26 february 2003 copenhagen patent information at the desktop: supporting research innovation in...
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26 February 2003 Copenhagen
Patent Information at the Desktop:
Supporting Research Innovation in Denmark
Jeff ClovisDirector, Global Sales Support
Thomson Scientific
Presentation Agenda
• The importance of patent literature
• Purpose and key uses of patents
• Benefits for researchers and students
• Growth of patents in Academic settings (US and Canadian examples)
• Denmark’s challenge
• Key proposals and initiatives from “Industry Policy in Denmark: New trends in industrial property rights” (Danish Ministry of Trade and Industry)
• The needs of researchers and students (non-patent experts)
• Derwent Innovations Index: helping to meet those challenges
Purpose of patents• Protect ownership rights
• Affords the inventor exclusive rights to invention for a set period of time
• Provide incentive for industries to devote resources to new technologies
• “To focus attention on the strategic importance of IPR for innovation and the commercial development of many Danish companies”
• Enhance the knowledge base of the public
• Legal agreement requires full disclosure of the complete details of the invention
Key uses of patents: what the experts do• Part of business development/ legal activities
• Conduct prior art searching/ due diligence
• Avoid duplication of effort
• Measure company performance
• Identify acquisition prospects, monitor competitor activities
• Find new licensing opportunities
• Detect/ avoid infringement
• Yet in Denmark “it has not in the past been the practice to assess the value of the company’s rights… IPR is often not used as a strategic tool to enhance corporate competitiveness”
Key uses of patents: what researchers can do• Part of the research process
• Survey the current technological landscape
• Trace the development of technology to identify new research areas
• Find solutions to technical problems
• Inspire new ideas and new directions
Patents are part of the scientific publishing process along with journal articles and proceedings papers!
Duality of patent use
• As a legal/business document to protect ownership rights, measure business performance, produce revenue stream
• As a scientific paper to find complete details about an invention or gain an overview of a particular area
Patents are an overlooked source of valuable and unique scientific and technical information crucial to researchers!
What are the benefits for the researcher?• Find immediate technical solutions
• Patent gives full disclosure of all details of an invention: descriptions, drawings, diagrams, chemical structures, genetic sequences, etc.
• The patent literature is the largest single body of technical information available anywhere (over 20 million patents; 1 million new each year)
• Can be utilized immediately: public domain or licensing
What are the benefits for the researcher?• Keep up-to-date in your field
• 20,000 patents are published per week; 50% are new inventions
• Patents are often the first place research information is being reported (before journals, before conferences)
• Patents are often the only place research information is reported
• Patent applications are increasing dramatically, particularly in university settings, in bioscience fields, and in telecommunications
Growth of patents in academic settings• In the United States
• In 1980 the Bayh-Dole Act granted permission for universities to license and profit from federally sponsored research; it decreed that universities share royalties as personal income to the inventors.
• As a result, over 1600 patents are awarded to US universities annually, producing revenue in the billions.
• Academic success stories include Florida State University, which licensed its cancer drug (Taxol) to a pharmaceutical company, generating US$45 million in fiscal year 1998.
Patent licensing can mean significant revenue!
Growth of patents in academic settings• In Canada
• In 1954 the Public Servants Inventions Act established owners’ rights for inventions by public servants.
• Major research universities now have technology managers (IP Management Office).
• University of Toronto patent applications include one for “uses for genetic sequences related to Alzheimer’s Disease” by Peter H. St. George-Hyslop
Highly cited authors are now becoming inventors!
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The Value of Patent Information within Academia
Setting a Scene…
December 1966
Washington D.C., USA
133rd Meeting of the AAAS (American Association for the Advancement of Science)
… a symposium on “The Place of Information Retrieval and Scientific Communication in the Education of the Scientist”
One of the speakers – Dr. Eugene Garfield, ISI discussed the shocking neglect in the undergraduate education of engineers in the use of libraries.
Another Speaker…
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The Value of Patent Information within Academia
Dr. John Bardeen, Nobel prizewinner for physics
Dr. Bardeen stressed the absurd waste of valuable technological information available in U.S. patents. “Bardeen implied that
academic neglect of the patent literature, in contrast to journals and books, is an unjustifiable form of snobbism.”
-- twice.
His topic: “How can patent literature be made more useful?”
Science, v156, n3780, 1967
It was, and is a challenge to get those performing basic research within academia to routinely consult patent literature as a source
for scientific information.
