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Does working with industry come at a price? A study of doctoral candidates’ performance in collaborative vs. non-collaborative PhD projects

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  • Negin Salimi
  • Rudi Bekkers

Abstract

The increasing involvement of industry in academic research raised concerns whether university-industry projects actually meet the same academic standards as university projects in-house. Looking at the academic output and impact of collaborative versus non-collaborative Ph.D. projects at Eindhoven University of Technology, we observe – unexpectedly – that doctoral candidates who conducted a collaborative Ph.D. project outperform their peers in academic performance. Less surprisingly, collaborative projects also lead to more patents and patent citations compared to non-collaborative projects. Science policy implications follow.

Suggested Citation

  • Negin Salimi & Rudi Bekkers, 2014. "Does working with industry come at a price? A study of doctoral candidates’ performance in collaborative vs. non-collaborative PhD projects," Working Papers 14-09, Eindhoven Center for Innovation Studies, revised May 2014.
  • Handle: RePEc:ein:tuecis:1409
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    Keywords

    university-industry relations; technology transfer; collaborative and non-collaborative Ph.D. projects; performance; publication performance; patenting performance; citations; bibliometric data;
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