Innovation Systems for Science, Technology, Energy, Manufacturing, and Health by William Bonvillian via MIT
Innovation Systems for Science, Technology, Energy, Manufacturing, and Health free videos and free material uploaded by Massachusetts Institute of Technology Staff .
Unit A:
Economic Growth Theory and the Innovation System
1Economic Growth Theory and the Direct Elements
in Innovation
2Innovation Systems and Direct/Indirect
Elements in the Innovation Ecosystem
Unit B:
Challenges Facing the U.S. Economy
3The Competitive Challenge to U.S.
Manufacturing
4The Challenge from Globalization for Advanced
Manufacturing and New Services
Unit C: Federal-Private Sector Roles in the
Innovation System
5The Innovation System at the Institutional
Level: The Organization of Federal Science Support
6Crossing "The Valley of Death"
Between Research and Development: The Public-Private Partnership Approach
7The Organization of Innovation Systems at the
Face-to-Face
Level 8DARPA as the Connected Model in the
Innovation System: Government-Private Sector Interaction and the Example of
ComputingResearch Paper Outline Due
Unit D: The
Life Science and Energy Innovation Systems
9The Life Science R&D Model: National
Institutes of Health (NIH) 10The Challenge of Energy Technology
Transformation
Unit E:
Improving the Innovation System: The Talent Base
11Improving the Talent Base: New Education and
Training Models
12The Future of Work: The
Employment-Productivity DebateResearch Paper Due
This course focuses on science and technology policy—it will examine the science and technology innovation system, including case studies on energy, computing, advanced manufacturing, and health sectors, with an emphasis on public policy and the federal government's role in that system.
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