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Reference
Giarratana, M. S., Pasquini, M., & Simeth, M. (2025). Nourishing sustainability innovation: Scientific trajectories in industrial protein research. Research Policy, 55(2), 105375–105375. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.respol.2025.105375
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Welcome to Revise and Resubmit 🎙️✨
Today’s episode dives into a paper with a title that is as rich as its implications: “Nourishing sustainability innovation: Scientific trajectories in industrial protein research” 🌱🧬. Written by Marco S. Giarratana, Martina Pasquini, and Markus Simeth, this study journeys through the world of industrial protein production and asks a deceptively simple question: which scientific paths actually feed sustainable innovation, and which ones just nibble at the margins?
Some science walks in straight lines, some loops in tight circles, and some branches wildly like a protein-powered banyan tree 🌳. In this article, the authors use a clever two-step text analysis to connect the language of academic papers with the hard-edged world of USPTO patents in subclass A23J, uncovering four distinct trajectories that quietly steer where the next big breakthroughs in sustainable protein might emerge. One path, rooted in cellular and bioprocessing mechanisms, spills over generously into sustainability-oriented innovation and SDG-related patents, while others—like traditional animal-based protein or narrow protein chemistry—struggle to radiate their knowledge beyond a tight circle of insiders.
This is not just a story about “more science equals more innovation”; it is a story about science as a cognitive map, a mental atlas of mechanisms and meanings that guides firms toward some futures and away from others 🧠🗺️. In the pages of Research Policy—one of the world’s leading innovation journals, proudly on the prestigious FT50 list and published by Elsevier—this work argues that the structure of knowledge itself shapes which inventions become sustainable, scalable, and socially meaningful.
So as you listen, ask yourself: if some scientific trajectories reliably generate green, SDG-aligned spillovers while others barely ripple the surface, how should policymakers, firms, and researchers reorient their bets in the protein revolution? 🌍💡
Huge thanks to the authors—Marco S. Giarratana, Martina Pasquini, and Markus Simeth—and to Research Policy and Elsevier for bringing this research to the world 🙌📚. If you enjoy unpacking cutting-edge work from prestigious FT50 journals like this, make sure to subscribe to “Revise and Resubmit” on Spotify and on the “Weekend Researcher” YouTube channel, and don’t forget you can also find this podcast on Amazon Prime and Apple Podcast 🎧🚀. Now, are you ready to discover which scientific trajectories will really nourish the next generation of sustainable protein innovation? 🤔✨