The Innovation Ecosystems was held by Media X at Stanford University on July 1, 2011. Various topics in the ecosystems have been discussed, including innovative city, government role, university, collaboration, new research approach, data visualization, investment. People across industries shared insights and strategies for innovation ecosystems.
2. Innova&on
Ecosystems
Network
Innova&on
Ecosystems
refer
to
the
inter-‐organiza&onal,
poli&cal,
economic,
environmental,
and
technological
systems
through
which
a
milieu
conducive
to
business
growth
is
catalyzed,
sustained,
and
supported.
A
dynamic
innova&on
ecosystem
is
characterized
by
a
con&nual
realignment
of
synergis&c
rela&onships
that
promote
growth
of
the
system.
In
agile
responsiveness
to
changing
internal
and
external
forces,
knowledge,
capital
and
other
vital
resources
flow
through
these
rela&onships.
The
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Network
is
an
interna&onal
consor&um
of
data
partners,
analysis
partners
and
community-‐
of-‐prac&ce
partners,
dedicated
to
iden&fica&on
and
visualiza&on
of
success
factors
in
technology-‐based
development.
Through
research
collabora&ons,
quarterly
mee&ngs,
and
resource
sharing,
we
seek
to
iden&fy
paRerns
of
success
and
key
interven&on
points
in
innova&on
ecosystems
and
enhance
sharing
of
insights
among
the
diverse
groups
of
people.
Par&cipa&on
in
the
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Network
is
open
to
Media
X
member
companies
and
to
affiliated
partners.
-‐
Martha
G.
Russell
Associate
Director
of
Media
X
at
Stanford
University
Senior
Research
Scholar
at
HSTAR
at
Stanford
University
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Network
4. 8:00
-‐
8:30
Registra&on
and
Con&nental
Breakfast
Welcome
and
Introduc&ons
8:30
-‐
8:45
Martha
Russell,
Chuck
House,
Keith
Devlin
Infrastructure
for
Innova&on:
Systems
of
Interdependencies
Moderator:
Marguerite
Hancock
-‐-‐Norman
Jacknis,
Infrastructure
for
Innova&on
and
Regional
Economic
Growth
8:45
-‐
10:15
-‐-‐Torger
Reve,
Crea&ng
Innova&on
Dynamics
Through
Global
Knowledge
Hubs:
An
Empirical
Analysis
of
Norway
-‐-‐Jim
Spohrer,
City
Ecosystems
of
the
21st
Century
Posters,
Camilla
Yu
–
See
appendix
A
10:15
-‐
10:45
Break
and
Networking
Organiza&onal
Systems
for
Innova&on:
Who
Leads?
Who
Follows?
Moderator:
Kaisa
S&ll
-‐-‐John
Roese,
HUAWEI
NA
R&D
Innova&on
10:45
-‐
Noon
-‐-‐Willem
Jonker,
EIT
ICT
Labs:
A
New
European
Approach
to
ICT
Innova&on
Ecosystems
-‐-‐Yan
Xu,
Redefining
Technology
and
Innova&on
Industry
Within
the
Context
of
Ubiquitous
Innova&on
Noon
-‐
1:00
pm
Lunch
and
Networking
Resource
Networks
in
Greentech:
First
Mover
Advantages
and
Boundary-‐Spanning
Ac&vi&es
Moderator:
Martha
Russell
1:00
-‐
2:00
-‐-‐Steve
Eichenlaub,
The
Corporate
Venture
Investment
Ecosystem
-‐-‐Deepak
Jeevankumar,
The
Venture
Capital
Ecosystem
-‐-‐Greg
Callman,
Angels/Agencies
2:00
-‐
2:20
Break
and
Networking
Analyzing
and
Visualizing
Networks
Moderators:
Jukka
Huhtamäki,
Neil
Rubens
-‐-‐Kimihiko
Iwamura,
Anatomy
of
a
Personal
Network
2:20
-‐
3:30
-‐-‐Sean
Gourley,
Mapping
the
World’s
Technology
-‐-‐Mathieu
Bas&an,
Where
are
Networks?
-‐-‐Rahul
Basole,
Visualiza&on
of
Converging
Ecosystems
Knowledge
Transfer
in
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Moderator:
Martha
Russell
-‐-‐Dan
Wang,
Brain
Drain
and
Brain
Gain
3:30
-‐
4:30
-‐-‐Egils
Milberg,
Indicators
to
Build
Shared
Vision
-‐-‐Chenyang
Xu,
Insights
from
Global
Scou&ng
and
Working
with
Universi&es
and
Startups
4:30
-‐
5:30
Networking
5:30
on,
Please
join
the
Triple
Helix
Associa&on
Conference,
July
11-‐14.
