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Lab Study or Testing Agreement?
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Introduction |
Most lab studies involve the kind of basic research that makes it difficult to predict whether an invention might result from the study, so we protect ourselves by including a contract clause that lets the University own such inventions. There is, however, one class of lab studies that we will call "testing" agreements for which we can fairly safely predict there will be no University inventions. This is very similar to the conclusion we draw for clinical trials, but whereas it may be true for all or nearly all clinical trials, it is not true for all, or even most, lab studies. The trick then is to accurately classify a lab study so that we only require University ownership of intellectual property when it will benefit us and not when it will do no more than impede negotiation of the study terms. That is the purpose of this checklist. It should help you classify lab studies based on who wrote the protocol, how detailed it is and whether it requires mere testing or more detailed analysis of data. | |
General Concerns |
Please use the Sponsored Research Agreement Checklist to review all lab studies for the standard problems that any sponsored research agreement presents. The special problem that this checklist addresses is whether it might be permissible to grant the Sponsor ownership of intellectual property resulting from the study, as we do in clinical trials. | |
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Intellectual Property Section | Office of General Counsel
