Cultural shift: Innovation is a process
Loading...
No Access Until
Permanent Link(s)
Other Titles
Author(s)
Abstract
The commercialization of genetically engineered traits in specialty crops is a complicated process. University researchers are more accustomed to thinking about innovation as an event rather than as a process. Within Texas A&M AgriLife Research we are taking on the challenge of how to look at innovation as a process and how to steward innovation beyond simply publishing, to create opportunities for our industry partners. In so doing, we are addressing a fundamental problem: the weakness of the pipeline.
Journal / Series
Volume & Issue
Description
Sponsorship
Date Issued
2013
Publisher
NABC
Keywords
Agricultural biotechnology; specialty crops; transgenic papaya; stakeholders; genetic engineering; GE; GMO; regulation; food safety; USDA; novel traits; premarket approval; intellectual property; patents; human health impacts; synthetic genomics
Location
Effective Date
Expiration Date
Sector
Employer
Union
Union Local
NAICS
Number of Workers
Committee Chair
Committee Co-Chair
Committee Member
Degree Discipline
Degree Name
Degree Level
Related Version
Related DOI
Related To
Related Part
Based on Related Item
Has Other Format(s)
Part of Related Item
Related To
Related Publication(s)
Link(s) to Related Publication(s)
References
Link(s) to Reference(s)
Previously Published As
Government Document
ISBN
ISMN
ISSN
Other Identifiers
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Types
book chapter