Results 21 to 30 of about 72,528 (205)
Different Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains are simultaneously or in succession involved in spontaneous wine fermentations. In general, few strains occur at percentages higher than 50% of the total yeast isolates (predominant strains), while a variable ...
Donatella Ganucci +4 more
doaj +1 more source
The agricultural sector is constantly evolving. The rise in the world’s population generates an increasingly growing demand for food, resulting in the need for the agroindustry to meet this demand.
Marco Claudio De Simone +2 more
doaj +1 more source
Do Spin-Offs Make the Academics’ Heads Spin? [PDF]
As public research organisations are increasingly driven by their national and regional governments to engage in knowledge transfer, they have started to support the creation of companies. These research based spin-off companies (RBSOs) often keep contacts with the research institutes they originate from. In this paper we present the results of a study
Zomer, Arend H. +2 more
openaire +5 more sources
The Governance of Knowledge in Academic Spin-Offs [PDF]
The aim of the present work is to study the evolution of organizational knowledge within Academic Spin-off (ASO) firms throughout their life cycle. The exploitation of tacit and indivisible new knowledge developed in the context of academic institutions entails agency problems of different nature; one way to address such challenges is the creation of ...
openaire +2 more sources
A procedural perspective on academic spin-off creation:The changing relative importance of the academic and the commercial logics [PDF]
We analyze the influence of two contradicting settings on the success in the academic spin-off creation process. Scientists, who are embedded in the academic setting, have to reach out and adapt to the logics of the commercial setting to successfully ...
Huegel, Matthias +4 more
core +3 more sources
Academic Entrepreneurship: Spin-offs in Sweden and the UK [PDF]
Discussions of academic entrepreneurship often focus on efforts to commercialize inventions appropriated within the intellectual property (IP) system. However, studies in the U.S. have shown that a substantial amount of entrepreneurship happens outside of the formal IP system. In the UK each university sets its own rules on ownership of IP.
Baines, N. +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Do they matter? The role of non-academics in the internationalization of academic spin-offs [PDF]
Internationalization and academic entrepreneurship have been receiving a lot of attention not only in academic research but also in policy practice. While academic spin-offs suffer from limited resources and lack of entrepreneurial skills, they often penetrate international market through their innovative products and technology since the very early ...
Noelia Franco-Leal +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Opportunity recognition in academic spin‐offs: a contingency approach
This paper analyses the factors that influence opportunity recognition (OR) of academic spin‐offs (ASOs) from a contingency perspective. We focus on factors linked to the academic entrepreneur and propose that their relevance for explaining OR in ASOs depends on the context in which these firms operate: discovery (the necessary information for ...
Carmen Camelo‐Ordaz +3 more
openaire +3 more sources
Academic spin-offs for the local economy growth
Some research supports the suggestion that start-ups can represent a driver in job creation, economic growth, innovation and competitiveness. In the Entrepreneurship 2020 Action Plan and in the Action Plan on Building a Capital Market Union (2015), one of the main actions is promoting entrepreneurship, to support financing innovation for start-ups, to ...
Ada Carlesi +2 more
openaire +1 more source
An Impact of Business Unit Restructuring (spin-off/business transfer) on Corporate Value
In recent years, as one of business reorganizations, methods such as spin-off, carve-out, and business transfer have been frequently adopted.
吉田, 友紀 +5 more
core +1 more source

