87 research outputs found
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The rationale of e-health evaluation: The case of NHS Direct
An important area of research is that of the evaluation of e-health services. A holistic e-health evaluation framework should address the aspects that are hampering healthcare services from embracing the full potential of information and communication technologies towards successful e-health initiatives. Towards building a holistic evaluation framework for e-health services, this paper is intended to examine the rationale of e-health evaluation, as the paper argues that this aspect should be addressed first in the development of such a framework. NHS Direct which is one of the largest e-health services in the world has been chosen to discuss and validate a set of evaluation rationales and their applicability in practice
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Impact of knowledge management processes on organisational performance: A preliminary study
Copyright @ 2013 EMCIS.Despite the increasing number of studies relating to Knowledge Management (KM) in developed countries, few studies have explored this issue within the context of developing countries. Moreover, some industries have been affected more acutely than others in the transition to a knowledge-based economy. Thus, the purpose of this paper is to evaluate KM processes and to investigate the impact on organisational performance (OP).The authors propose a conceptual model through an in-depth investigation of the previous and current studies in the area of KM and OP. It is envisaged that this model can play a role in guiding the process of KM implementation in order to maximise the beneficial effects of KM processes on OP. An inductive qualitative approach was used based on a preliminary study. A pilot study was conducted; the study involved the use of interview as a primary data collection technique. Content analysis approach was used to identify ideas relevant to the main themes. The study showed that knowledge usage is the most influential aspect of KM that impacts OP. Moreover, the study revealed that knowledge transfer is a common KM process employed by organisations. Accordingly, it was ranked as the second most influential factor of KM with respect to OP
Spider monkey optimization routing protocol for wireless sensor networks
Uneven energy consumption (UEC) is latent trouble in wireless sensor networks (WSNs) that feature a multiple motion pattern and a multi-hop routing. UEC often splits the network, reduces network life, and leads to performance degradation. Sometimes, improving energy consumption is more complicated because it does not reduce energy consumption only, but it also extends network life. This makes energy consumption balancing critical to WSN design calling for energy-efficient routing protocols that increase network life. Some energy-saving protocols have been applied to make the energy consumption among all nodes inside the network equilibrate in the expectancy and end power in almost all nodes simultaneously. This work has suggested a protocol of energy-saving routing named spider monkey optimization routing protocol (SMORP), which aims to probe the issue of network life in WSNs. The proposed protocol reduces excessive routing messages that may lead to the wastage of significant energy by recycling frequent information from the source node into the sink. This routing protocol can choose the optimal routing path. That is the preferable node can be chosen from nodes of the candidate in the sending ways by preferring the energy of maximum residual, the minimum traffic load, and the least distance to the sink. Simulation results have proved the effectiveness of the proposed protocol in terms of decreasing end-to-end delay, reducing energy consumption compared to well-known routing protocols
Metformin lowers Glucose 6-phosphate in hepatocytes by activation of glycolysis downstream of glucose phosphorylation
The chronic effects of metformin on liver gluconeogenesis involve repression of the G6pc gene, which is regulated by the carbohydrate-response element-binding protein through raised cellular intermediates of glucose metabolism. In this study we determined the candidate mechanisms by which metformin lowers glucose 6-phosphate (G6P) in mouse and rat hepatocytes challenged with high glucose or gluconeogenic precursors. Cell metformin loads in the therapeutic range lowered cell G6P but not ATP and decreased G6pc mRNA at high glucose. The G6P lowering by metformin was mimicked by a complex 1 inhibitor (rotenone) and an uncoupler (dinitrophenol) and by overexpression of mGPDH, which lowers glycerol 3-phosphate and G6P and also mimics the G6pc repression by metformin. In contrast, direct allosteric activators of AMPK (A-769662, 991, and C-13) had opposite effects from metformin on glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, and cell G6P. The G6P lowering by metformin, which also occurs in hepatocytes from AMPK knockout mice, is best explained by allosteric regulation of phosphofructokinase-1 and/or fructose bisphosphatase-1, as supported by increased metabolism of [3-3H]glucose relative to [2-3H]glucose; by an increase in the lactate m2/m1 isotopolog ratio from [1,2-13C2]glucose; by lowering of glycerol 3-phosphate an allosteric inhibitor of phosphofructokinase-1; and by marked G6P elevation by selective inhibition of phosphofructokinase-1; but not by a more reduced cytoplasmic NADH/NAD redox state. We conclude that therapeutically relevant doses of metformin lower G6P in hepatocytes challenged with high glucose by stimulation of glycolysis by an AMP-activated protein kinase-independent mechanism through changes in allosteric effectors of phosphofructokinase-1 and fructose bisphosphatase-1, including AMP, Pi, and glycerol 3-phosphate
