Globalization emergence in the European Patent Office (EPO) patent network
Maria Tsouchnika, Alex Smolyak, Panos Argyrakis, Shlomo Havlin

TL;DR
This study analyzes 35 years of EPO patent applicant collaborations, revealing a transition from geographically segregated groups to more interconnected, globalized networks, with Japan playing a key role in network cohesion.
Contribution
It identifies the three distinct regimes of network evolution and highlights the factors influencing giant component formation, including applicant size and geographic influence.
Findings
Giant component forms faster in later years, indicating globalization.
Large applicants and Japan significantly influence network cohesion.
Critical patents are mainly introduced by large-sized applicants.
Abstract
We studied the evolution of the European Patent Office (EPO) patents applicants' collaborations network, within a 35 years span of data (1978-2013). Focusing on the Giant Component (GC) formation process over many time-windows, distributed throughout the data timeline, we found that the features governing this phenomenon are indicative of emerging globalization in the applicants' collaborations. The timeline appears to be divided into three regimes, corresponding to three states of the network's evolution. In the early years state, the GC takes long to form and the instant of its creation is easily pinpointed, while it features geographically segregated groups of applicants with technologically similar activities. In contrast, in the late years state, the GC forms quickly, the exact point of its creation is harder to spot, the applicants' activities are more disparate technologically,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFirm Innovation and Growth · Innovation Policy and R&D · Innovation and Knowledge Management
