1,766 research outputs found
The Dynamic Impacts of Employee Job Motivation on Employee Job Performance and Corporate Customer Satisfaction: The Contingent Role of ERP System Implementation
Prior research has generally found a significant, positive impact of employees\u27 job motivation on job performance, and which in turn, leads to more satisfied customers. However, little attention is directed towards how implementation of centralized information systems (IS), such as Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems, will affect these relationships in the business to business (B2B) context. Toward this end, we plan to conduct a field study to empirically compare the effects of these relationships before and after the implementation of an ERP system. This cross-disciplinary study will contribute to the extant organization, marketing, and IS literature by examining how a centralized IS implementation moderates the relationships among employees’ job motivation, performance, and corporate customer satisfaction, and testing the proposed framework in the B2B context
Hydrophobic Modification of Layered Clays and Compatibility for Epoxy Nanocomposites
Recent studies on the intercalation and exfoliation of layered clays with polymeric intercalating agents involving poly(oxypropylene)-amines and the particular uses for epoxy nanocomposites are reviewed. For intercalation, counter-ionic exchange reactions of clays including cationic layered silicates and anionic Al-Mg layered double hydroxide (LDH) with polymeric organic ions afforded organoclays led to spatial interlayer expansion from 12 to 92 angstrom (X-ray diffraction) as well as hydrophobic property. The inorganic clays of layered structure could be modified by the poly(oxypropylene) amine-salts as the intercalating agents with molecular weights ranging from 230 to 5,000 g/mol. Furthermore, natural montmorillonite (MMT) clay could be exfoliated into thin layer silicate platelets (ca. 1 nm thickness) in one step by using polymeric types of exfoliating agents. Different lateral dimensions of MMT, synthetic fluorinated Mica and LDH clays had been cured into epoxy nanocomposites. The hydrophobic amine-salt modification resulting in high spacing of layered or exfoliation of individual clay platelets is the most important factor for gaining significant improvements of properties. In particular, these modified clays were reported to gain significant improvements such as reduced coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE), enhanced thermal stability, and hardness. The utilization of these layered clays for initiating the epoxy self-polymerization was also reported to have a unique compatibility between clay and organic resin matrix. However, the matrix domain lacks of covalently bonded crosslink and leads to the isolation of powder material. It is generally concluded that the hydrophobic expansion of the clay inter-gallery spacing is the crucial step for enhancing the compatibility and the ultimate preparation of the advanced epoxy materials
Objective Measures of IS Usage Behavior Under Conditions of Experience and Pressure Using Eye Fixation Data
The core objective of this study is to understand individuals IS usage by going beyond the traditional subjective self-reported and objective system-log measures to unveil the delicate process through which users interact with IS. In this study, we conducted a laboratory experiment to capture users’ eye movement and, more importantly, applied a novel methodology that uses the Gaussian mixture model (GMM) to analyze the gathered physiological data. We also examine how performance pressure and prior usage experience of the investigative system affect IS usage patterns. Our results suggest that experienced and pressured users demonstrate more efficient and focused usage patterns than inexperienced and non-pressured ones, respectively. Our findings constitute an important advancement in the IS use literature. The proposed statistical approach for analyzing eye-movement data is a critical methodological contribution to the emerging research that uses eye-tracking technology for investigation
Structure Formation, Melting, and the Optical Properties of Gold/DNA Nanocomposites: Effects of Relaxation Time
We present a model for structure formation, melting, and optical properties
of gold/DNA nanocomposites. These composites consist of a collection of gold
nanoparticles (of radius 50 nm or less) which are bound together by links made
up of DNA strands. In our structural model, the nanocomposite forms from a
series of Monte Carlo steps, each involving reaction-limited cluster-cluster
aggregation (RLCA) followed by dehybridization of the DNA links. These links
form with a probability which depends on temperature and particle
radius . The final structure depends on the number of monomers (i. e. gold
nanoparticles) , , and the relaxation time. At low temperature, the
model results in an RLCA cluster. But after a long enough relaxation time, the
nanocomposite reduces to a compact, non-fractal cluster. We calculate the
optical properties of the resulting aggregates using the Discrete Dipole
Approximation. Despite the restructuring, the melting transition (as seen in
the extinction coefficient at wavelength 520 nm) remains sharp, and the melting
temperature increases with increasing as found in our previous
percolation model. However, restructuring increases the corresponding link