Separate
registra&on
is
required.
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
5. Informa&on
• Tweet
about
the
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit:
TwiRer
Hashtags:
#IESummit,
#IEN,
#MediaXStanford
• Follow
Media
X
(@MediaXStanford)
and
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Network
(@IEN_Stanford)
on
TwiRer
• Media
X
hRp://mediax.stanford.edu/summit2011.html
• Innova&on
Ecosystems
Network:
hRp://www.innova&on-‐ecosystems.org
7. Welcome
and
Introduc&on
Martha
G.
Russell
Dr.
Martha
G.
Russell
is
Senior
Research
Scholar
at
the
Human
Sciences
and
Technology
Advanced
Research
(HSTAR)
Ins&tute
at
Stanford
University
and
Associate
Director
of
Media
X
at
Stanford
University.
She
is
a
Senior
Fellow
at
the
Ins&tute
for
Innova&on,
Crea&vity
and
Capital
(IC2)
at
The
University
of
Texas
at
Aus&n.
She
studies
innova&on
ecosystems
using
data-‐driven
visualiza&on
methods
for
systems
analysis
and
is
promo&ng
the
development
of
new
media
metrics
for
the
persuasive
impact
of
interac&ve,
place-‐based
and
social
media.
Martha
has
deep
experience
in
cross-‐sector
research
collabora&on
ini&a&ves
and
interdisciplinary
research
management.
She
has
established
collabora&ve
research
ini&a&ves
in
technology
leadership
and
informa&on
sciences,
pioneered
early
public-‐
private
partnerships
in
microelectronic
and
informa&on
sciences
and
in
manufacturing
technologies.
Martha
has
led
several
entrepreneurial
startup
ventures
in
medical
technology,
agricultural
technologies,
and
consumer
marke&ng.
She
is
on
the
Advisory
Boards
for
Journal
of
Interac&ve
Adver&sing
and
Technology
Forecas&ng
and
Social
Change.
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
8. Welcome
and
Introduc&on
Charles
“Chuck”
House
Chuck
House
is
Senior
Researcher
in
Stanford’s
HSTAR
(Human
Science
and
Technology
Advanced
Research)
Ins&tute
and
Execu&ve
Director
of
Media
X.
House
was
instrumental
in
establishing
Stanford’s
Values,
Technology,
Science
and
Society
program
that
presaged
today’s
Science
Technology
and
Society
Department,
he
also
was
a
co-‐founder
of
CITS,
the
Center
for
Informa&on
Technologies
and
Society
at
the
University
of
California,
Santa
Barbara.
House
has
an
extensive
industry
background
–
a
long
development
career
at
HewleR-‐Packard
was
followed
by
execu&ve
roles
at
Informix,
Veritas,
Dialogic
and
Intel
Corpora&ons.
He
also
has
experience
with
start-‐
ups
and
small
companies,
selling
units
to
Motorola,
TI,
Intel,
Broadcom,
and
Centerline.
Chuck
will
be
speaking
at
the
IIRUSA-‐sponsored
Back
End
of
Innova&on
conference
taking
place
October
17-‐19
2011
in
La
Jolla,
CA.
9. Welcome
and
Introduc&on
Keith
Devlin
Dr.
Keith
Devlin
is
a
co-‐founder
and
Execu&ve
Director
of
the
university's
HSTAR
ins&tute,
and
co-‐
founder
of
the
Stanford
Media
X
research
network,
and
a
Senior
Researcher
at
the
Center
for
the
Study
of
Language
and
Informa&on.
He
is
a
World
Economic
Forum
Fellow
and
a
Fellow
of
the
American
Associa&on
for
the
Advancement
of
Science.
His
current
research
is
focused
on
the
use
of
different
media
to
teach
and
communicate
mathema&cs
to
diverse
audiences.
He
also
works
on
the
design
of
informa&on/reasoning
systems
for
intelligence
analysis.
Other
research
interests
include:
theory
of
informa&on,
models
of
reasoning,
applica&ons
of
mathema&cal
techniques
in
the
study
of
communica&on,
and
mathema&cal
cogni&on.
He
has
wriRen
30
books
and
over
80
published
research
ar&cles.
Recipient
of
the
Pythagoras
Prize,
the
Peano
Prize,
the
Carl
Sagan
Award,
and
the
Joint
Policy
Board
for
Mathema&cs
Communica&ons
Award.
In
2003,
he
was
recognized
by
the
California
State
Assembly
for
his
"innova&ve
work
and
long&me
service
in
the
field
of
mathema&cs
and
its
rela&on
to
logic
and
linguis&cs."
