Objectives, Characteristics and Outcomes of University Licensing: A Survey of Major U.S. Universities

The Journal of Technology Transfer - Tập 26 - Trang 59-72 - 2001
Jerry G. Thursby1, Richard Jensen2, Marie C. Thursby1
1Department of Economics, Krannert Building, Purdue University, W. Lafayette
2Department of Economics, University of Notre Dame, South Bend

Tóm tắt

This paper describes results of our survey of licensing at 62 research universities. We consider ownership, income splits, stage of development, marketing, license policies and characteristics, goals of licensing and the role of the inventor in licensing. Based on these results we analyze the relationship between licensing outcomes and both the objectives of the TTO and the characteristics of the technologies. Patent applications grow one-to-one with disclosures, while sponsored research grows similarly with licenses executed. Royalties are typically larger the higher the quality of the faculty and the higher the fraction of licenses that are executed at latter stages of development. Sponsored research is more likely to be included in a license if the new technology is at an early stage of development or if the TTO evaluates it as important. We find that additional disclosures generate smaller percentage increases in licenses, and those increases in licenses generate smaller percentage increases in royalties.

Tài liệu tham khảo

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