COBRA framework to evaluate e-government services: A citizen-centric perspective
E-government services involve many stakeholders who have different objectives that can have an impact on success. Among these stakeholders, citizens are the primary stakeholders of government activities. Accordingly, their satisfaction plays an important role in e-government success. Although several models have been proposed to assess the success of e-government services through measuring users' satisfaction levels, they fail to provide a comprehensive evaluation model. This study provides an insight and critical analysis of the extant literature to identify the most critical factors and their manifested variables for user satisfaction in the provision of e-government services. The various manifested variables are then grouped into a new quantitative analysis framework consisting of four main constructs: cost; benefit; risk and opportunity (COBRA) by analogy to the well-known SWOT qualitative analysis framework. The COBRA measurement scale is developed, tested, refined and validated on a sample group of e-government service users in Turkey. A structured equation model is used to establish relationships among the identified constructs, associated variables and users' satisfaction. The results confirm that COBRA framework is a useful approach for evaluating the success of e-government services from citizens' perspective and it can be generalised to other perspectives and measurement contexts. Crown Copyright © 2014.PIAP-GA-2008-230658) from the European Union Framework Program and another grant (NPRP 09-1023-5-158) from the Qatar National Research Fund (amember of Qatar Foundation
Trapping dust particles in the outer regions of protoplanetary disks
In order to explain grain growth to mm sized particles and their retention in
outer regions of protoplanetary disks, as it is observed at sub-mm and mm
wavelengths, we investigate if strong inhomogeneities in the gas density
profiles can slow down excessive radial drift and can help dust particles to
grow. We use coagulation/fragmentation and disk-structure models, to simulate
the evolution of dust in a bumpy surface density profile which we mimic with a
sinusoidal disturbance. For different values of the amplitude and length scale
of the bumps, we investigate the ability of this model to produce and retain
large particles on million years time scales. In addition, we introduced a
comparison between the pressure inhomogeneities considered in this work and the
pressure profiles that come from magnetorotational instability. Using the
Common Astronomy Software Applications ALMA simulator, we study if there are
observational signatures of these pressure inhomogeneities that can be seen
with ALMA. We present the favorable conditions to trap dust particles and the
corresponding calculations predicting the spectral slope in the mm-wavelength
range, to compare with current observations. Finally we present simulated
images using different antenna configurations of ALMA at different frequencies,
to show that the ring structures will be detectable at the distances of the
Taurus Auriga or Ophiucus star forming regions.Comment: Pages 15, Figures 14. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Web 2.0, Language Resources and standards to automatically build a multilingual Named Entity Lexicon
Declarative Derivation of Database Queries from Meaning Representations
this paper we show how declarative knowledge and meta-knowledge about a database domain can be applied in natural language access (both query and update) to information systems. In particular, the domain model is applied to principled derivation of database oriented logical forms from natural language oriented logical forms, and also to reasoning about the completeness of answers to database queries. The methods described have been implemented as part of the CLARE system, with project resource management as an example application. CLARE is a combined natural language and reasoning system which includes the Core Language Engine (or CLE, Alshawi 1991) as its language component. The CLE is a general purpose system for analysing English into logical form meaning representations. It offers a substantial coverage of the syntax and semantics of English as well as facilities for application specific lexical acquisition. Initially, the CLE component of CLARE produces purely linguistic representations independently of the influence of context by applying a unification grammar and lexicon for English. These intermediate representations are then resolved according to the linguistic and extra-linguistic context with the help of the CLARE reasoning components. This results in a contextually disambiguated logical form which can be paraphrased back into English (using the same grammar in the reverse direction) to allow the user to confirm the interpretation of referring or vague expressions in the original input. The selected interpretation is then further processed by the reasoning component to produce an answer or achieve some other result. Here we concentrate on this final phase of processing, particularly the automatic generation of database queries and assertions. In section 2 we ..
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