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ORGANIZATION SCIENCE
Vol. 18, No. 6, November-December 2007, pp. 938-954
DOI: 10.1287/orsc.1070.0289
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Small Worlds and Regional Innovation

Lee Fleming, Charles King, III, Adam I. Juda

Harvard Business School, Morgan Hall 485, Boston, Massachusetts 02163
Greylock McKinnon Associates, One Memorial Drive, Suite 1410, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, and Pleiades Consulting Group, Inc., P.O. Box 711, Lincoln, Massachusetts 01773
Google, Inc., 76 Ninth Avenue, 4th Floor, New York, New York 10011

lfleming{at}hbs.edu
cking{at}gma-us.com
juda{at}goggle.com

Small-world networks have attracted much theoretical attention and are widely thought to enhance creativity. Yet empirical studies of their evolution and evidence of their benefits remain scarce. We develop and exploit a novel database on patent coauthorship to investigate the effects of collaboration networks on innovation. Our analysis reveals the existence of regional small-world structures and the emergence and disappearance of giant components in patent collaboration networks. Using statistical models, we test and fail to find evidence that small-world structure (cohesive clusters connected by occasional nonlocal ties) enhances innovative productivity within geographic regions. We do find that both shorter path lengths and larger connected components correlate with increased innovation. We discuss the implications of our findings for future social network research and theory as well as regional innovation policies.

Key Words: small-world networks; innovation; regional advantage



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A. K. Gupta, P. E. Tesluk, and M. S. Taylor
Innovation At and Across Multiple Levels of Analysis
Organization Science, November 1, 2007; 18(6): 885 - 897.
[Abstract] [PDF]




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