TIME Kolloquium
Max-Planck-Institut für Innovation und Wettbewerb, München, Raum 313
Institutsseminar: Private Enforcement of Competition Law - a Comparative Study of EU, German and Chinese Law
Yukun Xiao (auf Einladung)
Moderation: Jörg Hoffmann
Max-Planck-Institut für Innovation und Wettbewerb, München, Raum E10
Brown Bag-Seminar: Informal Intellectual Collaboration with Central Colleagues
Michael Rose (University of Cape Town)
Max-Planck-Institut für Innovation und Wettbewerb, München, Raum 101
When preparing a research article, academics engage in informal intellectual collaboration by asking other academics for feedback, which gives rise to a social network. We study whether informal intellectual collaboration with an academic who is more central in this social network results in a research article having higher scientific impact. To identify the effect of centrality changes of the most central commenter acknowledged on an article, we exploit deaths of scholars occurring somewhere in the network. We show that citation count increases by 1 citation if the most central commenter on the average article increases her Bonacich centrality by 2%. The effect is mediated by a decay in importance of more distance connections and robust to different network definitions.
To illustrate our results, we develop a structural model in which a positive externality from intellectual collaboration implies that collaborating with a more central colleague results in larger scientific impact of the research article.
Ansprechpartner: Dr. Fabian Gaessler
Institutsseminar: Balance bei der Überarbeitung der Durchsetzungsrichtlinie
18:00 - 19:30 Uhr, Peter Slowinski
Moderation: Michael Neumann
Max-Planck-Institut für Innovation und Wettbewerb, München, Raum 101
Brown Bag-Seminar: Venture Capital Research: Review and Mixed Methods Directions
Ludvig Levasseur (PSL-Université Paris-Dauphine)
Max-Planck-Institut für Innovation und Wettbewerb, München, Raum 313
In this paper, we begin with a review of the venture capital (VC) literature. We then briefly present mixed methods research, which combines quantitative and qualitative data and exploratory and confirmatory analysis in one study, and an illustrative study on VC learning. We then suggest mixed methods-related directions for future VC research, addressing gaps in the relational, learning, and related aspects under research stream, and presenting a cross-disciplinary mixed methods-related approach. Lastly, we provide a short critical discussion on both methods and research practices. In doing so, we hope to stimulate entrepreneurship scholars’ interest in these underutilized methods.
Ansprechpartner: Dr. Fabian Gaessler
Kartellrechtsvortrag: Verbraucherschutz und Kartellrecht
19:00 - 21:00 Uhr, Prof. Dr. Carsten Becker (Bundeskartellamt), Prof. Dr. Rupprecht Podszun (Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf)
Zum Thema “Verbraucherschutz und Kartellrecht” sprechen aus der Perspektive des Bundeskartellamtes und der Wissenschaft Professor Dr. Carsten Becker, Bundeskartellamt, Vorsitzender der Beschlussabteilung Verbraucherschutz und Professor Dr. Rupprecht Podszun, Heinrich-Heine-Universität, Düsseldorf.
Priorität und Prioritätsrecht
18:00 - 19:30 Uhr, Prof. Dr. Louis Pahlow (Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main)
Die Spruchpraxis des EPA, die Rechtsprechung der Mitgliedsstaaten und das anwendbare Recht
Priorität und Prioritätsrecht gehören seit über einhundert Jahren zu den elementaren Bestandteilen des Patentschutzes. Dennoch bestehen sowohl innerhalb der Spruchpraxis des EPA wie auch der Rechtsprechung der Mitgliedsstaaten divergierende Auffassungen über die rechtliche Einordnung des Prioritätsrechts, aus denen erhebliche Rechtsunsicherheiten für die Praxis resultieren können. Der Vortrag setzt sich kritisch mit diesen Entscheidungen auseinander, fragt nach den Konsequenzen für das anwendbare Recht im grenzüberschreitenden Erfinderverkehr und spricht sich am Beispiel der Übertragung von Prioritätsrechten für eine stärkere Berücksichtigung des Vertragsstatuts aus.
Zur Erleichterung unserer Vorbereitungen bitten wir um Anmeldung bis Mittwoch, den 29. November 2017 per E-Mail an elisabeth.amler(at)ip.mpg.de
Brown Bag-Seminar: How Firms Frame Catastrophic Failures
Sen Chai (ESSEC Business School)
Max-Planck-Institut für Innovation und Wettbewerb, München, Raum 313
We explore how firms frame catastrophic innovation failure for external audiences. Failure events may lead external audiences to doubt the firm’s ultimate chances of success. Because it is difficult for those audiences to ascertain whether the failure occurred due to the uncertainty inherent to innovation (experimentation uncertainty) or due to managerial or organizational shortcomings (execution uncertainty), a firm’s own framing of the failure may critically influence external audiences’ interpretations. We analyze three cases of catastrophic innovation failure at two firms in the private space industry - SpaceX and Virgin Galactic—using market-facing communications, including social media, blogs, corporate websites, press releases, and news articles. We find that firms frame catastrophic innovation failure considering
(1) the extent to which they incorporated the notion of failure into their external narrative prior to the failure, and
(2) the nature of the catastrophic event itself. We identify a tension inherent to the crafting of organizational narratives for innovating firms, between promising success (which elicits external audiences’ support) and acknowledging the possibility of failure (which may deter them). Our findings indicate a need for innovating firms to weave a sense of ‘optimal promise’ into their external narratives, balancing the zeal of success with the possibility of failure.
Ansprechpartner: Zhaoxin Pu
Brown Bag-Seminar: Career Effects of Mental Health
Michael Dahl (Aarhus University)
Max-Planck-Institut für Innovation und Wettbewerb, München, Raum 313
This paper investigates how a major mental disorder - bipolar disorder - affects people’s careers. Individual-level registry data for the population of Denmark allows us examine variation in mental health diagnoses, prescriptions, and earnings for 2.5 million people born between 1946 and 1975. These data show that people with bipolar disorder earn 32 percent less than the overall population and 36 percent less than their siblings. To examine the effects of mental health treatments, we exploit the introduction of lithium as a targeted treatment for bipolar disorder in 1976. Baseline difference-in-differences regressions compare career penalties of mental disorder for people who had access to treatment when they turned 20 with people who did not have access. OLS estimates indicate that access to treatment led to a 30 percent reduction in the earnings penalty (from 32 to 22 percent). A major policy concern is that mental health disorders – and differential access to treatment – may exacerbate inequality. To investigate this issue, we estimate differential effects of bipolar disorder and access to treatment across the earnings distribution. This analysis reveals a dramatic differential effect of mental health – and treatments – on low end of the earnings distribution. In the lowest 10 percent of the earnings distribution, people with bipolar disorder earn 82 percent less than the overall population. Access to treatment closes this gap almost completely, by 89 percent (from 82 to 73 percent).
Ansprechpartner: Zhaoxin Pu
Institutsseminar: Der gutgläubige Erwerb geistigen Eigentums
18:00 Uhr, Mathias Menzel (auf Einladung)
Moderation: Moritz Suttner
Max-Planck-Institut für Innovation und Wettbewerb, Raum E 10