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9.2.1 Innovation

Innovation is fundamentally defined as the 'process that begins with an inventor's insight and ends with a new product or technique' being created (Lundstedt & Colglazier, 1982:xiii). Innovation is not just the practical improvement of hardware. It is also the reshaping of concepts or ideas. The innovation process forms the basis for individuals to inject ideas, insights, pure and applied research, scientific knowledge, and technical "know-how".

Innovation is not held within this topic to be the same as discovery or invention where a new technical entity unlike any known previous technology, is produced. Discovery is the production of new technical or scientific knowledge. This is distinct from invention which is usually the result of pure research discovery, or the unique combination of established knowledge, to produce a novel technical entity.

Innovation involves the substantial change and development to identified technology, ideas or techniques. On a continuum of change or search for superior outcomes, innovation may be considered to sit below the high risk, uncertain efforts of those seeking inventions or discoveries, and above those undertaking improvements.

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