18,914 research outputs found

    Shopping For Privacy: How Technology in Brick-and-Mortar Retail Stores Poses Privacy Risks for Shoppers

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    As technology continues to rapidly advance, the American legal system has failed to protect individual shoppers from the technology implemented into retail stores, which poses significant privacy risks but does not violate the law. In particular, I examine the technologies implemented into many brick-and-mortar stores today, many of which the average everyday shopper has no idea exists. This Article criticizes these technologies, suggesting that many, if not all of them, are questionable in their legality taking advantage of their status in a legal gray zone. Because the American judicial system cannot adequately protect the individual shopper from these questionable privacy practices, I call upon the Federal Trade Commission, the de facto privacy regulator in the United States, to increase its policing of physical retail stores to protect the shopper from any further harm

    Visual Human Tracking and Group Activity Analysis: A Video Mining System for Retail Marketing

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    Thesis (PhD) - Indiana University, Computer Sciences, 2007In this thesis we present a system for automatic human tracking and activity recognition from video sequences. The problem of automated analysis of visual information in order to derive descriptors of high level human activities has intrigued computer vision community for decades and is considered to be largely unsolved. A part of this interest is derived from the vast range of applications in which such a solution may be useful. We attempt to find efficient formulations of these tasks as applied to the extracting customer behavior information in a retail marketing context. Based on these formulations, we present a system that visually tracks customers in a retail store and performs a number of activity analysis tasks based on the output from the tracker. In tracking we introduce new techniques for pedestrian detection, initialization of the body model and a formulation of the temporal tracking as a global trans-dimensional optimization problem. Initial human detection is addressed by a novel method for head detection, which incorporates the knowledge of the camera projection model.The initialization of the human body model is addressed by newly developed shape and appearance descriptors. Temporal tracking of customer trajectories is performed by employing a human body tracking system designed as a Bayesian jump-diffusion filter. This approach demonstrates the ability to overcome model dimensionality ambiguities as people are leaving and entering the scene. Following the tracking, we developed a two-stage group activity formulation based upon the ideas from swarming research. For modeling purposes, all moving actors in the scene are viewed here as simplistic agents in the swarm. This allows to effectively define a set of inter-agent interactions, which combine to derive a distance metric used in further swarm clustering. This way, in the first stage the shoppers that belong to the same group are identified by deterministically clustering bodies to detect short term events and in the second stage events are post-processed to form clusters of group activities with fuzzy memberships. Quantitative analysis of the tracking subsystem shows an improvement over the state of the art methods, if used under similar conditions. Finally, based on the output from the tracker, the activity recognition procedure achieves over 80% correct shopper group detection, as validated by the human generated ground truth results

    Measuring Employee Perceptions of Organizational Tolerance for Failure

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    The empirical concept of Organizational Tolerance for Organizational Failure was examined. First, a clear definition of the concept was established and, second, the concept\u27s dimensionality was explored. Based on data collected from 140 participants, four main scale components were identified: Organizational Values and Beliefs, Organizational and Supervisor Support and Motivation, Compensation and Reward Systems, and Recognition. Even though the final scale developed represented a good research base, further development is needed to improve some of the subscale\u27s internal consistencies

    Cognitive finance: Behavioural strategies of spending, saving, and investing.

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    Research in economics is increasingly open to empirical results. The advances in behavioural approaches are expanded here by applying cognitive methods to financial questions. The field of "cognitive finance" is approached by the exploration of decision strategies in the financial settings of spending, saving, and investing. Individual strategies in these different domains are searched for and elaborated to derive explanations for observed irregularities in financial decision making. Strong context-dependency and adaptive learning form the basis for this cognition-based approach to finance. Experiments, ratings, and real world data analysis are carried out in specific financial settings, combining different research methods to improve the understanding of natural financial behaviour. People use various strategies in the domains of spending, saving, and investing. Specific spending profiles can be elaborated for a better understanding of individual spending differences. It was found that people differ along four dimensions of spending, which can be labelled: General Leisure, Regular Maintenance, Risk Orientation, and Future Orientation. Saving behaviour is strongly dependent on how people mentally structure their finance and on their self-control attitude towards decision space restrictions, environmental cues, and contingency structures. Investment strategies depend on how companies, in which investments are placed, are evaluated on factors such as Honesty, Prestige, Innovation, and Power. Further on, different information integration strategies can be learned in decision situations with direct feedback. The mapping of cognitive processes in financial decision making is discussed and adaptive learning mechanisms are proposed for the observed behavioural differences. The construal of a "financial personality" is proposed in accordance with other dimensions of personality measures, to better acknowledge and predict variations in financial behaviour. This perspective enriches economic theories and provides a useful ground for improving individual financial services

    Data Mining in Electronic Commerce

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    Modern business is rushing toward e-commerce. If the transition is done properly, it enables better management, new services, lower transaction costs and better customer relations. Success depends on skilled information technologists, among whom are statisticians. This paper focuses on some of the contributions that statisticians are making to help change the business world, especially through the development and application of data mining methods. This is a very large area, and the topics we cover are chosen to avoid overlap with other papers in this special issue, as well as to respect the limitations of our expertise. Inevitably, electronic commerce has raised and is raising fresh research problems in a very wide range of statistical areas, and we try to emphasize those challenges.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/088342306000000204 in the Statistical Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
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