2,362 research outputs found
Does My Stigma Look Big in This? Considering the acceptability and desirability in the inclusive design of technology products
This paper examines the relationship between stigmatic effects of design of technology products for the older and disabled and contextualizes this within wider social themes such as the functional, social, medical and technology models of disability. Inclusive design approaches are identified as unbiased methods for designing for the wider population that may accommodate the needs and desires of people with impairments, therefore reducing ’aesthetic stigma’. Two case studies illustrate stigmatic and nonstigmatic designs
Four-injector variability modeling of FinFET predictive technology models
The usual way of modeling variability using threshold voltage shift and drain current amplification is becoming inaccurate as new sources of variability appear in sub-22nm devices. In this work we apply the four-injector approach for variability modeling to the simulation of SRAMs with predictive technology models from 20nm down to 7nm nodes. We show that the SRAMs, designed following ITRS roadmap, present stability metrics higher by at least 20% compared to a classical variability modeling approach. Speed estimation is also pessimistic, whereas leakage is underestimated if sub-threshold slope and DIBL mismatch and their correlations with threshold voltage are not considered
The optimal mix of taxes on money, consumption and income
We determine the optimal combination of taxes on money, consumption and income in transactions technology models where exogenous government expenditures must be financed with distortionary taxes. We show that the optimal policy does not tax money, regardless of whether the government can use as alternative fiscal instruments an income tax, a consumption tax, or the two taxes jointly. These results are at odds with recent literature. We argue that the reason for this divergence is an inappropriate specification of the transactions technology adopted in the literature.Consumption (Economics) ; Income ; Taxation
Documentation of the Analyses of the Benefits and Costs of Aeronautical Research and Technology models (ABC-ART). Volume 2: Appendices
Fleet variables are defined, and source codes for each module are presented
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Enterprise portals: addressing the organisational and individual perspectives of information systems
Enterprise portals are being viewed as the next generation application platform of choice, offering benefits over both client/server and thin client arrangements. By providing a mediating layer between the information applications and resources of the organisation and the individuals using them, enterprise portals appear to provide a unique context to allow both the organisational and individual perspectives of information systems to be addressed. This study seeks to examine these often competing perspectives of information systems by using an exploratory empirical survey to investigate the actual deployment of enterprise portals within a range of different organisations. It is found that both the individual and organisational benefits that enterprise portals can offer appear to have been recognised, and coherent sets of services addressing each of these perspectives are being developed. Consistent with diffusion and acceptance of technology models, organisations appear to be commencing their portal developments with services that will ensure utilisation by individuals, and are subsequently seeking to realise organisational level benefits
Environment in Three Classes of Endogenous Growth Models
The implications of environmental externalities are studied within three classes of endogenous growth models viz. the linear technology models, the human capital models, and the R&D and innovation models. The long-run rate of economic growth changes when environmental extemalities are introduced; the direction of change depends on the severity of extemalities and the intertemporal elasticity of substitution. The presence of environmental externalities cause the decentralized growth rate to diverge from the efficient rate. Which rate is bigger than the other depends, among other things, on the valuation of consumption relative to environmental quality. Several policy changes to align the two paths are discussed. The models are calibrated to U.S. data.Environmental Economics and Policy, International Development,
A trajectory generation and system characterization model for cislunar low-thrust spacecraft. Volume 2: Technical manual
The documentation of the Trajectory Generation and System Characterization Model for the Cislunar Low-Thrust Spacecraft is presented in Technical and User's Manuals. The system characteristics and trajectories of low thrust nuclear electric propulsion spacecraft can be generated through the use of multiple system technology models coupled with a high fidelity trajectory generation routine. The Earth to Moon trajectories utilize near Earth orbital plane alignment, midcourse control dependent upon the spacecraft's Jacobian constant, and capture to target orbit utilizing velocity matching algorithms. The trajectory generation is performed in a perturbed two-body equinoctial formulation and the restricted three-body formulation. A single control is determined by the user for the interactive midcourse portion of the trajectory. The full spacecraft system characteristics and trajectory are provided as output
On the global economic potentials and marginal costs of non-renewable resources and the price of energy commodities
A model is presented in this work for simulating endogenously the evolution
of the marginal costs of production of energy carriers from non-renewable
resources, their consumption, depletion pathways and timescales. Such marginal
costs can be used to simulate the long term average price formation of energy
commodities. Drawing on previous work where a global database of energy
resource economic potentials was constructed, this work uses cost distributions
of non-renewable resources in order to evaluate global flows of energy
commodities. A mathematical framework is given to calculate endogenous flows of
energy resources given an exogenous commodity price path. This framework can be
used in reverse in order to calculate an exogenous marginal cost of production
of energy carriers given an exogenous carrier demand. Using rigid price
inelastic assumptions independent of the economy, these two approaches generate
limiting scenarios that depict extreme use of natural resources. This is useful
to characterise the current state and possible uses of remaining non-renewable
resources such as fossil fuels and natural uranium. The theory is however
designed for use within economic or technology models that allow technology
substitutions. In this work, it is implemented in the global power sector model
FTT:Power. Policy implications are given.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, 8 pages of supplementary informatio
Seeking Sustainability: A Nonprofit News Roundtable Summary and Report
Summarizes April 2010 discussions on entrepreneurship, revenue, engagement, and technology models among Web-based, local nonprofit news organizations seeking sustainability. Assesses unresolved issues and future challenges. Includes post-meeting survey
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