Myriam Mariani
I am full professor of applied economics. I earned a PhD from the Marche Polytechnic University and completed a two years post-doc Marie Curie fellowship at MERIT (Maastricht Economic Research Institute on Innovation and Technology). I am the Dean of Strategy of my University.
Research interests
My work focuses on inventors’ job motivations and knowledge transmission during the inventive process. My most recent research studies the career effects of overwork and temporal flexibility for women. I also investigate why there are so few women in innovation, and the processes through which they select in and out from the inventive profession.
Selected Publications
Patent rewards and the recognition of women’s inventive performance and potential
Industrial and Corporate ChangeTrained to lead: Evidence from industrial research
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNALFirm strategic behavior and the measurement of knowledge flows with patent citations
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2019Rewards for patents and inventor behaviors in industrial research and development
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2018Learning to be Edison: inventors, organizations, and breakthrough inventions
ORGANIZATION SCIENCE, 2014The relationship between knowledge sourcing and fear of imitation
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2014When Distance Disappears: Inventors, Education, and the Locus of Knowledge Spillovers
THE REVIEW OF ECONOMICS AND STATISTICS, 2013Next to Production or to Technological Clusters? The Economics and Management of R&D Location
Journal of Management and GovernanceTeaching
41016
INNOVATION
12469
CONDUCTING RESEARCH USING SURVEYS