1,001 research outputs found

    A note using mergers and acquisitions to gain competitive advantage in the United States in the case of Latin American MNCs

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    Author's OriginalThe "new" economic and business climate in Latin America, fostered by multilateral trade agreements such as NAFTA, MERCOSUR, and the ANDEAN Pact, suggests that Latin American (LA) firms must become more aggressive and competitive in order to survive. Foreign direct investment in the form of mergers and acquisitions (M&A) is often an effective way of competing in a tough global environment. Using transactions data collected from Security Data Company's Worldwide Merger and Acquisition database, this paper analyzes the relative involvement of firms from five LA countries (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, and Venezuela) in acquiring targets in the United States of America. Transaction characteristics examined and summarized include the annual distribution (1985-1998) of the deals, the industrial sector of the target firm, the form of acquisition method used, and the form of ownership of the target firm. The trends are analyzed, and implications for managers are indicated.Milman, C. D., D’Mello, J. P., Aybar, B., & Arbaláez, H. (2001). A note using mergers and acquisitions to gain competitive advantage in the United States in the case of Latin American MNCs. International Review of Financial Analysis, 10(3), 323-332. doi:10.1016/S1057-5219(01)00056-

    Climbing: A Unified Approach for Global Constraints on Hierarchical Segmentation

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    International audienceThe paper deals with global constraints for hierarchical segmentations. The proposed framework associates, with an input image, a hierarchy of segmentations and an energy, and the subsequent optimization problem. It is the first paper that compiles the different global constraints and unifies them as Climbing energies. The transition from global optimization to local optimization is attained by the h-increasingness property, which allows to compare parent and child partition energies in hierarchies. The laws of composition of such energies are established and examples are given over the Berkeley Dataset for colour and texture segmentation

    A comparative evaluation of the process of developing and implementing an emergency department HIV testing program

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The 2006 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) HIV testing guidelines recommend screening for HIV infection in all healthcare settings, including the emergency department (ED). In urban areas with a high background prevalence of HIV, the ED has become an increasingly important site for identifying HIV infection. However, this public health policy has been operationalized using different models. We sought to describe the development and implementation of HIV testing programs in three EDs, assess factors shaping the adoption and evolution of specific program elements, and identify barriers and facilitators to testing.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We performed a qualitative evaluation using in-depth interviews with fifteen 'key informants' involved in the development and implementation of HIV testing in three urban EDs serving sizable racial/ethnic minority and socioeconomically disadvantaged populations. Testing program HIV prevalence ranged from 0.4% to 3.0%.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Three testing models were identified, reflecting differences in the use of existing ED staff to offer and perform the test and disclose results. Factors influencing the adoption of a particular model included: whether program developers were ED providers, HIV providers, or both; whether programs took a targeted or non-targeted approach to patient selection; and the extent to which linkage to care was viewed as the responsibility of the ED. A common barrier was discomfort among ED providers about disclosing a positive HIV test result. Common facilitators were a commitment to underserved populations, the perception that testing was an opportunity to re-engage previously HIV-infected patients in care, and the support and resources offered by the medical setting for HIV-infected patients.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>ED HIV testing is occurring under a range of models that emerge from local realities and are tailored to institutional strengths to optimize implementation and overcome provider barriers.</p

    Cooperative parallel SAT local search with path relinking

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    In this paper, we propose the use of path relinking to improve the performance of parallel portfolio-based local search solvers for the Boolean Satisfiability problem. In the portfolio-based framework several algorithms explore the search space in parallel, either independently or cooperatively with some communication between the solvers. Path relinking is a method to maintain an appropriate balance between diversification and intensification (and explore paths that aggregate elite solutions) to properly craft a new assignment for the variables to restart from. We present an empirical study that suggest that path relinking outperforms a set of well-known parallel portfolio-based local search algorithms with and without cooperation
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