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143,642 result(s) for "Innovation system"
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Prescription for excellence : leadership lessons for creating a world-class customer experience from UCLA Health System
Provides a business model based on the UCLA Health System and explains how other businesses can use the same system to provide excellent customer experiences and dominate their industry.
Enhancing agricultural innovation : how to go beyond the strengthening of research systems
An innovation system can be defined as a network of organizations, enterprises, and individuals demanding and supplying knowledge and bringing it into a social and economic use. This book's primary aim is to focus on the largely unexplored operational aspects of the innvoation systems concept and to explore its potential for agriculture.
Scaling Innovation Hubs: Impact on Knowledge, Innovation and Entrepreneurial Ecosystems in Tanzania
This study has explored the impact of innovation hubs on knowledge, innovation and entrepreneurial ecosystems. To gain deeper insights, the study adopted an exploratory case study design along a qualitative approach to conduct an empirical investigation. The study reveals a noticeable contribution of the X-Innovation Hub in empowering youths in aspects of knowledge co-creation and transfer, and promotion of diverse innovations. The findings of the study also disclose that the contribution of the innovation hub in transforming innovations into entrepreneurial opportunities is still unsatisfactory. Furthermore, the findings suggest that not all start-ups emanating from the hub are taking off. This is due to various undermining factors such as financial constraints and unfriendly legal frameworks. For X-Innovation Hub to satisfactorily and sustainably contribute to national innovation systems, deliberate efforts must be made, and strategies put in place by different stakeholders such as the government. Particularly, diversification of funding sources to minimise dependence on international development funding agencies and organisations is important.
A Theoretical Framework for a Local Energy Innovation System Based on the Renewable Energy Case of Poland
The aim of this research is to create a theoretical framework for a local energy innovation system based on renewable energy sources. For this purpose, four types of clusters were outlined based on energy-generation capacity and socio-economic factors such as “local wealth”, “relational capital”, “scientific and research capital” and “energy demand”. This classification revealed areas of Poland that have diverse features in terms of energy-generation capacity and innovation abilities. For each type of area, energy potentials combined with innovation abilities were established. To understand how areas with insufficient energy and innovation capacities could be supported in their development of local energy sovereignty, the concept of the regional innovation system has been adjusted. The results of the research can serve as an aid in the development of national and regional energy policies focused on the specificity and capacity of energy generation and innovation of each area.
5G for the Connected World
<p><b>COMPREHENSIVE HANDBOOK DEMYSTIFIES 5G FOR TECHNICAL AND BUSINESS PROFESSIONALS IN MOBILE TELECOMMUNICATION FIELDS</b> <p>Much is being said regarding the possibilities and capabilities of the emerging 5G technology, as the evolution towards 5G promises to transform entire industries and many aspects of our society. <i>5G for the Connected World</i> offers a comprehensive technical overview that telecommunication professionals need to understand and take advantage of these developments. <p>The book offers a wide&#45;ranging coverage of the technical aspects of 5G &#40;with special consideration of the 3GPP Release 15 content&#41;, how it enables new services and how it differs from LTE. This includes information on potential use cases, aspects of radio and core networks, spectrum considerations and the services primarily driving 5G development and deployment. <p>The text also looks at 5G in relation to the Internet of Things, machine to machine communication and technical enablers such as LTE&#45;M, NB&#45;IoT and EC&#45;GSM. Additional chapters discuss new business models for telecommunication service providers and vertical industries as a result of introducing 5G, and strategies for staying ahead of the curve. Other topics include: <ul> <li>Key features of the new 5G radio such as descriptions of new waveforms, massive MIMO and beamforming technologies, as well as spectrum considerations for 5G radio regarding all possible bands</li> <li>Drivers, motivations and an overview of the new 5G system &#150; especially RAN architecture and technology enablers &#40;e.g. service&#45;based architecture, compute&#45;storage split and network exposure&#41; for native cloud deployments</li> <li>Mobile edge computing, Non&#45;3GPP access, Fixed&#45;Mobile Convergence</li> <li>Detailed overview of mobility management, session management and Quality of Service frameworks</li> <li>5G security vision and architecture</li> <li>Ultra&#45;low latency and high reliability use cases and enablers, challenges and requirements &#40;e.g. remote control, industrial automation, public safety and V2X communication&#41;</li> <li>An outline of the requirements and challenges imposed by a massive number of devices connected to cellular networks</li> </ul> <p>While some familiarity with the basics of 3GPP networks is helpful, <i>5G for the Connected World</i> is intended for a variety of readers. It will prove a useful guide for telecommunication professionals, standardization experts, network operators, application developers and business analysts &#40;or students working in these fields&#41; as well as infrastructure and device vendors looking to develop and integrate 5G into their products, and deploy 5G radio and core networks.
Challenge-oriented regional innovation systems
In this letter, we reflect on recent modifications of the regional innovation system (RIS) approach that have been prompted by persistent environmental, social, and economic problems. Scholars have begun to advocate a reorientation of the RIS framework towards addressing territorial sustainability challenges and have introduced the notion of challenge-oriented regional innovation systems (CORIS). While the CORIS approach holds promise given the challenges of our time, several unresolved issues remain. We elaborate on and discuss three themes that demand further research. Firstly, there is a need for in-depth studies of the geographies of problems. Systematic analyses of the origins and interrelations of territorial challenges are high in demand. Secondly, the geographies of challenge-oriented innovation-exnovation dynamics warrant more attention. We argue that future research should delve into questions around the development, testing and upscaling of innovative solutions, as well as the unlocking and destabilisation of unsustainable practices in various spatial contexts. Lastly, we contend that a better understanding of the geographies of RIS reconfiguration is necessary. This entails shedding light on various forms of system-level agency involved in reorienting or transforming historically-grown real-world RIS in different types of regions.
