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Corporate management of patents: Role of the industrial librarian

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  • Chasen, Larry

Abstract

This paper is directed for the most part to the Corporate Management of Patents, from a technical information viewpoint. The librarian, who is seldom the direct user of patents, should become knowledgeable in the rich resources of patent data. Technology transfer can be accomplished by the engineer and scientist having the complete picture, which the librarian offers in response to a search request. The General Electric Company is used as an example of corporate patent management. The author prepared two surveys. Major library schools were questioned on whether courses in Patent Information are part of the curriculum requirements of a special librarian. The other survey directed itself to several dozen major industrial libraries in the United States on patent handling and management. The results of these surveys are given. Although there are over 30 patent depositories in the United States (see Appendix I), the 'average' research librarian does not make complete use of these depositories. In some cases, the survey indicated they were unaware of these data sources. The paper describes several key patents within the General Electric Company supported by library research, and specifically, man-made diamonds. On-line retrieval systems, where patent license data is offered by NASA and DTIC, are an example of sources available to the aerospace librarian, and the paper concludes with a forecast of how libraries and special libraries will retrieve patents and patent applications before the next century commences.

Suggested Citation

  • Chasen, Larry, 1981. "Corporate management of patents: Role of the industrial librarian," World Patent Information, Elsevier, vol. 3(3), pages 120-127, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:worpat:v:3:y:1981:i:3:p:120-127
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