TY - JOUR
T1 - The Open Innovation in Science research field
T2 - a collaborative conceptualisation approach
AU - Beck, Susanne
AU - Bergenholtz, Carsten
AU - Bogers, Marcel
AU - Brasseur, Tiare Maria
AU - Conradsen, Marie Louise
AU - Di Marco, Diletta
AU - Distel, Andreas P.
AU - Dobusch, Leonhard
AU - Dörler, Daniel
AU - Effert, Agnes
AU - Fecher, Benedikt
AU - Filiou, Despoina
AU - Frederiksen, Lars
AU - Gillier, Thomas
AU - Grimpe, Christoph
AU - Gruber, Marc
AU - Haeussler, Carolin
AU - Heigl, Florian
AU - Hoisl, Karin
AU - Hyslop, Katie
AU - Kokshagina, Olga
AU - LaFlamme, Marcel
AU - Lawson, Cornelia
AU - Lifshitz-Assaf, Hila
AU - Lukas, Wolfgang
AU - Nordberg, Markus
AU - Norn, Maria Theresa
AU - Poetz, Marion
AU - Ponti, Marisa
AU - Pruschak, Gernot
AU - Pujol Priego, Laia
AU - Radziwon, Agnieszka
AU - Rafner, Janet
AU - Romanova, Gergana
AU - Ruser, Alexander
AU - Sauermann, Henry
AU - Shah, Sonali K.
AU - Sherson, Jacob F.
AU - Suess-Reyes, Julia
AU - Tucci, Christopher L.
AU - Tuertscher, Philipp
AU - Vedel, Jane Bjørn
AU - Velden, Theresa
AU - Verganti, Roberto
AU - Wareham, Jonathan
AU - Wiggins, Andrea
AU - Xu, Sunny Mosangzi
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Openness and collaboration in scientific research are attracting increasing attention from scholars and practitioners alike. However, a common understanding of these phenomena is hindered by disciplinary boundaries and disconnected research streams. We link dispersed knowledge on Open Innovation, Open Science, and related concepts such as Responsible Research and Innovation by proposing a unifying Open Innovation in Science (OIS) Research Framework. This framework captures the antecedents, contingencies, and consequences of open and collaborative practices along the entire process of generating and disseminating scientific insights and translating them into innovation. Moreover, it elucidates individual-, team-, organisation-, field-, and society‐level factors shaping OIS practices. To conceptualise the framework, we employed a collaborative approach involving 47 scholars from multiple disciplines, highlighting both tensions and commonalities between existing approaches. The OIS Research Framework thus serves as a basis for future research, informs policy discussions, and provides guidance to scientists and practitioners.
AB - Openness and collaboration in scientific research are attracting increasing attention from scholars and practitioners alike. However, a common understanding of these phenomena is hindered by disciplinary boundaries and disconnected research streams. We link dispersed knowledge on Open Innovation, Open Science, and related concepts such as Responsible Research and Innovation by proposing a unifying Open Innovation in Science (OIS) Research Framework. This framework captures the antecedents, contingencies, and consequences of open and collaborative practices along the entire process of generating and disseminating scientific insights and translating them into innovation. Moreover, it elucidates individual-, team-, organisation-, field-, and society‐level factors shaping OIS practices. To conceptualise the framework, we employed a collaborative approach involving 47 scholars from multiple disciplines, highlighting both tensions and commonalities between existing approaches. The OIS Research Framework thus serves as a basis for future research, informs policy discussions, and provides guidance to scientists and practitioners.
KW - collaboration in science
KW - interdisciplinary research
KW - Open Innovation in Science
KW - Open Science
KW - openness
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85089035577&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13662716.2020.1792274
DO - 10.1080/13662716.2020.1792274
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85089035577
SN - 1366-2716
VL - 29
SP - 136
EP - 185
JO - Industry and Innovation
JF - Industry and Innovation
IS - 2
ER -