Stuart Toby E, Ding Waverly W
Columbia Business School, USA.
AJS. 2006 Jul;112(1):97-144. doi: 10.1086/502691.
The authors examine the conditions prompting university-employed life scientists to become entrepreneurs, defined to occur when a scientist (1) founds a biotechnology company, or (2) joins the scientific advisory board of a new biotechnology firm. This study draws on theories of social influence, socialization, and status dynamics to examine how proximity to colleagues in commercial science influences individuals' propensity to transition to entrepreneurship. To expose the mechanisms at work, this study also assesses how proximity effects change over time as for-profit science diffuses through the academy. Using adjusted proportional hazards models to analyze case-cohort data, the authors find evidence that the orientation toward commercial science of individuals' colleagues and coauthors, as well as a number of other workplace attributes, significantly influences scientists' hazards of transitioning to for-profit science.
作者们研究了促使受雇于大学的生命科学家成为企业家的条件,这里的企业家定义为科学家出现以下两种情况:(1)创立一家生物技术公司;(2)加入一家新生物技术公司的科学顾问委员会。本研究借鉴社会影响、社会化和地位动态理论,以考察与商业科学领域同事的亲近程度如何影响个人向创业转型的倾向。为揭示其中起作用的机制,本研究还评估了随着营利性科学在学术界的传播,亲近效应如何随时间变化。作者们使用调整后的比例风险模型来分析病例队列数据,发现有证据表明,个人同事和共同作者对商业科学的倾向以及其他一些工作场所属性,会显著影响科学家向营利性科学转型的风险。