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www.uis.unesco.org Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual South Asian Regional Workshop on Science, Technology and Innovation Statistics Kathmandu, Nepal 6-9 December 2010

Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual. South Asian Regional Workshop on Science, Technology and Innovation Statistics Kathmandu, Nepal 6-9 December 2010. Ch 8 OM - Innovation Survey Procedures. Guidelines - collection and analysis of innovation data ; Comparable results ; - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

www.uis.unesco.org

Innovation Surveys:Advice from the Oslo Manual

South Asian Regional Workshop on Science, Technology and Innovation StatisticsKathmandu, Nepal

6-9 December 2010

Page 2: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Ch 8 OM - Innovation Survey Procedures

Guidelines - collection and analysis of innovation data;

Comparable results;

Particular circumstances may require other methodology comparability!

Page 3: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Populations

The target population:The target population:

• Business enterprise sector (goods-producing and services industries);

• At a minimum, all statistical units with at least ten employees.

Page 4: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Populations

The frame population:The frame population:

• Units from which a survey sample or census is drawn = frame population;

• Basis: last year of the observation period;

• Ideal frame = up-to-date official business register established for statistical purposes NSOs;

• If the register forms the basis for several surveys (innovation, R&D, business), the information collected can be restricted to issues specific to innovation.

Page 5: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Survey methods

Mandatory Mandatory surveys increase response rates;

Census or sample survey?Census or sample survey?

• Sample surveys should be representative of the basic characteristics of the target population (industry, size, region) a stratified sample is necessary;

• Census, though costly, might be unavoidable in some cases (legal requirement, small frame population, inclusion of all units in the frame with a certain number of employees).

Page 6: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Survey methods

Domains Domains (sub-populations) are subsets of the sampling strata;

• Potential sub-populations: industry groupings, size classes, regions, units that engage in R&D and innovation-active;

• Guidelines:» Same statistical units and classifications;

» Consistent methods;

» Documentation of deviations in data treatment or differences in the quality of the results (from the domains).

Page 7: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Survey methods

Sampling techniques:Sampling techniques:

• Stratified sample surveys (reliable results): based on the size and principal activity of the units;

• Sampling fractions should not be the same for all strata: the sampling fraction of a stratum should be higher for more heterogeneous strata and for smaller strata.

Cross-sections: Cross-sections: standard approach - new random sample drawn from a given population;

Alternative/supplementary approach: panel datapanel data.

Page 8: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Survey methods

Suitable respondents:Suitable respondents:

• Various methods: postal surveys, electronic surveys, personal interviews;

• Questions are very specialised and can be answered by only a few people in the unit;

• It is highly recommended to make a special effort to It is highly recommended to make a special effort to identify respondents by identify respondents by namename before data collection before data collection starts.starts.

Page 9: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Survey methods

The questionnaire:The questionnaire:

• Pre-test before fieldwork;

• Simple and short;

• Order of the questions;

• Questions on qualitative indicators - binary or ordinal scale;

• International innovation surveys: translation and design of the questionnaire;

• Short-form questionnaires for units with little/no innovation activity previously reported.

Page 10: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Survey methods

Combination of Innovation and R&D surveys:Combination of Innovation and R&D surveys: Reduction in the overall response burden; Scope for analysing the relations between R&D and

innovation activities at the unit level; Efficient method of increasing the frequency of innovation

surveys; It is possible to obtain reliable results for R&D expenditures;

Longer questionnaire; Units not familiar with the concepts of R&D and innovation

may confuse them; The frames for the two surveys are generally different.

Page 11: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Survey methods

Guidelines for conducting combined surveys:Guidelines for conducting combined surveys:

• The questionnaire should have two distinct sections;

• Individual sections for R&D and innovation should be smaller than in separate surveys;

• Comparisons of results from combined surveys with those from separate innovation surveys should be done with care;

• Surveying methods should be reported;

• Samples to carry out such surveys should be extracted from a common business register.

Page 12: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Estimation of results

Weighting methods:Weighting methods:

• The simplest one is weighting by the inverse of the sampling fractions of the sampling units, corrected by the unit non-response;

• Stratified sampling technique with different sampling fractions weights should be calculated individually;

• Commonly based on the number of enterprises in a stratum;

• In international and other comparisons, be sure that In international and other comparisons, be sure that the the samesame weighting method is used. weighting method is used.

Page 13: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Estimation of results

Non-response:Non-response:

• Unit non-response: a reporting unit does not reply at all;

• Item non-response: response rate to a specific question / % of blank or missing answers among the reporting units;

» Disregarding missing values and applying simple weighting procedures based only on the responses received implicitly assumes that non-respondents are distributed in the same way as respondents biased resultsbiased results;

» Possibility: imputation methodsimputation methods to estimate missing values on the basis of additional information.

Page 14: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Presentation of results

Descriptive analysis:Descriptive analysis:• Description of the

statistical units in terms of their innovative or non-innovative activities without drawing any conclusions about the underlying survey or target population;

• No generalisation of the results;

• Unit non-response rate is of minor importance.

Inferential analysis:Inferential analysis:

• Drawing of conclusions about the target population;

• The results should give a representative estimation of the situation;

• Weighted results;

• Unit non-response rate is very important.

Page 15: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Presentation of results

Errors:Errors:

• Random errors due to the random process used to select the units;

• Systematic errors containing all non-random errors (bias);

» Results’ variance: it is recommended to calculate both (average) values for innovation indicators and also their coefficients of variation and/or confidence intervals;

» Results presentation: metadata (including information on data collection procedure), sampling methods, procedures for dealing with non-response and quality indicators.

Page 16: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Frequency of data collection

Innovation surveys: every two years;

When not economically feasible three or four years;

Surveys must always specify an observation period for questions on innovation;

• The length of the observation period for innovation surveys should not exceed three years nor be less than one year.

Page 17: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Annex A - 5. Methodological issues for developing country contexts

Information system specificities:

• Relative weakness of statistical systems

• Absence of linkages between surveys and data sets; lack of official business registers information from other surveys cannot be used;

• Involvement of NSOs;

• When lacking, basic variables about firms’ performance can be included in the innovation survey - to enable further analysis.

Page 18: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Annex A - 5. Methodological issues for developing country contexts

General methodological considerations:

• Questionnaire design: » Separated sections - different respondents;

» Guidance / definitions;

» Language and the translation of technical terms;

• Survey application:» In-person;

» Trained personnel.

Page 19: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Annex A - 5. Methodological issues for developing country contexts

General methodological considerations:

• Frequency:» Every three to four years (e.g., timed to CIS rounds);

» Try to update a minimum set of variables every year;

• The purpose of surveys needs to be clearly stated and the questions clearly formulated;

• An adequate legislative base for the collection of innovation statistics can help ensure the success of such an exercise;

• The results should be published and distributed The results should be published and distributed widely.widely.

Page 20: Innovation Surveys: Advice from the Oslo Manual

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Thank you!

http://www.uis.unesco.org

[email protected]

(CIS: http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/37/39/37489901.pdf)