1,333 research outputs found
The Deep-Pocket Effect of Internal Capital Markets
We provide evidence suggesting that incumbents’ access to group deep pockets has a negative impact on entry in product markets. Relying on a unique French data set on business groups, our paper presents three major findings. First, the amount of cash holdings owned by incumbent-affiliated groups is negatively related to entry in a market. Second, the impact on entry of group deep pockets is more important in markets where access to external funding is likely to be more difficult. Third, the ‘entry deterring effeect’ of group deep pockets is more pronounced when groups have more active internal capital markets. Our findings suggest that internal capital markets operate within corporate groups and that they have a potential anti-competitive effect.Business Groups, Internal Capital Markets, Deep-Pockets, Market Entry
The Deep-Pocket Effect of Internal Capital Markets
We provide evidence suggesting that incumbents' access to group deep pockets has a negative impact on entry in product markets. Relying on a unique French data set on business groups, our paper presents three major findings. First, the amount of cash holdings owned by incumbent-affiliated groups is negatively related to entry in a market. Second, the impact on entry of group deep pockets is more important in markets where access to external funding is likely to be more difficult. Third, the “entry deterring effect" of group deep pockets is more pronounced when groups have more active internal capital markets. Our findings suggest that internal capital markets operate within corporate groups and that they have a potential anti-competitive effect.Business Groups, Cash Holdings, Internal Capital Markets, Deep-Pockets, Market Entry
Application du contrôle pour garantir la performance des systèmes Big Data
International audienceNous sommes à l'aube d'une énorme explosion de données et la quantité à traiter par les entreprises est de plus en plus grande. Pour faire face à ce chalenge, Google a développé MapReduce, un modèle de programmation parallèle qui est en train de devenir l'outil de facto pour l'analyse des systèmes Big Data. Bien que dans une certaine mesure son utilisation est déjà très répandue dans l'industrie, garantir les performances d'un système aussi complexe pose de grands problèmes et sa gestion nécessite un haut niveau d'expertise. Cet article répond à ces défis en proposant le premier système autonome qui garantit des contraintes de temps de réponse pour une charge de travail MapReduce simultanée. Nous développons le premier modèle dynamique d'une grappe MapRe- duce. De plus, un contrôle en boucle fermée est conçu et implémenté pour garantir un temps de réponse donné. Un contrôle d'anticipation de type ""feedforward"" est également rajouté pour amé- liorer la réponse du système en présence de perturbations, en l'occurrence, la variation du nombre de clients. L'approche est validée en ligne sur une grappe MapReduce avec 40 nœuds utilisant une charge de travail intensive de type Business Intelligence. Nos expériences montrent que le contrôle ainsi conçu peut garantir les contraintes de temps de réponse
Feedback Autonomic Provisioning for Guaranteeing Performance in MapReduce Systems
International audienceCompanies have a fast growing amounts of data to process and store, a data explosion is happening next to us. Currentlyone of the most common approaches to treat these vast data quantities are based on the MapReduce parallel programming paradigm.While its use is widespread in the industry, ensuring performance constraints, while at the same time minimizing costs, still providesconsiderable challenges. We propose a coarse grained control theoretical approach, based on techniques that have already provedtheir usefulness in the control community. We introduce the first algorithm to create dynamic models for Big Data MapReduce systems,running a concurrent workload. Furthermore we identify two important control use cases: relaxed performance - minimal resourceand strict performance. For the first case we develop two feedback control mechanism. A classical feedback controller and an evenbasedfeedback, that minimises the number of cluster reconfigurations as well. Moreover, to address strict performance requirements afeedforward predictive controller that efficiently suppresses the effects of large workload size variations is developed. All the controllersare validated online in a benchmark running in a real 60 node MapReduce cluster, using a data intensive Business Intelligenceworkload. Our experiments demonstrate the success of the control strategies employed in assuring service time constraints
Survival, differentiation, and neuroprotective mechanisms of human stem cells complexed with neurotrophin-3-releasing pharmacologically active microcarriers in an ex vivo model of parkinson’s disease