He
is
"the
Math
Guy"
on
Na&onal
Public
Radio.
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
11. Infrastructure
for
Innova&on:
Systems
of
Interdependencies
Moderator:
Marguerite
Gong
Hancock
Marguerite
Gong
Hancock
is
Associate
Director
of
the
Stanford
Program
on
Regions
of
Innova&on
and
Entrepreneurship
(SPRIE),
an
interdisciplinary
and
interna&onal
research
program
at
Stanford
University’s
Graduate
School
of
Business.
A
poli&cal
economist,
Marguerite
leads
research
ini&a&ves,
conferences,
and
publica&ons
on
topics
ranging
from
"China
2.0:
The
Rise
of
a
Digital
Superpower"
to
"Smart
Green
Ci&es:
New
Technologies,
Models,
Strategies.”
Marguerite
co-‐directs
an
execu&ve
educa&on
program,
"Leading
Innova&ve
and
Entrepreneurial
Regions
in
the
Global
Economy.”
She
is
co-‐editor
of
books
published
by
Stanford
including
The
Silicon
Valley
Edge
(2000),
Making
IT:
The
Rise
of
Asia
in
High
Tech
(2006),
and
China’s
Quest
for
Innova&on
(2008).
Currently,
she
is
co-‐authoring
a
book
on
the
drivers
and
global
implica&ons
of
the
ascendance
of
China’s
internet
industry.
12. Infrastructure
for
Innova&on:
Systems
of
Interdependencies
Infrastructure
for
Innova&on
and
Regional
Economic
Growth
Norman
Jacknis,
Internet
Business
Solu&ons
Group,
Public
Sector,
Cisco
Informa&on
highways
connect
local
people
and
businesses
to
global
partners
and
opportuni&es.
The
dynamic
networked
organiza&on
requires
technology,
process
and
culture.
Dr.
Norman
Jacknis
is
Director,
Cisco
IBSG
Public
Sector
(the
company’s
open
innova&on
and
pro-‐
bono
strategic
advisory
group).
Before
joining
Cisco
in
Feb.
2008,
Jacknis
served
more
than
ten
years
as
CIO
and
commissioner
of
Westchester
County,
NY
government.
Under
his
leadership,
Westchester
County
won
numerous
awards,
including
one
of
the
global
top
seven
Intelligent
Communi&es.
Government
Technology
selected
him
as
one
the
“Top
25
Doers,
Dreamers
and
Drivers.”
At
Cisco,
he
has
worked
with
several
na&onal
organiza&ons
of
senior
public
officials,
including
the
US
Conference
of
Mayors,
with
special
focus
on
developing
their
strategy
for
future-‐oriented
economic
growth.
His
recent
wriRen
work
includes
a
blog
for
state/local
elected
execu&ves
and
a
chapter
for
the
book,
“CIO
Leadership
for
Ci&es
&
Coun&es.”
Jacknis
received
his
Doctorate,
Master's
and
Bachelor's
degrees
from
Princeton
University.
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
13. Infrastructure
for
Innova&on:
Systems
of
Interdependencies
Crea&ng
Innova&on
Dynamics
Through
Global
Knowledge
Hubs:
An
Empirical
Analysis
of
Norway
Torger
Reve,
Wilh
Wilhelmsen
Chair,
Strategy
and
Industrial
Compe&veness,
BI
Norwegian,
School
of
Management,
Norway
Metrics
for
6
driving
forces
of
knowledge-‐driven
innova&on.
Torger
Reve
currently
holds
the
Wilh
Wilhelmsen
Chair
in
Strategy
and
Industrial
Compe&&veness
at
BI
Norwegian
School
of
Management,
where
he
also
heads
the
Center
for
Mari&me
Compe&&veness.
Torger
Reve
has
been
President
at
BI
Norwegian
School
of
Management,
1997-‐2005.
He
is
currently
a
member
of
the
board
of
directors
at
Ekornes
ASA,
a
leading
interna&onal
furniture
manufacturer.
He
is
also
chairman
of
the
Council
of
Strømme
Founda&on
which
is
a
Microfinance
NGO
working
in
Africa,
Asia
and
La&n
America,
and
member
of
the
R&D
councils
of
Mari&me
Port
Authori&es
(MPA)
of
Singapore
and
SIMULA,
a
center
of
excellence
in
soxware
industry.
14. Infrastructure
for
Innova&on:
Systems
of
Interdependencies
City
Ecosystems
of
the
21st
Century
Jim
Spohrer,
Director,
Almaden
Services
Research,
IBM
Almaden
Research
TwiRer:
@JimSpohrer
Blog:
"Spohrer
on
Service”
hRp://service-‐science.info/archives/category/blogs/spohrer
A
network
of
interfacing
systems
describes
complex
interdependencies
in
21st
century
ci&es.
