03-072
GENOMIC DATA ACCESS PATTERNS AS INDICATORS OF THE
DIFFUSION OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY CAPABILITY: TRENDS, PUZZLES, AND IMPLICATIONS
Juan Enriquez, Rodrigo Martinez, and Jonathan West
Over the past decade, hundreds of labs spent billions of
dollars to generate terabytes of genetic sequence data. These tidal waves of
information have been deposited into some of the largest libraries ever
constructed. While debate has raged about the social and ethical implications of
the genomics revolution, surprisingly little attention has focused on the data
themselves who is using these genomic data and for what purposes? We recently
had the opportunity to investigate these questions, and came to some surprising
conclusions.
At the Harvard Business School Life Sciences Project, we
are trying to understand the industrial dynamics of what has been termed the
life sciences revolution, its impact on firms, regions, and nations. How will
economies and organizations be transformed, who will succeed, and what will it
take to do so? A first step in our project is an attempt to estimate which
nations and regions are winning and which failing in the race to construct the
scientific and technological capabilities needed to participate in the
biotechonomy of the future.
17 pages
TOM
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