13
The Value of Patent Information within Academia
'When we spliced the profit gene into academic culture, we created a new organism -- the recombinant university. We reprogrammed the incentives that guide science. The rule in academe used to be "publish or
perish." Now bioscientists have an alternative -- "patent and profit." '
Paul Berg, Stanfordin a 13aug01 San Francisco Chronicle
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The Value of Patent Information within Academia
“Whether or not one’s own research is of a ‘patentable’ variety, patent literature may
certainly hold information that is beneficial to the progress of that research.”
Need for patent information in academic settings• Academic authors are becoming inventors
• Patents are now a fundamental part of the scientific publication process along with journal articles and conference papers.
• The information in the patent literature cannot be overlooked during the research process.
• Institutions of higher learning are partnering with the corporate research community – business incubators for technology transfer.
Patent information sources must be promoted at the desktop at the university level to ensure that Denmark’s
future innovators have the competitive edge
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Denmark: World Share 1998-2002 by broad field areas
Rank Field Years Percent Papers World1 DENMARK Microbiology 98-02 1.75 1,412 80,516
2 DENMARK Ecology/Environment 98-02 1.75 1,608 91,906
3 DENMARK Biology & Biochemistry 98-02 1.70 4,614 271,103
4 DENMARK Plant & Animal Science 98-02 1.57 3,498 222,482
5 DENMARK Agricultural Sciences 98-02 1.56 1,312 83,993
6 DENMARK Immunology 98-02 1.46 928 63,617
7 DENMARK Space Science 98-02 1.45 652 44,873
8 DENMARK Geosciences 98-02 1.34 1,365 102,106
9 DENMARK Clinical Medicine 98-02 1.22 10,545 864,366
10 DENMARK Economics & Business 98-02 1.12 560 49,954
11 DENMARK Pharmacology 98-02 1.12 862 76,924
12 DENMARK Molecular Biol & Genetics 98-02 1.07 1,170 108,910
13 DENMARK Neurosciences & Behavior 98-02 0.99 1,388 140,510
14 DENMARK Physics 98-02 0.88 3,952 449,109
15 DENMARK Computer Sciences 98-02 0.77 335 43,358
16 DENMARK Chemistry 98-02 0.74 3,717 499,801
17 DENMARK Mathematics 98-02 0.70 457 65,054
18 DENMARK Engineering 98-02 0.65 1,732 268,056
19 DENMARK Social Sciences, general 98-02 0.59 759 129,395
20 DENMARK Psychology/Psychiatry 98-02 0.49 482 98,297
21 DENMARK Materials Science 98-02 0.41 568 136,923
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Danish Patents filed through the EPO and WIPO
• Total Patents with Denmark as the Priority Country
– 1998 586– 1999 649– 2000 696– 2001 790– 2002 725
• Total Listed with Denmark as one of the Designated States (where the inventor has designated that he/she will follow through to secure IPR in Denmark)
– 1998 97,139– 1999 107,883– 2000 120,690– 2001 142,019– 2002 128,149
Denmark: Proposals for research innovation
• “In a knowledge society, intellectual assets represent the very cornerstone of corporate competitiveness.”
• The needs of researchers and students (non-patent experts):
• “Enterprises will have to be made more conscious of the fact that already available patent information is a good source of new technical knowledge”
• “Graduates and researchers at institutions of higher education must be given this knowledge as part of their training; preferably, it should be a skill acquired through conducting their own research.”
Meeting the needs of Denmark’s researchers • Problem: “Patent information as a source of knowledge… [is not
widespread] because – to the non-specialist – patent literature can appear complex and difficult to understand”
• Solution: Derwent Innovations Index
• Easy-to-use interface based on Web of Science
• Enhanced title descriptions end frustration over cryptic invention titles
• Abstracts rewritten with an inventions USE, ADVANTAGE, and NOVELTY clearly indicated
• Part of the ISI Web of Knowledge integrating journal, proceedings, and patent information for R&D discovery
The importance of DII for the Academic Market• Comprehensive coverage of all major and minor patent issuing
authorities (40+ authorities inclusive of the EP and WIPO)
• Compared with internet services - free and pay-for-use
• Multidisciplinary Coverage of ALL technologies
• 70-80% is new information; currency and value
• Derwent Value Add
• Descriptive titles and abstracts – usable, retrievable information
• Derwent Classification that standardizes differences across patenting authorities
• Patent Family structure to view patenting throughout the world
• A Easy to Use Interface designed for 24/7 access at the desktop
Month 00, 0000
Descriptive Titles
•Author’s original patent title (free Internet services)
“Setting machine”
• Derwent Enhanced Descriptive Title
“Seedling setting machine - has transportation unit for using vacuum to suck withdrawn seedling into predetermined position”
A two part title is included that describes the nature of the invention and its novelty – ensures completeness and retrievability
Month 00, 0000
Value Added, Descriptive Abstracts
• Author’s original
The present invention relates to capsules encapsulating antibody-producing cells, and to the use of such capsules and encapsulated cells, respectively, for implantation in vivo for long term delivery or sustained delivery of antibodies of therapeutic interest.
