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Francis Narin

Scientist / Business Personality

A pioneer in the field of scientometrics, Francis Narin founded CHI Research (now called The Patent Board) and set out to quantify the worth of scientific research. Narin studied chemistry at Franklin and Marshall College, got a M.S. degree in nuclear engineering from North Carolina State College and a PhD. in bibliometrics from Walden University. He worked at the Los Alamos National Laboratory and the ITT Research Institute, where he developed tools to evaluate scientific research and how it effects technological advances. CHI Research was founded in 1968 to provide "indicator services" to both government and private clients -- ways to measure if their R&D (research and development) dollars were being well-spent, for example. In 1976 Narin and Gabriel Pinski published "Citation Influence for Journal Aggregates of Scientific Publications," an influential paper in the information field that built on Eugene Garfield's systems of citation analysis of research journals. During the 1980s Narin worked on the relationship between research literature and patents, and during the 1990s he worked on patent technology and its effect on stock market performance. Now retired, Narin serves in an advisory capacity to The Patent Board, which still publishes the CHI Research's "Patent Scorecard," an industry standard for measuring innovativeness.

Four Good Links

Dr. Francis Narin

Brief curriculum vitae from a 2003 conference

Pioneers of Scientometrics

Another very brief career summary

The National Academies Press

Search for online texts by Narin (for sale)

The Patent Board

Official site for what CHI Research is now

Vital Stats

Birth

1934
(age 74)

Birthplace

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Death

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Best Known As

Scientometrics pioneer who started CHI Research