5,791 research outputs found
EXAMINING PRICE PATHS OF A PORTFOLIO OF AGRO-BIOTECHNOLOGY SEEDS: THE EFFECTS OF COMPETITION AND FARMERS' RESPONSE
Biotechnology techniques have played an important role in meeting farmer's needs in the seed industry given the changes in customer's preferences. This paper analytically evaluates the time paths of pricing a portfolio of seeds, which simultaneously encourages seed adoption and maximizes a firm's returns within a competitive environment while considering shorter product life cycles. Using a dynamic programming (DP) approach, the results indicate that the single pricing model and the portfolio pricing model are materially affected by the firm's initial market share, the farmer's attitude towards seed attributes, and the firm competitiveness within the industry. Farmer's acceptance of a seed variety will have an impact on seed price or actions from the seed firm even though farmers are theoretically and empirically considered as price takers in the input markets.Financial Economics, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies,
Supporting people with active and advanced disease: a rapid review of the evidence
1.1 Background: the NCSI AAD group
The National Cancer Survivorship Initiative (NCSI, 2010) was set up in response to the NHS Cancer Reform Strategy (Department of Health, 2007) as a collaboration between Macmillan Cancer Support, the Department of Health and NHS Improvement, with the goal to achieve a better understanding of the experiences of cancer survivors and to advocate for the provision of services to support them. Within this broad remit, it was recognised that there was a particular group of patients whose needs were commonly neglected; people who were experiencing the ongoing effects of cancer beyond first-line treatment but who were not at end of life. The Active and Advanced Disease (AAD) working group was created to consider issues of relevance to such people.
1.2 Aims of this review
This project set out to meet the following aim:
To review the literature on selected cancers in order to identify implications for the development of services to support patients experiencing difficulties associated with active and advanced disease
Attachment working models as unconscious structures: An experimental test
Internal working models of attachment (IWMs) are presumed to be largely unconscious representations of childhood attachment experiences. Several instruments have been developed to assess IWMs; some of them are based on self-report and others on narrative interview techniques. This study investigated the capacity of a self-report measure, the Inventory of Parent and Peer Attachment (IPPA; Armsden & Greenberg, 1987), and of a narrative interview method, the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI; George, Kaplan, & Main, 1985), to measure unconscious attachment models. We compared scores on the two attachment instruments to response latencies in an attachment priming task. It was shown that attachment organisation assessed by the AAI correlates with priming effects, whereas the IPPA scales were inversely or not related to priming. The results are interpreted as support for the assumption that the AAI assesses, to a certain degree, unconscious working models of attachment
Alien Registration- Quinn, Annie A. (Millinocket, Penobscot County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/7390/thumbnail.jp
Alien Registration- Lavers, Annie A. (Portland, Cumberland County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/21885/thumbnail.jp
Statically Checking Web API Requests in JavaScript
Many JavaScript applications perform HTTP requests to web APIs, relying on
the request URL, HTTP method, and request data to be constructed correctly by
string operations. Traditional compile-time error checking, such as calling a
non-existent method in Java, are not available for checking whether such
requests comply with the requirements of a web API. In this paper, we propose
an approach to statically check web API requests in JavaScript. Our approach
first extracts a request's URL string, HTTP method, and the corresponding
request data using an inter-procedural string analysis, and then checks whether
the request conforms to given web API specifications. We evaluated our approach
by checking whether web API requests in JavaScript files mined from GitHub are
consistent or inconsistent with publicly available API specifications. From the
6575 requests in scope, our approach determined whether the request's URL and
HTTP method was consistent or inconsistent with web API specifications with a
precision of 96.0%. Our approach also correctly determined whether extracted
request data was consistent or inconsistent with the data requirements with a
precision of 87.9% for payload data and 99.9% for query data. In a systematic
analysis of the inconsistent cases, we found that many of them were due to
errors in the client code. The here proposed checker can be integrated with
code editors or with continuous integration tools to warn programmers about
code containing potentially erroneous requests.Comment: International Conference on Software Engineering, 201
Problématique de terminologie botanique en français : l'exemple des fruits, noix et arbres fruitiers du Vanuatu (Vanouatou)
L'objectif est de fixer la terminologie en français des principales espèces fruitières du Vanuat
A Case for Reverse Incorporation of Academic Legal Scholarship into Conflict Management Studies
The article takes as its point of departure some of the author’s multidisciplinary projects. Special attention is given to the question of whether the disciplines united in the vari- ous research team members already constituted a kind of ‘inter-discipline’, through which a single object was studied. The issue of how the disciplinary orientations of the research team members occasionally clashed, on methodological issues, is also addressed.
The outcomes of these and similar multidisciplinary research projects are followed back into legal practice and academic legal scholarship to uncover whether an incorporation prob- lem indeed exists. Here, special attention will be given to policy recommendations and notably proposals for new leg- islation. After all, according to Van Dijck et al., the typical role model for legal researchers working from an internal perspective on the law is the legislator.
The author concludes by making a somewhat bold case for reverse incorporation, that is, the need for (traditional) aca- demic legal research to become an integral part of a more encompassing (inter-)discipline, referred to here as ‘conflict management studies’. Key factors that will contribute to the rise of such a broad (inter-)discipline are the changes that currently permeate legal practice (the target audience of tra- ditional legal research) and the changes in the overall financing of academic research itself (with special reference to the Netherlands)
A study of flux lines lattice order and critical current with time of flight small angle neutron scattering
Small angle neutron scattering (SANS) is an historical technique to study the
flux lines lattice (FLL) in a superconductor. Structural characteristics of the
FLL can be revealed, providing fundamental information for the physics of
vortex lattice.
However, the spatial resolution is limited and all the correlation lengths of
order are difficult to extract with precision.
We show here that a time of flight technique reveals the Bragg peak of the
FLL, and also its translational order with a better resolution.
We discuss the implication of these results for pinning mechanisms in a
Niobium sample.Comment: accepted in PR
Inviscid Large deviation principle and the 2D Navier Stokes equations with a free boundary condition
Using a weak convergence approach, we prove a LPD for the solution of 2D
stochastic Navier Stokes equations when the viscosity converges to 0 and the
noise intensity is multiplied by the square root of the viscosity. Unlike
previous results on LDP for hydrodynamical models, the weak convergence is
proven by tightness properties of the distribution of the solution in
appropriate functional spaces
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