Educa&onal
ins&tu&ons
renew
knowledge
resources
across
many
of
these
systems.
Jim
Spohrer
is
the
Director
of
IBM
University
Programs
Worldwide
at
the
IBM
Almaden
Research
Center
in
San
Jose,
California,
where
he
works
to
understand
the
co-‐
evolu&on
of
ci&es
and
universi&es
as
&ghtly-‐coupled
holis&c
service
systems.
Previously,
Jim
was
the
founding
Director
of
Service
Research
in
IBM
Research,
the
founding
CTO
of
IBM
Venture
Capital
Rela&ons
Group
in
Silicon
Valley
California,
as
well
as
an
Apple
Dis&nguished
Engineer
Scien&st
Technologist.
Jim
received
a
B.S.
in
Physics
from
MIT
in
1978,
and
a
Ph.D.
in
Computer
Science
from
Yale
University
in
1988.
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
16. Organiza&onal
Systems
for
Innova&on:
Who
Leads?
Who
Follows?
Moderator:
Kaisa
S&ll
Dr.
Kaisa
S&ll
currently
works
for
VTT
Technical
Research
Centre
of
Finland
and
collaborates
with
Stanford’s
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Network.
Her
research
interests
include
innova&on,
technology
transfer,
and
the
role
of
technology,
with
a
focus
on
informa&on
and
knowledge
crea&on,
sharing,
and
management
-‐
emphasizing
support
for
collabora&on
and
coopera&on
in
organiza&ons
as
well
as
in
community
seyngs.
Recent
studies
include
mobile,
online
and
social
networking
communi&es,
innova&on
ecosystems,
and
innova&on
indicators.
Dr.
S&ll
has
over
10
years
of
cross-‐sector
business
and
academic
experience
in
Finland,
USA
and
China.
17. Organiza&onal
Systems
for
Innova&on:
Who
Leads?
Who
Follows?
HUAWEI
NA
R&D
Innova&on
John
Roese,
Senior
Vice
President
and
GM
North
American
R&D
at
Huawei
Simultaneously
innova&ng
technologies
and
developing
markets
requires
crea&ng
a
dynamic
ecosystem.
What
are
the
fastest
changing
components?
Which
elements
are
the
most
stable?
John
Roese
is
the
Senior
Vice
President
and
GM
North
American
R&D
for
Huawei.
He
is
an
industry
recognized
Chief
Technology
Officer/R&D
Execu&ve
within
the
enterprise,
carrier,
wireless,
wire
line,
security
and
IT
sectors
with
a
proven
history
of
transforming
and
opera&ng
both
focused
and
extremely
large
R&D
organiza&ons,
providing
industry
thought
leadership
and
vision
and
evangelizing
that
future
to
both
customers
and
the
wider
industry
of
press,
analyst,
investor
and
partners.
His
areas
of
exper&se
include
vision
crea&on
and
evangelism
within
the
broader
telecom
and
IT
industry;
opera&onal
execu&ve
leadership
of
large
scale
R&D
organiza&ons
in
excess
of
$1B;
enterprise
and
carrier
technology
and
market
exper&se;
ecosystem
development
and
partnering;
and
technical
exper&se
in
a
wide
area
of
disciplines
including
silicon
development,
hardware
design,
soxware
design,
systems
and
applica&ons
(20
granted
and
pending
patents).
John
is
an
accomplished
author,
public
speaker
and
external
representa&ve
of
the
company
to
the
press,
analysts,
investors
and
industry.
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
18. Organiza&onal
Systems
for
Innova&on:
Who
Leads?
Who
Follows?
EIT
ICT
Labs:
A
New
European
Approach
to
ICT
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Willem
Jonker,
CEO,
EIT
ICT
Labs
EIT
ICT
Labs
is
a
new
ini&a&ve
by
the
European
Union
intended
to
turn
Europe
into
a
global
leader
in
ICT
innova&on.
It
aims
to
fulfill
this
mission
by
establishing
a
new
type
of
partnership
between
leading
companies,
research
centers,
and
universi&es
in
Europe.
As
a
Knowledge
and
Innova&on
community,
EIT
ICT
Labs
speeds
up
ICT
innova&on
by
bringing
people
together
from
different
countries,
disciplines
and
organiza&ons
via
mobility
programs
and
co-‐loca&on
centers.
Through
the
transforma&on
of
higher
educa&on,
EIT
ICT
Labs
breeds
entrepreneurial
top
ICT
talent
by
promo&ng
crea&vity
and
entrepreneurial
spirit.
