The sociology of expectations in science and technology
2006; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 18; Issue: 3-4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/09537320600777002
ISSN1465-3990
AutoresMads Borup, Nik Brown, Kornelia Konrad, Harro van Lente,
Tópico(s)Innovative Approaches in Technology and Social Development
ResumoClick to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Notes 1. H. van Lente, Promising technology. The dynamics of expectations in technological developments, PhD Thesis, University of Twente, Enschede, 1993. 2. M. Michael, Futures of the present: from performativity to prehension, in: N. Brown, B. Rappert & A. Webster (Eds) Contested Futures: A Sociology of Prospective Techno-Science (Aldershot, UK, Ashgate, 2000). 3. M. Sturken, D. Thomas & S. J. Ball-Rokeach (Eds), Technological Visions. The Hopes and Fears that Shape New Technologies (Philadelphia, PA, Temple University Press, 2004). 4. N. Brown, B. Rappert & A. Webster (Eds), Contested Futures: A Sociology of Prospective Techno-Science (Aldershot, UK, Ashgate, 2000). 5. W. Bijker & J. Law (Eds), Shaping Technology/Building Society (Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, 1992); A. Pickering (Ed.), Science as Practice and Culture (Chicago, IL, University of Chicago Press, 1992); B. Latour, Science in Action: How to Follow Scientists and Engineers through Society (Milton Keynes, UK, Open University Press, 1987); J. Law (Ed.), A Sociology of Monsters—Essays on Power, Technology and Domination (London, Routledge, 1991). 6. H. van Lente & A. Rip, Expectations in technological developments: an example of prospective structures to be filled by agency, in: C. Disco & B. van der Meulen (Eds), Getting New Technologies Together. Studies in Making Sociotechnical Order (Berlin, De Gruyter, 1998). 7. J. Guice, Designing the future: the culture of new trends in science and technology, Research Policy, 28, 1999, pp. 81–98. 8. P. Martin, Great expectations: the construction of markets, products and user needs during the early development of gene therapy in the USA, in: R. Coombs, K. Green, A. Richards & V. Walsh (Eds), Technology and the Market: Demand, Users and Innovation (Cheltenham, UK, Edward Elgar, 2001); A. Hedgecoe & P. Martin, The drugs don't work: expectations and the shaping of pharmacogenetics, Social Studies of Science, 33, 2003, pp. 327–364. 9. C. Selin, Time matters: temporal harmony and dissonance in nanotechnology networks, Time & Society, 15, 2006, pp. 121–139. 10. H. Nowotny & U. Felt, After the Breakthrough—the Emergence of High-Temperature Superconductivity as a Research Field (Cambridge, UK, Cambridge University Press, 1997); M. Callon, Variety and irreversibility in networks of technique conception and adoption, in: D. Foray & C. Freeman (Eds), Technology and the Wealth of Nations—The Dynamics of Constructed Advantage (London, Pinter, 1993). 11. Van Lente, op. cit., Ref. 1; Van Lente & Rip, op. cit., Ref. 6; J. Deuten & A. Rip, Narrative infrastructure in product creation processes, Organization, 7, 2000, pp. 69–63; K. Konrad, Prägende Erwartungen—Szenarien als Schrittmacher der Technikentwicklung (Berlin, Edition Sigma, 2004). 12. N. Brown & M. Michael, A sociology of expectations: retrospecting prospects and prospecting retrospects, Technology Analysis and Strategic Management, 15, 2003, pp. 3–18. 13. M. Dierkes, U. Hoffman & L. Maez, Leitbild und Technik: Zur Entstehung und Steuerung technischer Innovationen (Berlin, Edition Sigma, 1992); W. Rammert, Die kulturelle Orientierung der technischen Entwicklung. Eine technikgenetische Perspektive, in: D. Siefkes, P. Eulenhöfer, H. Stach & K. Städtler, (Eds), Sozialgeschichte der Informatik. Soziale Praktiken und Orientierungen (Wiesbaden, Deutscher Universitäts Verlag, 1998); H. D. Hellige, Technikleitbilder auf dem Prüfstand: Leitbild-Assessment aus Sicht der Informatik- und Computergeschichte (Berlin, Edition Sigma, 1996). 