“…When it is joined by civil society, one can have the quadruple helix model as shown in the purple square in Figure A1; the way in which the social part can be involved in innovation processes is when it is possible to observe, for example, the incorporation of art, culture, values, ethics, media, democratic management initiatives, or social studies [50][51][52][53][54]. Likewise, a model of innovation with a quintuple helix is presented when the social part and ecology are involved in the basic model of a triple helix [50,51,[54][55][56]. This quintuple helix model is seen in Figure A1 in the green pentagon; in this quintuple helix innovation model, the transdisciplinary, interdisciplinary, natural environmental, and socio-ecological subjects are enhanced.…”