© AlphaMed Press 2015. Stem cell-based regenerative therapies hold great potential for the treatment of degenerative disorders such as Parkinson’s disease (PD). We recently reported the repair and functional recovery after treatment with human marrow-isolated adult multilineage inducible (MIAMI) cells adhered to neurotrophin-3 (NT3) releasing pharmacologically active microcarriers (PAMs) in hemiparkinsonian rats. In order to comprehend this effect, the goal of the present work was to elucidate the survival, differentiation, and neuroprotective mechanisms of MIAMI cells and human neural stem cells (NSCs), both adhering to NT3-releasing PAMs in an ex vivo organotypic model of nigrostriatal degeneration made from brain sagittal slices. It was shown that PAMs led to a marked increase in MIAMI cell survival and neuronal differentiation when releasing NT3. A significant neuroprotective effect of MIAMI cells adhering to PAMs was also demonstrated. NSCs barely had a neuroprotective effect and differentiated mostly into dopaminergic neuronal cells when adhering to PAM-NT3. Moreover, those cells were able to release dopamine in a sufficient amount to induce a return to baseline levels. Reverse transcription-quantitative polymerase chain reaction and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay analyses identified vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and stanniocalcin-1 as potential mediators of the neuroprotective effect of MIAMI cells and NSCs, respectively. It was also shown that VEGF locally stimulated tissue vascularization, which might improve graft survival, without excluding a direct neuroprotective effect of VEGF on dopaminergic neurons. These results indicate a prospective interest of human NSC/PAM and MIAMI cell/PAM complexes in tissue engineering for PD.Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (Grant SAF2010-17167), a grant from the Comunidad de Madrid (Grant S2011-BMD-2336), and Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Redes Tematicas de Investigacion Cooperativa en Salud RD12/0019/0013) to A.M.S.Peer Reviewe
The Power of Dynastic Commitment
We study how, at times of CEO transitions, the identity of the CEO successor shapes labor contracts within family firms. We propose an alternate view of how family management might underperform relative to external management in family firms. The idea developed in this paper is that, in contrast to external professionals, CEOs promoted from within the family not only inherit control of the firm but also inherit a set of implicit contracts that affects their ability to restructure the firm. Consistent with our dynastic commitment hypothesis, we find that family-promoted CEOs are associated with lower turnover of the workforce, lower wage renegotiation, and greater loyalty for the incumbent workforce
Modeling neurocognitive and neurobiological recovery in addiction
This book focuses on "what to know" and "how to apply" information, prioritizing novel principles and delineating cutting-edge assessment, phenotyping and treatment tools
Bankruptcy Law and the Cost of Banking Finance
Many theories study how firms'cost of funding depends on reorganization and liquidation in bankruptcy. However empirical evidence on this subject is scarce due to the difficulty in interpreting reforms that change different legal instruments at the same time. We take advantage of the timing of the 2005-2006 Italian bankruptcy law and combine it with a unique loan-level dataset. We find that the introduction of a reorganization procedure increased the interest rates on bank loans; the reform that made the liquidation procedure faster reduced firms' loan costs; and the presence of gains from creditor coordination reduced the cost of funding
Conceptualizing and Designing a Resilience Information Portal
Cities need to cater for the challenges they face. They must endure, respond to, and adapt to short-term shocks and long-term stresses. This ability is now commonly referred to as resilience. Communication and collaboration are vital aspects of a city\u27s effort of becoming (more) resilient. In particular, cities ought to engage their citizens, who ultimately are those that make it resilient - and who benefit from their city\u27s resilience. In this paper we present work from a large-scale research project with a considerably practical focus. We have employed IT artefacts to conceptualize and design what we call a Resilience Information Portal. This portal is meant to be the unifier of communication and collaboration efforts of a city. Our proposal takes into account that the basic technological artefacts already exist and are relatively simple, but that the actual problem is complex and requires the integration of various IT systems
Information from Automated Evaluation in an Engineering School
[EN] The paper introduces the need for automated evaluation and presents the experience of automating all the evaluations of a course in Computer Science in the sophomore year of an engineering degree. First, the paper describes the features needed and developed for that course and the positive results for both professors and students. The main advantage of automated evaluation is that it allows real continuous grading for all types of activities: short answers and exercises during the class, homework, short exercises evaluated every 10 days in class, medium term evaluations and the final grade for the course. A significant benefit of this practice is that it allows the professor, from the very beginning of the course, to monitor how the students perform each task. The professor can see in real time the marks of an exercise or evaluation, the global evolution of the class or the status of a specific student. The students also have immediate feedback from their exercises and the total points obtained at any given time providing greater involvement in the course. http://ocs.editorial.upv.es/index.php/HEAD/HEAD18Serrano, N.; Blanco, C.; Carias, F.; Reina, E. (2018). Information from Automated Evaluation in an Engineering School. Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València. 987-994. https://doi.org/10.4995/HEAD18.2018.8132OCS98799
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