• Derwent abstract
Capsule (A) comprises a core containing antibody-producing cells (B), surrounded by a porous wall that is permeable to antibodies (Ab) produced by the cells.
USE - Ab may bind to and block the receptors
essential for viral infection, or they bind to viruses or other circulating antigens. The capsules are implanted for treatment or prevention of disease, particularly cancer, autoimmune disease (including multiple sclerosis ….
ADVANTAGE - The capsules, from which no anti-idiotype response is elicited provide long-term or sustained release of Ab and after implantation do not cause an inflammatory response in the host…..
Month 00, 0000
Consistent Classification
• Original Patent (all free services)
Inconsistent application of IPC by examining authority (not applied consistently across different authorities
• Consistent application of manual codes – used across all 40+ patent issuing authorities (covers a total of 123+ countries with inclusion of the EPO and WIPO patent filings)
In many services – the free services especially - the classification schemes are applied inconsistently making retrieval of information less complete and more difficult.
Month 00, 0000
Value Added, Selected Images
Selected by Subject Specialists – Images that Best represent that technical innovation
Conclusion – Part One
• How Thomson ISI can work with Denmark’s institutions of higher learning to promote use of Derwent Innovations Index as part of a greater information literacy program designed to increase Danish innovation and corporate competitiveness in the world market.
• How Thomson ISI provides DII as part of an integrated information solution that allows the researcher to gain a complete view of the scientific landscape in any discipline
• Access is via the desktop on an easy-to-use familiar interface that continually is revised and upgraded to provide additional features and functionality – designed to assist the researcher!
36
ISI Web of Knowledgesm
ISI products are registered trademarks and service marks used under license
.
An incredible wealth of
content --
ISI-Derwent + Partners
= depth and
diversity
Engineered to work as single resource.
Uniquely Integrated like no other
platform.
What makes the
Web of Knowledge
so unique?
CrossSearch:
• 9,000+ International Journals
• 100,000+ meetings, symposia, and reports
• 11.3 million Patented Inventions
Our research interests involve the development of plant species that will
actually assist in the clean-up of polluted soils.
We can choose to explore our results
using the CrossSearch
results summary list as a base.
We can also filter results by specific
database.
This is especially helpful in identifying
particular information, such as patent data, within
the results list.
There is a wealth of scientific information
within Derwent Innovations Index patent records.
It should always be considered, never
overlooked.
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Easy to use interfaceFields that you are familiar with
Novice users can immediately use DII
Patent searchers have the ability to do detailed narrow searches
43
The Next Steps – mid-2003
• Development of a modular platform infrastructure
– Continue to refine and add new features across all resources
– Add new content and continue to interlink content sets and to provide new methods for managing and analyzing content
• Personalization
• Alerting – Subject, Citation and Chemical Structure
46
ISI Web of Knowledge version 2.0 – June 2003
Searches are created in a specific product, but then all
are listed here
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Concluding Remarks
• From the EPS Update, 2000.
On the Derwent Innovations Index“For those who need to trace the research-to-patent cycle … this
piece of connectivity provides a vital missing link.For science researchers who need to move back from the patent to
the underlying cited research (and vice versa) the benefit is the same.
Cited and Cited Patents linked to cited literature is a powerful combination”
The only way to gain a complete view of science – easily and effectively! Combining the highest impact journal literature with valuable proceedings literature and patents – the total scientific landscape at the click of a mouse. Easy to use yet powerful.
48
Thank you!
Live Demonstration
Question and Answer Session
Jeff ClovisDirector, Global Sales SupportThomson Scientific [email protected]