Mapping spatial and temporal changes of global corporate research and development activities by conducting a bibliometric analysis
Gyorgy Csomos

TL;DR
This study uses bibliometric analysis to map global corporate R&D centers from 1980 to 2014, revealing shifts towards emerging cities driven by industry growth, especially in tech and pharma sectors.
Contribution
It identifies and compares the evolution of global corporate R&D hubs over decades, highlighting emerging centers and industry influences using scientific publication data.
Findings
Tokyo, New York, London, Paris led in total publications (1980-2014).
Rapid growth in R&D output in Boston, San Jose, Beijing, Seoul.
Major R&D hubs are concentrated in pharma and IT industries.
Abstract
Corporate research and development (R&D) activities have long been highly concentrated in a handful of world cities. This is due to the fact that these cities (e.g., Tokyo, New York, London, and Paris) are home to the largest and most powerful transnational corporations and are globally important sites for innovative start-up firms that operate in the fastest growing industries. However, in tandem with the rapid technological changes of our age, corporate R&D activities have shifted towards newly emerging and now globally significant R&D centres, like San Jose, San Francisco, and Boston in the United States, and Beijing, Seoul, and Shenzhen in East Asia. In this paper, I will conduct a bibliometric analysis to define which cities are centres of corporate R&D activities, how different industries influence their performance, and what spatial tendencies characterise the period from 1980 to…
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