Theory of Subsystems Driving Technological Coevolution in Modular Architecture of Complex Innovations
Abstrak
This paper investigates the fundamental mechanisms of technological change in complex systems by analyzing how the evolution of embedded subsystems dictates the trajectory and sets the tempo of a host technology. Building on the theoretical framework of technological parasitism, the study conceptualizes host systems having a modular architecture—such as smartphones—as evolving through dynamic, coevolutionary interactions with their constituent subsystems. These relations gradually shift from parasitic reliance to mutualistic and ultimately symbiotic interactions. Central to this research is the concept of subsystems as pacemakers. Methodologically, this research employs a longitudinal, mixed-methods approach, combining an 18-year case study of the iPhone (2007–2025) with time-series regression and log–log hedonic pricing models. Key findings are: (a) Temporal precedence: Advances in subsystems (e.g., Bluetooth protocols) consistently precede host releases. The integration lag has contracted from three years to one, signaling an acceleration in symbiotic coupling and highlighting Bluetooth as a systemic pacemaker whose evolutionary tempo anticipates shifts in the wider smartphone architecture. (b) Differential evolutionary pressure in technological host systems: While camera resolution exhibited the highest exponential growth (+16.73%), it remained a secondary driver of systemic evolution. (c) Economic pacemakers: Hedonic analysis identifies battery life as the dominant evolutionary predictor (standardized beta = 0.77). With an elasticity of approximately 0.30, a 1% gain in battery performance correlates to a 0.3% increase in nominal price, whereas display and camera resolution exert significantly less influence on the system’s valuation and trajectory. These findings reveal that subsystems evolve—and exert influence—at different speeds and with different degrees of systemic leverage. Overall, the proposed theory shows that subsystem evolution functions as a leading indicator of forthcoming host–system transitions. By identifying which subsystems act as temporal pacemakers, this research contributes new design rules for forecasting technological generations and optimizing R&D strategies in complex, multi-component innovations. Hence, the study demonstrates that mastering complex innovation requires a granular understanding of the asynchronous rhythms between a host technology and its constitutive parts.
Penulis (1)
Mario Coccia
Akses Cepat
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- 2026
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- DOI
- 10.3390/technologies14030156
- Akses
- Open Access ✓