1st Edition
Intellectual Property in Academia A Practical Guide for Scientists and Engineers
Introduction to Intellectual Property in Academia
The Basics of Patenting, Nadya Reingand
Is Your Invention Novel?: The Issue of Prior Art, Farhad Shir
Practical Framework for Intellectual Property (IP) Valuation, Mikhail Maiorov and Stefan Spinler
Drafting and Prosecuting a Patent Application, Oliver Edwards
Electronic Systems for U.S. and European Patents, Sarfaraz K. Niazi
Commercializing Inventions Through an Office of Technology Transfer, Alexey Titov
University Patent Case Studies: Some Patents Hang on the Wall, Others Go to Work, Ethel Machi and Peter Machi
What’s Mine is Yours: Navigating Ownership Rights and Bayh-Dole, Peter Machi
Copyright, Melissa Levine and Billie Munro Audia
Index
Biography
Nadya Reingand, PhD, teaches short courses on intellectual property (IP), patent search and analysis, reverse engineering, and other topics for various audiences. Her scientific background and experience help her to understand researchers’ needs in intellectual property aspects that arise from the result of scientific work. She holds a PhD in optoelectronics and has authored numerous scientific papers and patents of her own, mostly in the fields of holography, interferometry, speckles, and optical communications. Her legal experience originated from patent analysis and technology overview reports, which she performed at Landon IP, Inc., together with the creation of technology development forecast and IP strategy. Currently, Dr. Reingand is an Intellectual Property Director at CeLight, Inc., responsible for developing and maintaining IP assets of the company. She is licensed to practice Patent Law before the U.S. Patent Office.
"… a complete source of intellectual property (IP) information for academic researchers. The book is a valuable guide to business and market estimation, employment legislation and invention priority estimation. It will become a standard reference for IP issues and help to stimulate interactions between academics and entrepreneurs."
—Optics & Photonics News, January 2013






