15,966 research outputs found

    Family History of Adam R. Smith

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    Family history of Adam R. Smith, connections to the coal mining in southeast Kansas

    The Relationship of Personality to Entrepreneurial Performance: An Examination of Openness to Experience Facets

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    The role of personality has resurfaced in entrepreneurship research. The results surrounding the broad personality traits have varied. Although openness to experience has been found to generally have a positive relationship with entrepreneurial intentions and performance (e.g., Zhao, Seibert, & Lumpkin, 2010), conflicting and inconsistent results have emerged (e.g., Baron & Markman, 2004; Ciaverella, Buchholtz, Riordan, Gatewood, & Stokes, 2004). Therefore, an in-depth look at the facets of openness to experience may offer additional information. The present investigation used a sample of founder/owners and examined the facets of openness to: fantasy, aesthetics, feelings, actions, ideas, and values. Specifically, it was hypothesized that openness to fantasy, aesthetics, and feelings were negatively related to entrepreneurial performance. Also, it was hypothesized that openness to actions, ideas, and values were positively related to entrepreneurial performance. Additionally, the grit construct (Duckworth, Peterson, Matthews, & Kelly, 2007) was explored as a possible moderator. Grit was hypothesized to improve each of the relationships between openness facets and entrepreneurial performance. The hypotheses were tested using hierarchical multiple regression. Full support was only found for one hypothesis. One explanation could be that entrepreneurship is a process that goes through phases where each has a different set of activities and outcomes, and the effects of openness may change over the different phases of founding a new venture. Several results supported previous research findings. Contributions and future research ideas are discussed

    Compiler Transformations to Generate Reentrant C Programs to Assist Software Parallelization

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    As we move through the multi-core era into the many-core era it becomes obvi- ous that thread-based programming is here to stay. This trend in the development of general purpose hardware is augmented by the fact that while writing sequential programs is considered a non-trivial task, writing parallel applications to take ad- vantage of the advances in the number of cores in a processor severely complicates the process. Writing parallel applications requires programs and functions to be reentrant. Therefore, we cannot use globals and statics. However, globals and statics are useful in certain contexts. Globals allow an easy programming mecha- nism to share data between several functions. Statics provide the only mechanism of data hiding in C for variables that are global in scope. Writing parallel programs restricts users from using globals and statics in their programs, as doing so would make the program non-reentrant. Moreover, there is a large existing legacy code base of sequential programs that are non-reentrant, since they rely on statics and globals. Several of these sequential programs dis- play significant amounts of data parallelism by operating on independent chunks of input data, and therefore can be easily converted into parallel versions to ex- ploit multi-core processors. Indeed, several such programs have been manually converted into parallel versions. However, manually eliminating all globals and statics to make the program reentrant is tedious, time-consuming, and error-prone. In this paper we describe a system to provide a semi-automated mechanism for users to still be able to use statics and globals in their programs, and to let the compiler automatically convert them into their semantically-equivalent reentrant versions enabling their parallelization later

    Examination of Regional Transit Service Under Contracting: A Case Study in the Greater New Orleans Region, Research Report 10-09

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    Many local governments and transit agencies in the United States face financial difficulties in providing adequate public transit service in individual systems, and in providing sufficient regional coordination to accommodate transit trips involving at least one transfer between systems. These difficulties can be attributed to the recent economic downturn, continuing withdrawal of the state and federal funds that help support local transit service, a decline in local funding for transit service in inner cities due to ongoing suburbanization, and a distribution of resources that responds to geographic equity without addressing service needs. This study examines two main research questions: (1) the effect of a “delegated management” contract on efficiency and effectiveness within a single transit system, and (2) the effects of a single private firm—contracted separately by more than one agency in the same region—on regional coordination, exploring the case in Greater New Orleans. The current situation in New Orleans exhibits two unique transit service conditions. First, New Orleans Regional Transit Authority (RTA) executed a “delegated management” contract with a multinational private firm, outsourcing more functions (e.g., management, planning, funding) to the contractor than has been typical in the U.S. Second, as the same contractor has also been contracted by another transit agency in an adjacent jurisdiction—Jefferson Transit (JeT), this firm may potentially have economic incentives to improve regional coordination, in order to increase the productivity and effectiveness of its own transit service provision. Although the limited amount of available operation and financial data has prevented us from drawing more definitive conclusions, the findings of this multifaceted study should provide valuable information on a transit service contracting approach new to the U.S.: delegated management. This study also identified a coherent set of indices with which to evaluate the regional coordination of transit service, the present status of coordination among U.S. transit agencies, and barriers that need to be resolved for regional transit coordination to be successful

