Innovation beyond intention: harnessing exaptation for technological breakthroughs
Youwei He, Jeong-Dong Lee, Seungmin Lee

TL;DR
This paper explores how exaptation, the repurposing of existing technologies across domains, drives technological breakthroughs and enhances disruptiveness, despite a general decline in disruptive innovation.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of exaptation value, analyzes its increasing role in innovation, and examines its impact on technological disruptiveness over time.
Findings
Increasing cross-domain knowledge application in innovation.
Decline in overall innovation disruptiveness.
Exaptation enhances disruptive potential of technologies.
Abstract
The frameworks that explore scientific and technological evolution suggest that discoveries and inventions are intrinsic processes, while the wealth of knowledge accumulated over time enables researchers to make further advancements, echoing Newton's sentiment of "standing on the shoulders of giants." Despite the exponential growth in new scientific and technical knowledge, the consolidation-disruption (D) index suggests a concerning decline in the disruptiveness of papers and patents. "Exaptation" a concept borrowed from biological evolution, is now recognized as a pivotal yet often neglected mechanism in technological evolution. Significant technologies often do not emerge out of thin air but rather result from the application of existing technologies in other domains. For instance, bird feathers initially served as waterproofing and insulation before enabling flight, and microwave…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUniversity-Industry-Government Innovation Models · Technology Assessment and Management · Regional Development and Policy