fraction at melting to a value well above the percolation threshold. Our
calculated extinction cross section agrees qualitatively with experiments on
gold/DNA composites. It also shows a characteristic ``rebound effect,''
resulting from incomplete relaxation, which has also been seen in some
experiments. We discuss briefly how our results relate to a possible sol-gel
transition in these aggregates.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
Synchronization and Coarsening (without SOC) in a Forest-Fire Model
We study the long-time dynamics of a forest-fire model with deterministic
tree growth and instantaneous burning of entire forests by stochastic lightning
strikes. Asymptotically the system organizes into a coarsening self-similar
mosaic of synchronized patches within which trees regrow and burn
simultaneously. We show that the average patch length grows linearly with
time as t-->oo. The number density of patches of length L, N(L,t), scales as
^{-2}M(L/), and within a mean-field rate equation description we find
that this scaling function decays as e^{-1/x} for x-->0, and as e^{-x} for
x-->oo. In one dimension, we develop an event-driven cluster algorithm to study
the asymptotic behavior of large systems. Our numerical results are consistent
with mean-field predictions for patch coarsening.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 2-column revtex format. To be submitted to PR
Foundations of Dissipative Particle Dynamics
We derive a mesoscopic modeling and simulation technique that is very close
to the technique known as dissipative particle dynamics. The model is derived
from molecular dynamics by means of a systematic coarse-graining procedure.
Thus the rules governing our new form of dissipative particle dynamics reflect
the underlying molecular dynamics; in particular all the underlying
conservation laws carry over from the microscopic to the mesoscopic
descriptions. Whereas previously the dissipative particles were spheres of
fixed size and mass, now they are defined as cells on a Voronoi lattice with
variable masses and sizes. This Voronoi lattice arises naturally from the
coarse-graining procedure which may be applied iteratively and thus represents
a form of renormalisation-group mapping. It enables us to select any desired
local scale for the mesoscopic description of a given problem. Indeed, the
method may be used to deal with situations in which several different length
scales are simultaneously present. Simulations carried out with the present
scheme show good agreement with theoretical predictions for the equilibrium
behavior.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figure
Proposed low-energy absolute calibration of nuclear recoils in a dual-phase noble element TPC using D-D neutron scattering kinematics
We propose a new technique for the calibration of nuclear recoils in large noble element dual-phase time projection chambers used to search for WIMP dark matter in the local galactic halo. This technique provides an measurement of the low-energy nuclear recoil response of the target media using the measured scattering angle between multiple neutron interactions within the detector volume. The low-energy reach and reduced systematics of this calibration have particular significance for the low-mass WIMP sensitivity of several leading dark matter experiments. Multiple strategies for improving this calibration technique are discussed, including the creation of a new type of quasi-monoenergetic 272 keV neutron source. We report results from a time-of-flight based measurement of the neutron energy spectrum produced by an Adelphi Technology, Inc. DD108 neutron generator, confirming its suitability for the proposed nuclear recoil calibration.Peer Reviewe
Fulminant hyperpyrexia induced by bleomycin
Mild and self-limiting fever following bleomycin use is common, and a fatal hyperpyrexial response occurs rarely. In previously reported cases, such hyperpyrexia occurred either after the initial administration of the drug or during subsequent therapy following an initial pyrexial response. We describe a fatal hyperpyrexial reaction after bleomycin in a patient with T-cell lymphoma who had had no febrile response when she received her initial injection 3 weeks earlier. Since the occurrence of this hyperpyrexial response is unpredictable, health care workers as well as patients and relatives should always be alert to this potentially lethal complication and prompt measures should be taken in any patient who develops fever after bleomycin use.published_or_final_versio
Cosmological solutions in multidimensional model with multiple exponential potential
A family of cosmological solutions with Ricci-flat spaces in the
theory with several scalar fields and multiple exponential potential is
obtained when coupling vectors in exponents obey certain relations. Two
subclasses of solutions with power-law and exponential behaviour of scale
factors are singled out. It is proved that power-law solutions may take place
only when coupling vectors are linearly independent and exponential dependence
occurs for linearly dependent set of coupling vectors. A subfamily of solutions
with accelerated expansion is singled out. A generalized isotropization
behaviours of certain classes of general solutions are found. In quantum case
exact solutions to Wheeler-DeWitt equation are obtained and special "ground
state" wave functions are considered.Comment: 22 pages, 1 figur
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