EIT
ICT
Labs’
research
ac&vi&es
are
focused
on
broader
and
faster
industrializa&on
of
research
results
in
order
to
generate
world-‐class
ICT
business.
Prof.
Dr.
(Willem)
Jonker
is
the
CEO
of
EIT
ICT
Labs.
Prof.
Dr.
Jonker
has
a
broad
background
in
ICT,
both
in
industry
as
well
as
in
academia.
He
studied
mathema&cs
and
computer
science
at
Groningen
University,
worked
at
Delx
University
of
Technology,
received
his
PhD
from
the
University
of
Utrecht,
and
is
a
part-‐&me
full
professor
in
computer
science
at
Twente
University.
Prof.
Dr.
Jonker’s
industrial
experience
covers
telecommunica&ons
(KPN),
IT
(European
Computer
industry
Research
Centre,
Munich)
and
consumer
electronics
(Philips).
He
has
held
posi&ons
as
researcher,
interna&onal
project
leader,
department
head,
sector
head,
and
account
manager.
In
2006
he
was
appointed
Vice
President
Philips
Research.
Prof.
Dr.
Jonker
has
served
European
ICT
research
in
various
ways,
amongst
others
as
project
leader,
reviewer,
and
advisor.
19. Organiza&onal
Systems
for
Innova&on:
Who
Leads?
Who
Follows?
Redefining
Technology
and
Innova&on
Industry
Within
the
Context
of
Ubiquitous
Innova&on
Yan
Xu,
Associate
Dean,
EMBA,
Execu&ve
Programs
&
China
Strategy,
HKUST
Hong
Kong’s
5
year
plan
for
ac&va&ng
innova&on
throughout
the
economy
–
technology,
service,
educa&on,
and
government.
Who
leads?
Who
follows?
Yan
Xu
is
Associate
Dean
of
the
HKUST
Business
School,
Hong
Kong
University
of
Science
and
Technology
(HKUST).
Yan’s
research
and
teaching
interests
include
technology
and
innova&on
management
and
policy,
as
well
as
regulatory
policy
of
telecommunica&ons.
He
has
provided
extensive
consul&ng
and
execu&ve
training
for
the
various
organiza&ons
and
enterprises.
Tradi&onal
defini&on
of
technology
and
innova&on
industry
tends
to
designate
certain
specific
industrial
sectors
as
technology
and
innova&on
industry.
As
a
result,
government
policy
has
ignored
vast
industrial
sectors
and
has
hindered
the
overall
development
of
innova&on.
On
the
basis
of
his
project
for
the
Central
Policy
Unit
of
Hong
Kong
Government,
Yan
proposed
a
new
approach
to
redefine
the
technology
and
innova&on
industry.
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
20. Resource Networks in Greentech: First Mover
Advantages and Boundary-Spanning Activities
22. Resource
Networks
in
Greentech:
First
Mover
Advantages
and
Boundary-‐Spanning
Ac&vi&es
The
Corporate
Venture
Investment
Ecosystem
Steve
Eichenlaub,
Managing
Director,
Placorm
Technologies,
Cleantech,
and
Healthcare
Sectors,
Intel
Capital
Accelera&ng
innova&on
in
exis&ng
and
emerging
ecosystems.
Criteria
and
&meframe
for
managing
the
risks
and
benefits
of
corporate
venture
investments
Interfacing
corporate
decision
and
strategy
cycles
with
startup
evolu&on
and
uncertain&es.
Steve
Eichenlaub
joined
Intel
Capital
in
1998
and
is
a
vo&ng
member
of
the
Pla}orm
Technologies,
Cleantech,
and
Healthcare
investment
commiRees.
Steve
leads
a
worldwide
team
of
investment
managers
driving
equity
and
technology
licensing
rela&onships
with
early-‐
and
mid-‐stage
companies
to
expand,
align
and
accelerate
the
fron&ers
of
technology
in
the
context
of
driving
posi&ve
financial
returns
for
Intel.
Prior
to
Intel,
Steve
worked
at
leading
soxware
companies
Adobe
Systems
and
Mentor
Graphics,
and
at
start-‐ups
Silicon
Compiler
Systems
and
GammaMetrics.
He
holds
a
BS
in
Electrical
and
Nuclear
Engineering
from
UC
Berkeley,
and
an
MBA
from
Harvard
Business
School.
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
23. Resource
Networks
in
Greentech:
First
Mover
Advantages
and
Boundary-‐Spanning
Ac&vi&es
The
Venture
Capital
Ecosystem
Deepak
Jeevankumar,
Senior
Associate,
Growth
Catalyst
Partners
TwiRer:
@dj4tec
Ac&va&ng
synergy
across
new
en&&es
from
different
ecosystems.