14. For example, M. Akrich, The de-scription of technical objects, in: Bijker & Law, op. cit., Ref 5, pp. 205–224; W. B. Carlson, Artifacts and frames of meaning: Thomas A. Edison, his managers, and the cultural construction of motion pictures, in shaping technology/building society, in: Bijker & Law, op. cit., Ref 5; J. Jelsma, Innovating for sustainability: involving users, politics and technology, Innovation, 16, 2003, pp. 103–116; N. Oudshoorn & T. Pinch, How Users Matter: The Co-construction of Users and Technology (Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, 2003). 15. B. De Laat, Scripts for the future: using innovation studies to design foresight tools, in: Brown et al., op. cit., Ref. 4; FORMAKIN, Final Report of the Formakin Project (Foresight as a Tool for the Management of Knowledge Flows and Innovation), York etc.: Science and Technology Studies Unit, University of York, 2001. An EU-TSERP project led by A.Webster, L. Sanz-Menéndez and B. van der Meulen. 16. C. Marvin, When Old Technologies were New (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1990); M. 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Merton, The self-fulfilling prophecy, The Antioch Review, 8, 1948, pp. 193–210. 24. N. Rosenberg, On technological expectations, The Economic Journal, 86, 1976, pp. 523–535; N. Rosenberg, On technological expectations, in: N. Rosenberg (Ed.), Inside the Black Box: Technology and Economics (Cambridge, UK, Cambridge University Press, 1982), pp. 104–119; C. Antonelli, The role of technological expectations in a mixed model of international diffusion of process innovations: the case of open-end spinning rotors, Research Policy, 18, 1989, pp. 273–288; F. Lissoni, Technological expectations and the diffusion of ‘intermediate’ technologies, CRIC (Manchester), Working Paper No. 8, August 1999; D. S. Boone, K. N. Lemon & R. Staelin, The impact of firm introductory strategies on consumers' perceptions of future product introductions and purchase decisions, Journal of Product Innovation Management, 18(2), 2001, pp. 96–109. 25. K. Froot, D. Scharfstein & J. Stein, Herd on the street: informational efficiencies in a market with short-term speculation, Journal of Finance, 47, 1992, pp. 1461–1484; S. Bikhchandani & S. Sharma, Herd behavior in financial markets, IMF Staff Papers, 47(3), 2001. 26. R. M. Grant, Contemporary Strategy Analysis, 2nd edn (Oxford, Blackwell, 1995). 27. G. Reger, Technology foresight in companies: from an indicator to a network and process perspective, Technology Analysis & Strategic Management, 13(4), 2001, pp. 533–553. 28. R. Koppl, Big Players and the Economic Theory of Expectations (London, Palgrave, 2002); J. Pixley, Finance organisations, decisions and emotions, British Journal of Sociology, 53(1), 2002, pp. 41–65. 29. De Laat, op. cit., Ref. 15; H.van Lente, From promises to requirement, in: Brown et al., op. cit., Ref. 4. 30. Konrad, op. cit., Ref. 11; Van Lente, op. cit., Ref. 29. 31. F. Geels & W. Smit, Lessons form failed technology futures: potholes in the road to the future', in Ref 4, pp. 881–882. 32. 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Thompson, The biotech mode of reproduction, Paper prepared for the School of American Research Advanced Seminar ‘Animation and Cessation: Anthropological Perspectives on Changing Definitions of Life and Death in the Context of Biomedicine’, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 2000. 47. P. Weingart, A. Engels & P. Pansegrau, Risks of communication: discourses on climate change in science, politics, and mass medi, Public Understanding of Science, 9(3), 2000, pp. 261–283. 48. H. Nowotny, P. Scott & M. Gibbons, Re-thinking Science—Knowledge and the Public in an Age of Uncertainty (Cambridge, UK, Polity Press, 2001), p. 232. 49. Brown et al., op. cit., Ref. 4.
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