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Workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities in universities

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Forthcoming

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Workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities in universities. / Chapman, Gary; Nasirov, Shukhrat; Hughes, Mathew (Mat) et al.
In: The Journal of Technology Transfer, 25.04.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Chapman, G, Nasirov, S, Hughes, M & Hughes, P 2025, 'Workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities in universities', The Journal of Technology Transfer.

APA

Chapman, G., Nasirov, S., Hughes, M., & Hughes, P. (in press). Workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities in universities. The Journal of Technology Transfer.

Vancouver

Chapman G, Nasirov S, Hughes M, Hughes P. Workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities in universities. The Journal of Technology Transfer. 2025 Apr 25.

Author

Chapman, Gary ; Nasirov, Shukhrat ; Hughes, Mathew (Mat) et al. / Workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities in universities. In: The Journal of Technology Transfer. 2025.

Bibtex

@article{f18eec6d21284043b57ca253d19b0ae0,
title = "Workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities in universities",
abstract = "Universities are increasingly tasked with fulfilling a {"}third mission{"} – driving economic growth through knowledge creation and innovation, with inventive activities serving as an important mechanism to achieve this mission. This research investigates the link between workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities in universities to enhance our understanding of how demographic characteristics are associated with innovation and, ultimately, contribute to economic growth. Workforce age diversity is proposed to be linked to inventive activities via two distinct yet competing mechanisms: on the one hand, workforce age variety should facilitate collaboration, knowledge sharing, and networking, all of which should enhance invention; on the other hand, workforce age polarisation tends to result in social categorisation, lower trust, and affective conflict, which should hinder invention. Using the UK higher education sector as the empirical context, the analysis reveals a positive association between workforce age variety and the intensity of inventive activities in universities, as seen from more invention disclosures and patent registrations. Conversely, workforce age polarisation shows a negative association with the intensity of inventive activities, which is evidenced by fewer patent applications and registrations. As such, this research contributes to the literature by highlighting the important but nuanced link between workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities. It also offers practical and policy implications aimed at promoting an age-inclusive invention process in universities.",
keywords = "workforce age diversity; inventive activities; information-processing perspective; social categorisation perspective; higher education; universities",
author = "Gary Chapman and Shukhrat Nasirov and Hughes, {Mathew (Mat)} and Paul Hughes",
year = "2025",
month = apr,
day = "25",
language = "English",
journal = "The Journal of Technology Transfer",
issn = "0892-9912",
publisher = "Kluwer Academic Publishers",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities in universities

AU - Chapman, Gary

AU - Nasirov, Shukhrat

AU - Hughes, Mathew (Mat)

AU - Hughes, Paul

PY - 2025/4/25

Y1 - 2025/4/25

N2 - Universities are increasingly tasked with fulfilling a "third mission" – driving economic growth through knowledge creation and innovation, with inventive activities serving as an important mechanism to achieve this mission. This research investigates the link between workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities in universities to enhance our understanding of how demographic characteristics are associated with innovation and, ultimately, contribute to economic growth. Workforce age diversity is proposed to be linked to inventive activities via two distinct yet competing mechanisms: on the one hand, workforce age variety should facilitate collaboration, knowledge sharing, and networking, all of which should enhance invention; on the other hand, workforce age polarisation tends to result in social categorisation, lower trust, and affective conflict, which should hinder invention. Using the UK higher education sector as the empirical context, the analysis reveals a positive association between workforce age variety and the intensity of inventive activities in universities, as seen from more invention disclosures and patent registrations. Conversely, workforce age polarisation shows a negative association with the intensity of inventive activities, which is evidenced by fewer patent applications and registrations. As such, this research contributes to the literature by highlighting the important but nuanced link between workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities. It also offers practical and policy implications aimed at promoting an age-inclusive invention process in universities.

AB - Universities are increasingly tasked with fulfilling a "third mission" – driving economic growth through knowledge creation and innovation, with inventive activities serving as an important mechanism to achieve this mission. This research investigates the link between workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities in universities to enhance our understanding of how demographic characteristics are associated with innovation and, ultimately, contribute to economic growth. Workforce age diversity is proposed to be linked to inventive activities via two distinct yet competing mechanisms: on the one hand, workforce age variety should facilitate collaboration, knowledge sharing, and networking, all of which should enhance invention; on the other hand, workforce age polarisation tends to result in social categorisation, lower trust, and affective conflict, which should hinder invention. Using the UK higher education sector as the empirical context, the analysis reveals a positive association between workforce age variety and the intensity of inventive activities in universities, as seen from more invention disclosures and patent registrations. Conversely, workforce age polarisation shows a negative association with the intensity of inventive activities, which is evidenced by fewer patent applications and registrations. As such, this research contributes to the literature by highlighting the important but nuanced link between workforce age diversity and the intensity of inventive activities. It also offers practical and policy implications aimed at promoting an age-inclusive invention process in universities.

KW - workforce age diversity; inventive activities; information-processing perspective; social categorisation perspective; higher education; universities

M3 - Journal article

JO - The Journal of Technology Transfer

JF - The Journal of Technology Transfer

SN - 0892-9912

ER -