Empowering
focused
energy
with
the
big
picture.
Deepak
Jeevankumar
is
a
Venture
Capitalist
at
General
Catalyst
Partners.
Deepak
focuses
on
investments
in
new
and
exis&ng
technology
business,
specifically
clean
energy.
Prior
to
joining
GC,
Deepak
worked
at
Sun
Microsystems
and
was
an
intern
at
the
Yale
Investments
Office.
At
Sun,
he
worked
with
Sun’s
Chief
Architect
in
designing
some
of
the
world’s
fastest
supercomputers
and
headed
Sun’s
Asia-‐Pacific
High
Performance
Compu&ng
team.
He
was
also
responsible
for
many
green
compu&ng
business
development
ini&a&ves
in
this
space.
24. Resource
Networks
in
Greentech:
First
Mover
Advantages
and
Boundary-‐Spanning
Ac&vi&es
Agencies
and
Angels
Greg
Callman,
Commercializa&on
Advisor
-‐
ARPA-‐E
at
U.S.
Department
of
Energy
Seeding
the
science,
seeking
the
market,
and
making
connec&ons
in
between.
First
mover
advantages.
Greg
Callman
is
a
Commercializa&on
Adviser
at
the
Advanced
Research
Projects
Agency
for
Energy
(ARPA-‐E)
of
the
U.S.
Department
of
Energy.
Greg
also
served
DOE
as
a
member
of
the
Recovery
Act
Team
under
the
direc&on
of
MaR
Rogers.
Before
joining
DOE,
Greg
directed
corporate
development
for
a
Bay
Area
biochar
venture,
and
previously
founded
a
strategy
and
opera&ons
consultancy
in
The
Netherlands.
Greg
studied
Energy
Policy
and
Finance
at
Johns
Hopkins,
SAIS,
and
Biochemistry
at
the
University
of
Virginia.
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
26. Analyzing
and
Visualizing
Networks
Moderator:
Jukka
Huhtamäki
Jukka
Huhtamäki
(M.Sc,
Hypermedia)
is
a
researcher,
a
post-‐graduate
student,
and
a
teacher
working
for
the
Hypermedia
Laboratory
(HLab)
at
Tampere
University
of
Technology,
Finland
and
collaborates
with
Stanford’s
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Network.
His
research
interests
include
visual
social
media
analy&cs,
methods
of
streamlining
social
network
visualisa&on
and
informa&on
visualisa&on,
user
and
informa&on
modeling,
and
the
development
methods
and
implementa&on
technologies
of
social,
adap&ve,
and
distributed
hypermedia.
Currently,
Jukka
is
working
to
develop
data-‐
driven
visual
analysis
processes
for
insights
on
social
media
usage
and
innova&on
diffusion.
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
27. Analyzing
and
Visualizing
Networks
Moderator:
Neil
Rubens
Dr.
Neil
Rubens
is
Assistant
Professor
at
the
Knowledge
Systems
Laboratory,
University
of
Electro-‐Communica&ons,
Japan.
He
is
the
Director
of
Ac&ve
Intelligence
Research
Group
and
collaborates
with
Stanford’s
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Network.
He
holds
a
Ph.D.
degree
from
the
Tokyo
Ins&tute
of
Technology
and
a
M.Sc.
degree
from
the
University
of
MassachuseRs.
His
research
focuses
on
developing
Ac&ve
Intelligence
systems
-‐-‐
self-‐
adaptable
systems
that
ac&vely
acquire
data
and
learn
in
an
unsupervised/semi-‐supervised
manner.
28. Analyzing
and
Visualizing
Networks
Anatomy
of
a
Personal
Network
Kimihiko
Iwamura,
Founder,
Managing
Director,
Valley
Breeze
Consul&ng,
LLC;
Tipping
Point
Ventures
The
rela&onship
origins
and
organiza&onal
background
of
a
personal
network
Kimi
is
a
seasoned
strategist
and
cross-‐border
business
launcher.
He
guides
new
cross-‐border
business
from
ini&al
strategy
to
execu&on
and
collaborates
with
Stanford’s
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Network.
Kimi
ini&ated
and
managed
more
than
10
collabora&ve
R&D
projects
between
Japanese
companies
and
R&D
organiza&ons
in
Silicon
Valley,
including
Stanford
University,
UCB,
and
Lawrence
Livermore
Na&onal
Laboratories.
He
has
20
years
experience
developing
cross-‐border
marke&ng,
business
alliances,
and
partnerships
in
Silicon
Valley.
He
is
also
a
visi&ng
scholar
at
Stanford
University.