Examining economic complexity as a holistic innovation system effect
The relationship between entrepreneurship and economic growth has remained somewhat contentious. While it is almost universally acknowledged that entrepreneurship and particularly knowledge-intensive entrepreneurship has apparent and important links to economic growth, studies to elaborate exactly how each of these factors influences economic growth return inconsistent findings. However, the measure of economic growth we suggest is too broad as an outcome metric to account for the sector of the economy that most directly contributes to the dynamics of economic growth. In this paper, we take a more nuanced approach to consider in what way and whether increasing economic complexity is related to the efficiency with which a country produces growth. We argue from a holistic innovation system (HIS) perspective that the combination of both knowledge-intensive and broader market–led business innovation will more rapidly improve the productivity levels of nations by utilising the diversity of knowledge and business resources available to that country. To test this hypothesis, we employ a dynamic version of the two-stage data envelopment analysis. We conclude that the increased economic diversity measured by the change in economic complexity can be treated as a much more refined outcome effect of a country’s HIS.
Innovation Systems for Transformations towards Sustainability? Taking the Normative Dimension Seriously
The aim of this article is to complement research on transformations towards sustainability by drawing upon the innovation systems (IS) framework. The IS framework already serves as a suitable and influential basis for research on processes of technological innovation and economic change. We argue that improving the capacity of an IS framework for dealing with wicked problems and the normative complexity of sustainability requires a fundamental paradigm shift because in the current IS paradigm innovations are considered as per se desirable and in mostly technological terms. Therefore, we call for IS dedicated to transformations towards sustainability by opening up for systemic innovations beyond the technological dimension and by acknowledging that stakeholders have conflicting visions, interests, norms, and expectations with regard to sustainability goals. Taking the normative dimension of transformations towards sustainability seriously thus requires more explicit and integrative research on directionality, legitimacy, responsibility, and their interrelation in IS. The article concludes by proposing suggestions for future research based on IS-related approaches that can serve as building blocks for an IS framework capable of incorporating legitimate goal-orientation for transformative innovation by and for society.
Unpacking the Precision Technologies for Adaptation of the Chilean Dairy Sector. A Structural-functional Innovation System Analysis
Precision technologies and smart farming practices are spreading globally. However, there are still limited insights into how these technologies develop in newly adopted countries and adapt to different local systems, especially in emergent economies. This article aims to diagnose the technological innovation system of precision technologies within Chile's dairy sector, focusing on the possibilities of development and co-evolution. A structural-functional innovation system analysis is performed, based upon 41 semi-structured interviews. The main results indicate that precision technologies are in the implementation phase in the Chilean dairy sector, with scarce experience and undeveloped knowledge of their benefits. Moreover, there are insufficient interactions between different actors with limited information sharing due to the lack of trust as a cultural issue, affecting the development of smart farming practices. Some strategies to develop and co-evolve the technological systems are discussed, as is the need to increase trust and cooperation between the actors of the dairy sector.
Developed democracies versus emerging autocracies: Arts, democracy, and innovation in Quadruple Helix innovation systems
Arts, democracy, and innovation co-evolve. While for the Triple Helix model the existence of a democracy is not necessary for knowledge production and innovation, the Quadruple Helix is here more explicit. The way how the Quadruple Helix is being engineered, designed, and \"architected\" clearly shows that there cannot be a Quadruple Helix innovation system without democracy or a democratic context. The following attributes and components define the fourth helix in the Quadruple Helix: \"media-based and culture-based public,; \"civil society,\" and \"arts, artistic research, and arts-based innovation\". By this, the fourth helix in the Quadruple Helix represents the perspective of the \"dimension of democracy\" or the \"context of democracy\" for knowledge, knowledge production, and innovation. This is particularly true when democracy is to be understood to transcend the narrow understanding of being primarily based on or being primarily rooted in government institutions (within Triple Helix). Civil society, culture-based public, quality of democracy, and sustainable development convincingly demonstrate what the rationales and requirements are for conceptualizing democracy broader. Political pluralism in a democracy co-evolves with the pluralism, diversity, and heterogeneity of knowledge, knowledge production, and innovation (\"Democracy of Knowledge\"). The Quintuple Helix extends the Quadruple Helix by aspects of the \"natural environments of society and economy,\" \"social ecology,\" and the \"socio-ecological transition\". Also, this environmental context of society can be better addressed in a democracy than in a non-democracy. The current world appears to be challenged by a race between developing democracies versus emerging autocracies over knowledge production and innovation. The contributions of arts, arts-based research, and arts-based innovation to knowledge production and innovation systems are manifold. Art helps and aids us in thinking \"beyond the box\". The traditional understanding of arts emphasizes the aesthetic dimension of arts. Art and arts can also be understood (and re-invented) as a manifestation of knowledge, knowledge production, and knowledge creation. Arts and artistic research are now being regarded as drivers for forming and pluralizing interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary configurations and networks with research in the sciences and the application and use of knowledge and innovation in the context of not only society and democracy, but also the economy. Art, arts-based research, and arts-based innovation contribute to creating (co-creating) the basis for new models of economic growth. This indicates opportunities for a creative design or creative design processes in the further co-evolution of knowledge economy, knowledge society, and knowledge democracy.