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The Decision to Patent with Vertical Product Differentiation.- An Empirical Investigation of the Decision to Patent with Vertical Product Differentiation.- The Decision to Patent with Horizontal Product Differentiation.- An Empirical Investigation of the Decision to Patent with Horizontal Product Differentiation.- Summary and Discussion.
This book provides a thorough analysis of the decision to apply for a patent. Unlike many other theoretical approaches, the negative effect a patent may have due to the disclosure requirement linked to every patent application is taken into account. Seen in this light, the effects driving the propensity to patent can be identified as the opposing forces of a protective and a disclosure effect.The theoretical investigation includes an analysis of patenting behavior in a setting with vertically and horizontally differentiated products. Due to imperfect patent protection competitors of the patentee may enter the market for the innovative product despite a patent. An empirical investigation of the theoretical results with data from the 2005 Mannheim Innovation Panel in combination with patent information from the European Patent Office provides strong evidence for the main conclusions.
Disentangles the counter effects underlying the decision to patentThe widely ignored effect of the disclosure requirement on the patenting decision is taken into accountIntroduces the patenting decision into commonly known models of horizontal and vertical product differentiationAll theoretical analyzes are accompanied by an empirical investigation of the resultsGBCopyright © 2018 - 2024 ShopSpell