KING SKYFRONT, Japan publishes the March 2021 issue of Kawasaki SkyFront i-Newsletter
KAWASAKI, Japan, March 11, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- The March 2021 issue of Kawasaki SkyFront i-Newsletter includes a video interview with Professor Yoshimi Yashiro of the Center for Innovation Policy Research, Kanagawa University of Human Services, Japan, on "How society views regenerative medicine and stem cell research" and highlights of research being conducted by scientists affiliated with Kawasaki INnovation Gateway at SKYFRONT (KING SKYFRONT)—the City's flagship science and technology innovation hub focused on the life sciences and environment.
March 2021 issue of Kawasaki SkyFront iNewsletter
https://tonomachi-ksf.kawasaki-net.ne.jp/i-newsletter/en/
The KING SKYFRONT was launched by Kawasaki City in 2013 as a base for scholars, industrialists and government administrators to work together to devise real life solutions to global issues in the life sciences and environment.
KING SKYFRONT is a 40 hectare area located in the Tonomachi area of the Keihin Industrial Region that spans Tokyo and Kanagawa Prefecture and Tokyo International Airport (Haneda Airport) and an important initiative in establishing the Tonomachi area of Kawasaki City as Asia's Silicon Valley.
Contents of the 19th issue of Kawasaki SkyFront i-Newsletter
https://tonomachi-ksf.kawasaki-net.ne.jp/i-newsletter/en/
Research Highlight
Improving intellectual property creation and management in R&D
A case study of a Japanese funding program leads to suggestions for optimizing scientific and technological innovation
http://kawasaki.ccvdev.net/en/research_highlights/vol-20-research01/
Generating and managing intellectual property is an important aspect of research and development (R&D), traditionally carried out in industrial laboratories. At the same time, innovation is often achieved through collaboration between academia, industry and government. Optimal intellectual property management is then far from straightforward because of the different actors involved, all having different specialties and operating in different settings. Now, Shuto Miyashita and colleagues from the Kawasaki Institute of Industrial Promotion have done a case study of a publicly funded university–industry–government R&D collaboration, resulting in a suggested strategy for optimizing intellectual property management in such a context.
The researchers looked at the Funding Program for World-Leading Innovative R&D on Science and Technology (FIRST) that ran in Japan from 2009 to 2013. The FIRST program provided R&D funding for Japan's top-30 researchers, with a focus on innovations for international industrial competitiveness. To find out which factors promote or prevent the successful creation of intellectual property, the scientists first examined the patents that came out of the program. They mapped out collaborations between the inventors behind the patents from the best practice in terms of intellectual property creation (NanoBio First), resulting in a co-inventor network from which the key actors could be identified.
Miyashita and colleagues noted that one individual, 'Inventor 33', occupied a central position in the network. This person was chief science officer for a startup founded by the project leader; this startup played a very active role in the creation of intellectual property. The researchers interviewed project leader, from which it became clear that, for intellectual property management to be successful, project participants need to have the right business-oriented mindset. This can be obtained through on-the-job training. Of particular importance is the 'reciprocal mindset', supporting a model of innovation wherein the social implementation of a future technology is taken into account right from the start in the R&D cycle.
The scientists also addressed issues related to the 'information asymmetry' inherent to a knowledge consumer/producer setting: the consumer (industry and/or the funder) does not a priori have access to the knowledge developed by the producer (project participants). The first problem is that of adverse selection: the consumer may prefer producers that simply develop the largest numbers of patents —these knowledge producers tend not to have the reciprocal mindset. The second issue is that of moral hazard: producers may have a sloppy attitude towards patent application and prosecution, the risk of which mainly affects the knowledge consumer. Miyashita and colleagues found that the two problems can be tackled by cultivating the reciprocal mindset, by setting up a dedicated startup, and by providing researchers contracts that include sufficient R&D funding and incentives for the creation of intellectual property.
The work by the Kawasaki Institute of Industrial Promotion scientists provides valuable suggestions for improving intellectual property management. Still, as Miyashita and colleagues point out, their study has some limitations: it is based on a single case, it is not mathematically rigorous, and R&D outcomes possibly being trade secrets is not accounted for. In the words of the scientists: "An improved model will facilitate analyses of decision-making in more complex situations."
Reference
Miyashita, S. et al. Intellectual Property Management in Publicly Funded R&D Program and Projects: Optimizing Principal-Agent Relationship through Transdisciplinary Approach, Sustainability 2020, 12, 9923.
https://doi.org/10.3390/su12239923
Video Feature
Professor Yoshimi Yashiro
Center for Innovation Policy Research, Kanagawa University of Human Services, Japan
How society views regenerative medicine and stem cell research
https://tonomachi-ksf.kawasaki-net.ne.jp/i-newsletter/en/video_feature/vol-20-feature01/
Originally, my background was so-called stem cell research. Based on this, my current research is focused on how stem cell research is viewed by society. Currently, I am doing research on how society views regenerative medicine and stem cell research. Also, regenerative medicine and cell therapy is needed to be put into practical use and accelerate its practical use.
From this point of view, I am also conducting research on the cost of regenerative medicine and cell therapy by trying to understand its economic aspects. I am currently conducting research at the newly established Kanagawa University of Human Services in the Tonomachi district of Kanagawa.
Since Tonomachi has a large concentration of regenerative medicine and cell therapy companies, this is a good opportunity to let people in the Tonomachi area and others outside this town know the existence and name of the University.
So with this goal in mind, I give a special class on "regenerative medicine and cell therapy." I have asked professors with whom I have been in contact to give lectures on regenerative medicine and cell therapy to cover various topics, including basic research to clinical applications.
Please visit the website for more.
https://tonomachi-ksf.kawasaki-net.ne.jp/i-newsletter/en/video_feature/vol-20-feature01/
About KING SKYFRONT
The Kawasaki INnovation Gateway (KING) SKYFRONT is the flagship science and technology innovation hub of Kawasaki City. KING SKYFRONT is a 40 hectare area located in the Tonomachi area of the Keihin Industrial Region that spans Tokyo and Kanagawa Prefecture and Tokyo International Airport (also often referred to as Haneda Airport).
KING SKYFRONT was launched in 2013 as a base for scholars, industrialists and government administrators to work together to devise real life solutions to global issues in the life sciences and environment.
Further information
KING-SKYFRONT iNewsletter Publishing Team
TONOMACHI LifeScience Cluster Division, Kawasaki Institute of Industrial Promotion Life Science & Environment research center (LiSE) 1F,
3-25-10, Tonomachi, Kawasaki-ku, Kawasaki-shi,
Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan, 210-0821
Email: [email protected]
SOURCE KING SKYFRONT
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