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
29. Analyzing
and
Visualizing
Networks
Mapping
the
World’s
Technology
Sean
Gourley,
Co-‐founder
and
CTO,
Quid,
Inc.
Integra&ng
patent,
publica&on
and
business
informa&on
for
network
analysis
and
insights.
What
is
revealed
and
what
is
hidden?
Sean
Gourley
is
Quid
co-‐founder
and
CTO,
and
did
research
into
the
mathema&cs
of
war
for
his
PhD
thesis
at
Balliol
College,
Oxford.
His
findings
appeared
as
the
featured
ar&cle
in
"Nature"
(December
2009)
and
were
the
subject
of
a
popular
TED
talk
(2009).
His
work
on
sta&s&cal
analysis,
probability,
and
algorithm
development
applied
to
complex
systems
and
large
datasets
inspired
the
crea&on
of
Quid.
Sean
is
a
Rhodes
Scholar
PhD
in
Physics
(Complexity)
from
the
University
of
Oxford;
his
undergraduate
degree
in
Physics
is
from
the
University
of
Canterbury,
Christchurch,
New
Zealand.
30. Analyzing
and
Visualizing
Networks
Where
are
Networks?
Mathieu
Bas&an,
Data
Scien&st
at
LinkedIn
&
Gephi
Sogware
Architect
TwiRer:
@mathieubas&an
Blog:
hRp://gephi.org/blog
Using
Exploratory
Network
Analysis
of
innova&on,
patents,
companies,
and
publica&ons.
What
personal
insights
are
provided
through
LinkedIn
InMaps?
What
is
revealed
and
what
is
hidden?
Mathieu
Bas&an
is
the
co-‐founder
of
the
Gephi
open-‐
source
project.
He
has
a
M.Sc.
in
Computer
Science
from
University
of
Technology
of
Compiègne
in
France
and
is
a
highly
mo&vated
technical
leader
with
a
passion
for
soxware
development,
data
visualiza&on
and
open-‐
source
communi&es.
Since
2007,
Mathieu
is
developing
the
Gephi
pla}orm
and
animates
the
vibrant
community.
Recognized
for
its
performance,
usability
and
extensible
design,
the
Gephi
soxware
is
supported
by
the
Google
Summer
of
Code
program
and
received
the
Duke’s
Choice
Award
in
2010.
Mathieu
recently
moved
to
California
to
work
in
the
Data
Analy&cs
team
at
LinkedIn.
There,
he
has
worked
on
InMaps,
an
interac&ve
visualiza&on
for
a
personal
LinkedIn
network,
and
con&nues
to
focus
on
data-‐driven
products.
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
31. Analyzing
and
Visualizing
Networks
Visualiza&on
of
Converging
Ecosystems
Rahul
C.
Basole,
Ph.D.,
Tennenbaum
Ins&tute,
Georgia
Tech
Network
analysis
can
show
different
perspec&ves:
periscope,
periphery,
and
ecosystem.
What
is
revealed
and
what
is
hidden
in
each
perspec&ve?
Rahul
C.
Basole
is
Research
Scien&st
in
the
Tennenbaum
Ins&tute
at
the
Georgia
Ins&tute
of
Technology.
His
research
focuses
on
innova&on
management
and
technology
strategy
in
complex
enterprise
systems.
In
par&cular,
Dr.
Basole
conducts
research
on
the
modeling,
analysis,
and
visualiza&on
of
extended
enterprise
networks
and
business
ecosystems
in
domains
such
as
mobile
telecommunica&ons,
biotechnology,
healthcare,
and
global
manufacturing.
34. Knowledge
Transfer
in
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Brain
Drain
and
Brain
Gain
Dan
Wang,
PhD
Candidate,
Stanford
University
Department
of
Sociology
TwiRer:
@dansalright
Highlights
and
indicators
from
a
study
of
knowledge
transfer
by
former
J1
Visa
holders.
Dan
Wang
is
a
Ph.D
Candidate
in
Sociology
at
Stanford
University,
focusing
on
how
knowledge
is
diffused,
recombined,
and
generated
in
networks
within
and
between
organiza&ons.
His
past
research
has
examined
the
effect
of
China's
changing
patent
laws
on
domes&c
R&D
collabora&on,
tac&cal
diffusion
through
American
social
movement
organiza&on
networks,
and
knowledge
transfer
in
academic
co-‐authorship
networks.
He
received
his
BA
in
sociology
and
compara&ve
literature
from
Columbia
University.
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
35. Knowledge
Transfer
in
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Indicators
to
Build
Shared
Vision
Egils
Milberg,
Execu&ve
Director,
Washington
Economic
Development
Commission
Feedback
and
repor&ng
cycles
for
public
and
private
ini&a&ves.
