Institutional logics

Brokerage that works: Balanced triads and the brokerage roles that matter for innovation.

We find that balanced open triads (gatekeepers and itinerant roles) are crucial to facilitate individual innovativeness, as compared to unbalanced open triads (coordinator and liaison roles).

Connecting others: Does a tertius iungens orientation shape the relationship between research networks and innovation?

Using an ego-network approach, this study examines whether and to what extent an individual strategic orientation to cooperation (i.e. tertius iungens) contributes to strengthening the relation between two personal network properties (structural and institutional separation) and involvement in innovation.

Scientists’ engagement in knowledge transfer and exchange: Individual factors, variety of mechanisms and users.

This article aims to provide a deeper understanding of the individual factors behind scientists’ involvement in a wide variety of knowledge transfer and exchange (KTE) activities.

Beneficiary contact and innovation: The relation between contact with patients and medical innovation under different institutional logics.

We explore how contact with patients facilitates biomedical scientists medical innovation output.