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Paradigm Shifts
“… occur when scientists encounter anomalies that cannot be explained by the universally accepted paradigm within which scientific progress has thereto been made.”
Thomas S. Kuhn
Library Science
Buildings
Collections
Users
Budgets
Librarians
Reference Services
Technical Services
Catalogs (Paper Machines)
Classifications
Associations
Curricula
Organizing Knowledge
Anomalies
Information Overload and Demand for More Information:
“A new attitude toward seeking out and stockpiling information was the crucial cause of the information explosion, more significant than any particular new discovery.”
(Blair, A.M. (2010), Too Much to Know: Managing Scholarly Information before the Modern Age, New Heaven: Yale University Press)
New Kinds of Media:
Sound Recordings,
Motion Pictures,
Audio-Visuals,
Etc.
Networks of scientific papers.
Information Science
Analysis
Documentation
SDI
Information Professionals
Indexes & Abstracts
Information Technologies
Information Retrieval
Taxonomies
Associations
Curricula
Mobilizing Knowledge
Anomalies
Intellectual Property Rights
Demand for Commercial Information
Hyper-commercialization
Tangible/Intangible Knowledge
Implicit/Explicit Knowledge
Knowledge Creation
Creativity & Idea Generation
Financial Exploitation of
Knowledge/Information
Research & Invention Relationship
Open Access to
Knowledge/Information
Liquidation of Knowledge/Information
Change of Production Relationships:
Makers Movement
– A New Kind of Industrial Revolution
Innovation Science
Routing of
Knowledge/Information
Creativity Boosting
Idea Generation &
Management
Idea Collision
Active Learning
Intelligence
Handcrafting
Prototyping
Commercialization
Innovation
Creative human novelty that provides value in forms of:
Ideas
Inventions
Approaches
Prototypes
Methods
Etc.
Can Innovation be a
Science?“In many respects, innovation can and should be defined by the ability of an
organization, individual or culture to create and provide linkages between many diverse and often unrelated domains and specialties – to create a new net good.
If you will, the innovator is the polymath of the information age.
Innovation Science would therefore be the process whereby an organization, an individual or a culture learns to use innovation tools and techniques to embrace an
ideal of change.
Innovation Science supplies theories, processes, methodologies and tools to organize and exploit this knowledge store.”
- Brett E. Trusko, PhD
Editor-in-Chief, International Journal of Innovation Science
Taxonomical Sequence
Library Science
19th Century
Industrialization
Libraries
Librarians
Organizing Knowledge
Information Science
20th Century
Post-Industrialization
Information Centers
Information Professionals
Mobilizing Knowledge
Innovation Science
21st Century
Informationalization
Future Centers ?
Innovation Professionals
Utilizing Knowledge
Empirical Foundations
Interdisciplinary
Relations
Field of Study
Core Research
Field
Theories
Empirical Laws
Conceptual
Framework
Education
Professional
Organization
Interdisciplinary Relations
Information Science
Library Science
Management Science
Economics
Sociology
Computer Science
Core Research Problems
& Field of Study
Idea Management
Disruption
Creative Destruction
Emergence of the Creative Class
Impact of Cognitive Surplus on
Creativity and innovation
Creative solution development methods
like TRIZ
Diffusion processes and their dynamics
Innovation Ecology
Intellectual Capital
Effect of Informationalism on
Innovation Economics,
Open Innovation Approaches
Value and Innovation Networks
Theories
Business Cycles (Nikolai Kondratiev, Chris
Freeman)
Creative Destruction (Karl Marx)
Disruption (Clayton Christensen)
Creativity (Theresa Amabile)
Economic Development (Joseph Schumpeter)
Creative Class (Richard Florida)
Cognitive Surplus (Clay Shirky)
Diffusion of Innovations (Everett Rogers)
TRIZ (Genrich Altschuller)
Innovation Ecology (Ron Dvir)
Intellectual Capital (Gordon Smith and Russell
Parr)
Open Innovation (Henry Chesbrough)
Value Web (Michael Porter)
Innovation Network (Everett Rogers)
Technological Determinism (Karl Marx)
Informationalism (Manuell Castells)
Globalization (Joseph Stiglitz)
Empirical Laws
Catell’s
Informationalism
Kondratiev’s Waves
Marx’s Determinism
Metcalfe's Law
Moore's Law
Rogers’
Generalizations
Slow Hunch Law
TRIZ Principles
Conceptual Framework
Business
Commercialization
Creative Class
Creativity
Crises
Crowdsourcing
Diffusion
Entrepreneurship
Globalization
Idea Generation
Idea Management
Informationalization
Intellectual property
Intelligence
Networks
Open Innovation
Social Innovation
Research and Development
Education
Variety of MBA Programs that offer Innovation Management Courses
Knowledge and Innovation Management Programs
George Washington University (USA), 2008
Pierre & Marie Currie University (France), 2009
Yeditepe University (Turkey), 2009
Today:
Various Master’s Degree Programs that offer Innovation Management Tracks and Courses
University of Brighton (UK)
Canfield University (UK)
Harvard University – Technology, Innovation, and Education Program (US)
Eindhoven University of Technology – Master in Innovation Management (Netherland)
University of Southern California Marshall School of Business - Master of Science in Entrepreneurship and Innovation (US)
Professional Bodies
International Association of Innovation Professionals (IAOIP)
International Society for Professional Innovation Management (ISPIM)
European Association for Creativity and Innovation (EACI)
International Association of Organizational Innovation (IAOI)
World Alliance for Innovation (WAINOVA)