Egils
Milberg
is
the
execu&ve
director
of
the
Economic
Development
Commission
of
Washington
State.
The
Commission
is
charged
with
developing
a
long
term
economic
development
strategy.
He
is
a
noted
thought
leader
and
strategist
in
global
innova&on,
advanced
manufacturing,
compe&&veness
and
public-‐private
partnerships.
He
held
previous
posi&ons
as
president
and
founder
of
the
Center
for
Accelera&ng
Innova&on,
president
of
the
Na&onal
Coali&on
for
Advanced
Manufacturing,
president
of
the
Ins&tute
for
Illinois,
Deputy
Assistant
Secretary
for
produc&vity,
technology
and
innova&on
for
the
U.S.
Commerce
Department,
and
execu&ve
director
the
President’s
Commission
on
Industrial
Compe&&veness.
He
is
a
graduate
of
Harvard
College.
36. Knowledge
Transfer
in
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Insights
from
Global
Scou&ng
and
Working
with
Universi&es
and
Startups
Chenyang
Xu,
General
Manager,
Technology-‐to-‐Business
Center,
Siemens
Managing
aRen&on
on
the
things
that
maRer
most.
Chenyang
Xu
is
General
Manager
of
Technology-‐to-‐
Business
Center
(TTB),
a
part
of
Siemens
Corpora&on,
located
in
Berkeley,
California.
He
is
responsible
to
drive
TTB’s
open
disrup&ve
innova&on
processes,
including
the
iden&fica&on,
incuba&on,
and
investment
of
promising
disrup&ve
technologies
by
partnering
with
promising
innovators
and
entrepreneurs
outside
of
Siemens
to
introduce
innova&ve
products
to
markets
and
launch
promising
start-‐up
companies.
He
earned
his
Ph.D.
in
Electrical
and
Computer
Engineering
from
Johns
Hopkins
University.
He
is
a
member
of
the
Industry
Advisory
Board
of
UC
Berkeley
(EE/CS)
and
a
member
of
the
advisory
board
at
the
University
of
California’s
Center
for
Informa&on
Technology
Research
in
the
Interest
of
Society
(CITRIS).
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Summit
38. Coordinator:
Camilla
(Jiafeng)
Yu
Camilla
Yu
works
for
Media
X
at
Stanford
University,
Silicon
Valley
Innova&on
Ins&tute
and
collaborates
with
Stanford’s
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Network.
Her
research
interest
and
work
experience
covers
social
media,
online
marke&ng,
mobile
applica&ons
and
project
management
in
Silicon
Valley,
Aus&n
and
Shanghai.
Camilla
is
also
a
strategic
planner
and
brand
consultant
for
companies
and
organiza&ons.
Her
recent
study
analyzed
TwiRer
to
understand
branding
and
reputa&on
of
innova&on
hubs.
Camilla
graduated
from
the
master
program
in
the
University
of
Texas
at
Aus&n.
Her
passion
is
to
build
connec&ons
between
people,
companies
and
regions
in
the
Innova&on
Ecosystems
Network.
39. University & Alumni Other Nodes
Alumni Network Analysis
University Alumnus Company Stanford Financial Org.
Size (degree log-scaled)
MIT Company
Relations (education, employment, investment)
Harvard Person
Berkeley Other
University
Universities
Size (Centrality log-scaled)
(a) Stanford University. (d) UC Berkeley.
(b) Harvard University.
(c) MIT.
Alumni Connections are important relationship resources that contribute to a
university's character. Although alumni connections represent networks,
evaluations tend to ignore network qualities, from which an alumni network gets
its name. We show that by analyzing alumni connections as networks, it is
possible to reveal different characteristics of alumni networks.
The figure shows ego-centric alumni networks of four universities (Stanford,
Harvard, MIT, Berkeley) consisting of universities, alumni and companies that
alumni are associated with through employment, investment or board level
positions. While alumni networks share many characteristics, differences among
alumni networks include ratio of companies/alumni, collaboration patterns (e.g.
persistence of relationships), and new alumni metrics -- network measures.
Innovation Ecosystems refer to the inter-organizational, political, economic,
environmental, and technological systems through which a milieu conducive to
business growth is catalyzed, sustained, and supported.
More Information:
N. Rubens, M. G. Russell, R. Perez, J. Huhtamäki, K. Still, D. Kaplan, and T. Okamoto. "Alumni Network Analysis". In IEEE Education Engineering (EDUCON 2010), Apr 2011. Universities in the Innovation Ecosystem Network http://innovation-ecosystems.org