    Vorticity-transport and unstructured RANS investigation of rotor-fuselage interactions

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    The prediction capabilities of unstructured primitive-variable and vorticity-transport-based Navier-Stokes solvers have been compared for rotorcraft-fuselage interaction. Their accuracies have been assessed using the NASA Langley ROBIN series of experiments. Correlation of steady pressure on the isolated fuselage delineates the differences between the viscous and inviscid solvers. The influence of the individual blade passage, model supports, and viscous effects on the unsteady pressure loading has been studied. Smoke visualization from the ROBIN experiment has been used to determine the ability of the codes to predict the wake geometry. The two computational methods are observed to provide similar results within the context of their physical assumptions and simplifications in the test configuration

    Multi-wavelength analysis of the Galactic supernova remnant MSH 11-61A

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    Due to its centrally bright X-ray morphology and limb brightened radio profile, MSH 11-61A (G290.1-0.8) is classified as a mixed morphology supernova remnant (SNR). H\textsc{i} and CO observations determined that the SNR is interacting with molecular clouds found toward the north and southwest regions of the remnant. In this paper we report on the detection of Îł\gamma-ray emission coincident with MSH 11-61A, using 70 months of data from the Large Area Telescope on board the \textit{Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope}. To investigate the origin of this emission, we perform broadband modelling of its non-thermal emission considering both leptonic and hadronic cases and concluding that the Îł\gamma-ray emission is most likely hadronic in nature. Additionally we present our analysis of a 111 ks archival \textit{Suzaku} observation of this remnant. Our investigation shows that the X-ray emission from MSH 11-61A arises from shock-heated ejecta with the bulk of the X-ray emission arising from a recombining plasma, while the emission towards the east arises from an ionising plasma.Comment: 12 Pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa

    Forecasting Equicorrelation

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    We study the out-of-sample forecasting performance of several time-series models of equicorrelation, which is the average pairwise correlation between a number of assets. Building on the existing Dynamic Conditional Correlation and Linear Dynamic Equicorrelation models, we propose a model that uses proxies for equicorrelation based on high-frequency intraday data, and the level of equicorrelation implied by options prices. Using state-of-the-art statistical evaluation technology, we find that the use of both realized and implied equicorrelations outperform models that use daily data alone. However, the out-of-sample forecasting benefits of implied equicorrelation disappear when used in conjunction with the realized measures.Equicorrelation, Implied Correlation, Multivariate GARCH, DCC

    Fuzzy Extractors: How to Generate Strong Keys from Biometrics and Other Noisy Data

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    We provide formal definitions and efficient secure techniques for - turning noisy information into keys usable for any cryptographic application, and, in particular, - reliably and securely authenticating biometric data. Our techniques apply not just to biometric information, but to any keying material that, unlike traditional cryptographic keys, is (1) not reproducible precisely and (2) not distributed uniformly. We propose two primitives: a "fuzzy extractor" reliably extracts nearly uniform randomness R from its input; the extraction is error-tolerant in the sense that R will be the same even if the input changes, as long as it remains reasonably close to the original. Thus, R can be used as a key in a cryptographic application. A "secure sketch" produces public information about its input w that does not reveal w, and yet allows exact recovery of w given another value that is close to w. Thus, it can be used to reliably reproduce error-prone biometric inputs without incurring the security risk inherent in storing them. We define the primitives to be both formally secure and versatile, generalizing much prior work. In addition, we provide nearly optimal constructions of both primitives for various measures of ``closeness'' of input data, such as Hamming distance, edit distance, and set difference.Comment: 47 pp., 3 figures. Prelim. version in Eurocrypt 2004, Springer LNCS 3027, pp. 523-540. Differences from version 3: minor edits for grammar, clarity, and typo

    Tension Cranes, A Close Collaboration of Architects and Engineers

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    This set of images and studies proves to show that architects and engineers can indeed work closely to produce amazing and beautiful results. This result came in the form of a project proposal for a high – rise residential tower located in the heart of San Francisco. The team elected to utilize a highly efficient system of cables in order to cantilever over the edges of the site and optimize the air space, make powerful vistas to increase residential value, and to form an elegant structural system holding everything together. In this paper, the design process is explained into engineering, architecture and then how the two have come together to make a compelling project
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