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Showing 1–10 of 10 results
Advanced filters: Author: Douglas R. Kauffman Clear advanced filters
  • A lack of entrepreneurial behaviour has often been identified as a contributor to the decline in the research and development (R&D) productivity of the pharmaceutical industry. Douglas and colleagues present an assessment of entrepreneurship in the industry, based on interviews with 26 former and current leaders of R&D departments at pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, highlighting factors that could be important in promoting entrepreneurial behaviour and revitalizing R&D productivity.

    • Frank L. Douglas
    • V. K. Narayanan
    • Robert E. Litan
    Reviews
    Nature Reviews Drug Discovery
    Volume: 9, P: 683-689
  • Selective, electrochemical transformation of carbon dioxide into industrially relevant C2+ products has remained a challenge. Now, a copper-based ‘nanoneedle’ electrocatalyst has been used to selectively convert carbon dioxide to ethylene at extremely high current density.

    • Douglas R. Kauffman
    • Dominic Alfonso
    News & Views
    Nature Catalysis
    Volume: 1, P: 99-100
  • Carbon-nanotube networks have been used to study the sensitivity to molecular oxygen of a dendrimer complexed with europium ions. Optically transparent devices made by coating nanotubes with the metal-containing dendrimer show a linear and reversible electrical response to O2, and may prove useful for oxygen-sensing applications.

    • Douglas R. Kauffman
    • Chad M. Shade
    • Alexander Star
    Research
    Nature Chemistry
    Volume: 1, P: 500-506
  • Greenhouse gas emissions from ruminant meat production are significant. Reductions in global ruminant numbers could make a substantial contribution to climate change mitigation goals and yield important social and environmental co-benefits.

    • William J. Ripple
    • Pete Smith
    • Douglas H. Boucher
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 4, P: 2-5
  • A sequence of technological inventions over several centuries has dramatically lowered the cost of producing and distributing information. Because societies ride on a substrate of information, these changes have profoundly impacted how we live, work, and interact. This paper explores the nature of information architectures (IAs)—the features that govern how information flows within human populations. IAs include physical and digital infrastructures, norms and institutions, and algorithmic technologies for filtering, producing, and disseminating information. IAs can reinforce societal biases and lead to prosocial outcomes as well as social ills. IAs have culturally evolved rapidly with human usage, creating new affordances and new problems for the dynamics of social interaction. We explore societal outcomes instigated by shifts in IAs and call for an enhanced understanding of the social implications of increasing IA complexity, the nature of competition among IAs, and the creation of mechanisms for the beneficial use of IAs.

    • Paul E. Smaldino
    • Adam Russell
    • Dan Patt
    Comments & OpinionOpen Access
    npj Complexity
    Volume: 2, P: 1-11