting to the new technology, at the same time, can vary from one firm to another. As such, this research focuses on several relevant factors, especially the roles of social interaction as a key variable that influences the technology adaptation process and the outcomes. Thus far, how a firm goes through the adaptation process to the new technology has not been yet fully explored. Previous studies on changes undergone by a firm or an organization due to information technology have been pursued from various theoretical points of views, evolved from technological and institutional views to an integrated social technology views. The technology adaptation process has been understood to be something that evolves over time and has been regarded as cycles between misalignments and alignments, gradually approaching the stable aligned state. The adaptation process of the new technology was defined as "appropriation" process according to Poole and DeSanctis (1994). They suggested that this process is not automatically determined by the technology design itself. Rather, people actively select how technology structures should be used; accordingly, adoption practices vary. But concepts of the appropriation process in these studies are not accurate while suggested propositions are not clear enough to apply in practice. Furthermore, these studies do not substantially suggest which factors are changed during the appropriation process and what should be done to bring about effective outcomes. Therefore, research objectives of this study lie in finding causes for the difference in ways in which advanced information technology has been used and adopted among organizations. The study also aims to explore how a firm's interaction with social as well as technological factors affects differently in resulting organizational changes. Detail objectives of this study are as follows. First, this paper primarily focuses on the appropriation process of advanced information technology in the long run, and we look into reasons for the diverse types of the usage. Second, this study is to categorize each phases in the appropriation process and make clear what changes occur and how they are evolved during each phase. Third, this study is to suggest the guidelines to determine which strategies are needed in an individual, group and organizational level. For this, a substantially grounded theory that can be applied to organizational practice has been developed from a longitudinal comparative case study. For these objectives, the technology appropriation process was explored based on Structuration Theory by Giddens (1984), Orlikoski and Robey (1991) and Adaptive Structuration Theory by Poole and DeSanctis (1994), which are examples of social technology views on organizational change by technology. Data have been obtained from interviews, observations of medical treatment task, and questionnaires administered to group members who use the technology. Data coding was executed in three steps following the grounded theory approach. First of all, concepts and categories were developed from interviews and observation data in open coding. Next, in axial coding, we related categories to subcategorize along the lines of their properties and dimensions through the paradigm model. Finally, the grounded theory about the appropriation process was developed through the conditional/consequential matrix in selective coding. In this study eight hypotheses about the adaptation process have been clearly articulated. Also, we found that the appropriation process involves through three phases, namely, "direct appropriation," "cooperate with related structures," and "interpret and make judgments." The higher phases of appropriation move, the more users represent various types of instrumental use and attitude. Moreover, the previous structures like "knowledge and experience," "belief that other members know and accept the use of technology," "horizontal communication," and "embodiment of opinion collection process" are evolved to higher degrees in their dimensions of property. Furthermore, users continuously create new spirits and structures, while removing some of the previous ones at the same time. Thus, from longitudinal view, faithful and unfaithful appropriation methods appear recursively, but gradually faithful appropriation takes over the other. In other words, the concept of spirits and structures has been changed in the adaptation process over time for the purpose of alignment between the task and other structures. These findings call for a revised or extended model of structural adaptation in IS (Information Systems) literature now that the vague adaptation process in previous studies has been clarified through the in-depth qualitative study, identifying each phrase with accuracy. In addition, based on these results some guidelines can be set up to help determine which strategies are needed in an individual, group, and organizational level for the purpose of effective technology appropriation. In practice, managers can focus on the changes of spirits and elevation of the structural dimension to achieve effective technology use.