Mapping (USPTO) Patent Data using Overlays to Google Maps
Loet Leydesdorff, Lutz Bornmann

TL;DR
This paper presents a method to visualize US patent data on Google Maps, showing patent quantity and quality at the city level, aiding research in innovation and economic geography.
Contribution
It introduces a novel overlay technique for mapping patent data geographically, including quantitative analysis tools for research and policy applications.
Findings
Maps reveal patent distribution and significance across cities.
Case studies on RNA interference and nanotechnology demonstrate the method's utility.
Quantitative data supports statistical analysis of innovation patterns.
Abstract
A technique is developed using patent information available online (at the US Patent and Trademark Office) for the generation of Google Maps. The overlays indicate both the quantity and quality of patents at the city level. This information is relevant for research questions in technology analysis, innovation studies and evolutionary economics, as well as economic geography. The resulting maps can also be relevant for technological innovation policies and R&D management, because the US market can be considered the leading market for patenting and patent competition. In addition to the maps, the routines provide quantitative data about the patents for statistical analysis. The cities on the map are colored according to the results of significance tests. The overlays are explored for the Netherlands as a "national system of innovations," and further elaborated in two cases of emerging…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovation Diffusion and Forecasting · Innovation and Knowledge Management · Intellectual Property and Patents
