964,412 research outputs found
Thermal And Mechanical Analysis of High-power Light-emitting Diodes with Ceramic Packages
In this paper we present the thermal and mechanical analysis of high-power
light-emitting diodes (LEDs) with ceramic packages. Transient thermal
measurements and thermo-mechanical simulation were performed to study the
thermal and mechanical characteristics of ceramic packages. Thermal resistance
from the junction to the ambient was decreased from 76.1 oC/W to 45.3 oC/W by
replacing plastic mould to ceramic mould for LED packages. Higher level of
thermo-mechanical stresses in the chip were found for LEDs with ceramic
packages despite of less mismatching coefficients of thermal expansion
comparing with plastic packages. The results suggest that the thermal
performance of LEDs can be improved by using ceramic packages, but the mounting
process of the high power LEDs with ceramic packages is critically important
and should be in charge of delaminating interface layers in the packages.Comment: Submitted on behalf of TIMA Editions
(http://irevues.inist.fr/tima-editions
Severance Packages
Job-to-job turnover provides a way for employers to escape statutory firing costs, as unprofitable workers may willfully quit their job on receiving an outside offer, thus sparing their incumbent employer the firing costs. Furthermore, employers can induce their unprofitable workers to accept outside job offers that they would otherwise reject by offering voluntary severance packages, which are less costly than the full statutory firing cost. We formalize those mechanisms within an extension of the Diamond-Mortensen-Pissarides (DMP) matching model that allows for employed job search and negotiation over severance packages. We find that, while essentially preserving most standard qualitative predictions of the DMP model without employed job search, our model explains why higher firing costs intensify job-to-job turnover at the expense of transitions out of unemployment. We further find that allowing for on-the-job search markedly changes the quantitative predictions of the DMP model regarding the impact of firing costs on unemployment and employment flows: ignoring on-the-job search leads one to strongly underestimate the negative impact of firing costs on unemployment.firing costs, on-the-job search, mutual consent, minimum wage
Comparison of Gaussian process modeling software
Gaussian process fitting, or kriging, is often used to create a model from a
set of data. Many available software packages do this, but we show that very
different results can be obtained from different packages even when using the
same data and model. We describe the parameterization, features, and
optimization used by eight different fitting packages that run on four
different platforms. We then compare these eight packages using various data
functions and data sets, revealing that there are stark differences between the
packages. In addition to comparing the prediction accuracy, the predictive
variance--which is important for evaluating precision of predictions and is
often used in stopping criteria--is also evaluated
Breaking the borders: an investigation of cross-ecosystem software packages
Software ecosystems are collections of projects that are developed and evolve
together in the same environment. Existing literature investigates software
ecosystems as isolated entities whose boundaries do not overlap and assumes
they are self-contained. However, a number of software projects are distributed
in more than one ecosystem. As different aspects, e.g., success, security
vulnerabilities, bugs, etc., of such cross-ecosystem packages can affect
multiple ecosystems, we investigate the presence and characteristics of these
cross-ecosystem packages in 12 large software distributions. We found a small
number of packages distributed in multiple packaging ecosystems and that such
packages are usually distributed in two ecosystems. These packages tend to
better support with new releases certain ecosystems, while their evolution can
impact a multitude of packages in other ecosystems. Finally, such packages
appear to be popular with large developer communities.Comment: 5 pages, presented at BENEVOL 2018, the 17th Belgium-Netherlands
Software Evolution Workshop, December 2018, Delft, Netherland
Multimedia Semantic Integrity Assessment Using Joint Embedding Of Images And Text
Real world multimedia data is often composed of multiple modalities such as
an image or a video with associated text (e.g. captions, user comments, etc.)
and metadata. Such multimodal data packages are prone to manipulations, where a
subset of these modalities can be altered to misrepresent or repurpose data
packages, with possible malicious intent. It is, therefore, important to
develop methods to assess or verify the integrity of these multimedia packages.
Using computer vision and natural language processing methods to directly
compare the image (or video) and the associated caption to verify the integrity
of a media package is only possible for a limited set of objects and scenes. In
this paper, we present a novel deep learning-based approach for assessing the
semantic integrity of multimedia packages containing images and captions, using
a reference set of multimedia packages. We construct a joint embedding of
images and captions with deep multimodal representation learning on the
reference dataset in a framework that also provides image-caption consistency
scores (ICCSs). The integrity of query media packages is assessed as the
inlierness of the query ICCSs with respect to the reference dataset. We present
the MultimodAl Information Manipulation dataset (MAIM), a new dataset of media
packages from Flickr, which we make available to the research community. We use
both the newly created dataset as well as Flickr30K and MS COCO datasets to
quantitatively evaluate our proposed approach. The reference dataset does not
contain unmanipulated versions of tampered query packages. Our method is able
to achieve F1 scores of 0.75, 0.89 and 0.94 on MAIM, Flickr30K and MS COCO,
respectively, for detecting semantically incoherent media packages.Comment: *Ayush Jaiswal and Ekraam Sabir contributed equally to the work in
this pape
CRM packaged software: a study of organisational experiences
Customer Relationship Management (CRM) packaged software has become a key contributor to attempts at aligning business and IT strategies in recent years. Throughout the 1990s there was, in many organisations strategies, a shift from the need to manage transactions and toward relationship management. Where Enterprise Resource Planning packages dominated the management of transactions era, CRM packages lead in regard to relationships. At present, balanced views of CRM packages are scantly presented instead relying on vendor rhetoric. This paper uses case study research to analyse some of the issues associated with CRM packages. These issues include the limitations of CRM packages, the need for a relationship orientation and the problems of a dominant management perspective of CRM. It is suggested that these issues could be more readily accommodated by organisational detachment from beliefs in IT as utopia, consideration of prior IS theory and practice and a more informed approach to CRM package selection
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