2,284 research outputs found
Foreign direct investment and spillovers : gradualism may be better
In contrast to the standard literature, we show that the presence of spillovers may justify temporarily restricting the inflow of foreign direct investment. Our argument is based on two stylized features of spillovers: first, technology transfers --- and subsequent spillovers --- are limited by the economy's absorptive capacity; and second, spillovers take time to materialize. By letting capital in more gradually, initial investment has the time to create spillovers --- and upgrade the economy's absorptive capacity --- before further investment occurs. This allows subsequent capital inflows to benefit from greater technology transfers. As a result, the economy converges to a steady state with a superior technology and a greater capital stock.We acknowledge financial support from the European Union Directorate
General XII (project SERD-1999-000102) and of the Comunidad de Madrid (project
06/0186/2002
Development of Surfaces Optically Suitable for Flat Solar Panels
Three areas of research in the development of flat solar panels are described. (1) A reflectometer which can separately evaluate the spectral and diffuse reflectivities of surfaces was developed. The reflectometer has a phase locked detection system. (2) A coating composed of strongly bound copper oxide that is formed by an etching process performed on an aluminum alloy with high copper content was also developed. Because of this one step fabrication process, fabrication costs are expected to be small. (3) A literature search was conducted and conclusions on the required optical properties of flat plate solar collectors are presented
The roles of products in product emotions an explorative study
Although several theoretical frameworks that aim to explain the emotional impact of product design have been introduced in design research literature, none of these frameworks clearly specifies the role of the product in these emotions. This paper reports a study that was designed to explore the variety of roles that products can play in emotional experiences. In a three staged experience sampling study, 29 participants produced 170 records of emotions experienced while interacting with products. Each case was examined in order to identify the antecedent event (the event triggering the emotion) and the mental object (what the emotion is about). The results indicated that several types of events involved in the user-product interaction can elicit an emotional experience: noticing a product; an event occurring during product usage; an entire usage episode; an external agent mentioning the product; and a change in the relationship between a user and a product . It was also found that the resulting emotional responses can be about (can be attributed to) several types of mental objects: a physical object, such as the particular product involved; the user or some other person; the actions of the user or the designer; the antecedent event itself. The results are used to identify and discuss eight distinct roles that products can play in the experience of emotions. In addition, examples are provided to illustrate how these roles can facilitate a structured approach to design for emotion.
Keywords:
Design and emotion, user-product interaction</p
Development of Surfaces Optically Suitable for Flat Solar Panels
Innovations in reflectometry techniques are described; and the development of an absorbing selective coating is discussed along with details of surface properties. Conclusions as to the parameterization desired for practical applications of selective surfaces are provided
Foreign direct investment and spillovers : gradualism may be better.
The standard argument says that in the presence of positive spillovers foreign direct investment should be promoted and subsidized. In contrast, this paper claims that the very existence of spillovers may require temporarily restricting FDI. Our argument is based on two features of spillovers: they are limited by the economy's absorptive capacity and they take time to materialize. By letting in capital more gradually, initial investment has the time to create spillovers – and upgrade the economy's absorptive capacity – before further investment occurs. The economy converges to a steady state with a superior technology and a greater capital stock
The Incisive Line: prints, paintings & drawings By Richard Fozard (1925 - 2000).
Richard Fozard’s fine engravings and etchings present a potent vision of landscape. He was an individual and a spiritual artist in the tradition of Samuel Palmer.
Fozard’s career as an artist-printmaker began in 1939 when, at 14 years of age, he entered the litho-art studio of the Gilchrist brothers (process engravers) who paid for him to take evening classes in design and life drawing.With the onset of the Second World War, the firm’s work changed and he took work on the land, returning to his childhood love: the Yorkshire Dales. In 1961 he moved to Hornsey College of Art, later to be merged with Middlesex Polytechnic (now University), lecturing three days per week until 1986. As a teacher, he always emphasised the primacy of good draughtsmanship and, as a printmaker, he was a seasoned and patient master of his craft whose students were inspired by the experience of watching him ink, wipe and print an intaglio plate.
This exhibition is the first major retrospective survey of his collected works - etchings, copper engravings, woodcuts, pen and ink drawings and watercolours - ever to be held. It will offer a unique opportunity to assess the strength of his works and to celebrate his artistic vision and accomplishments, establishing him as a notable, individual figure in that special tradition of English, poetic, pastoral art
Alignment and algebraically special tensors in Lorentzian geometry
We develop a dimension-independent theory of alignment in Lorentzian
geometry, and apply it to the tensor classification problem for the Weyl and
Ricci tensors. First, we show that the alignment condition is equivalent to the
PND equation. In 4D, this recovers the usual Petrov types. For higher
dimensions, we prove that, in general, a Weyl tensor does not possess aligned
directions. We then go on to describe a number of additional algebraic types
for the various alignment configurations. For the case of second-order
symmetric (Ricci) tensors, we perform the classification by considering the
geometric properties of the corresponding alignment variety.Comment: 19 pages. Revised presentatio
Extending the functionalities of shear-driven chromatography nano-channels using high aspect ratio etching
An new injection system is presented for shear-driven chromatography. The device has been fabricated by high aspect ratio etching of silicon. The performance of the injection slit is studied through the aid of computational fluid dynamics, and the first experimental results are presented
Improving the Generalizability of Depression Detection by Leveraging Clinical Questionnaires
Automated methods have been widely used to identify and analyze mental health
conditions (e.g., depression) from various sources of information, including
social media. Yet, deployment of such models in real-world healthcare
applications faces challenges including poor out-of-domain generalization and
lack of trust in black box models. In this work, we propose approaches for
depression detection that are constrained to different degrees by the presence
of symptoms described in PHQ9, a questionnaire used by clinicians in the
depression screening process. In dataset-transfer experiments on three social
media datasets, we find that grounding the model in PHQ9's symptoms
substantially improves its ability to generalize to out-of-distribution data
compared to a standard BERT-based approach. Furthermore, this approach can
still perform competitively on in-domain data. These results and our
qualitative analyses suggest that grounding model predictions in
clinically-relevant symptoms can improve generalizability while producing a
model that is easier to inspect
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