3,494 research outputs found
How Social Media Communications can Mitigate Negative Impacts of Corporate Social Irresponsibility on Corporate Financial Performance?
Previous research on corporate social responsibility (CSR) has focused on corporate reputation (CR) and corporate financial performance (CFP), showing a high correlation between both. While most researchers primarily focus on CSR, our research examines the other side of the coin; corporate social irresponsibility (CSI) and provides findings that counter previous thought. We contribute to the existing literature by showing that CSI has a non-significant impact on corporate financial performance, as measured by market value, while concurrently being negatively correlated to corporate reputation. Further, we show social media, as measured by the Social Media Sustainability Index (SMSI), a measure studied infrequently thus far in the literature, mediates the relationship between CSI and market value. This relationship between social media and financial performance is further strengthened when companies actively engage in other CSR activities that āfitā their image. From a practical standpoint, when companies āmisbehaveā our research reveals how to mitigate those effects in regards to financial performance
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Interface of Country Affective Image and Its Tourism: Evidence from Chinese and South Koreans
Dr. Suh-hee Choi is invited assistant professor at IFT, Macau. She taught in universities in the United States, China, and South Korea. She previously worked for National Geographic Korean edition, Gyeonggi Research Institute, and Seoul National University. Her research interests are place branding, tourist experience, and tourism marketing.
Dr. Hyun-jeong Cho is senior researcher at the Advanced Institutes of Convergence Technology, Seoul National University. She worked for the Seoul Institute and Gyeonggi Research Institute in the city marketing and tourism plan & policies. She is interested in spatial cognition and visitorsā cognitive mapping through internet map.
Dr. Liping A. Cai is professor and director of Purdue Tourism and Hospitality Research Center. His scholarly portfolio includes 200+ peer-reviewed papers in tourism consumers, destination and tourism branding, and rural tourism. He is recognized as the originator of a destination brand model that supports collaborative tourism for rural communities.Passport to Research (Visual Papers
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Cerebral Microbleeds in a Stroke Prevention Clinic.
The objective of this study is to assess the effectiveness of a stroke clinic in stroke prevention and progression of cerebral microbleeds (CMB). We conducted a retrospective observational study of patients who visited a stroke clinic between January 2011 and March 2017. Susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) MRI studies were obtained at baseline and follow-up visits to identify new infarctions and CMB progression. Patients with CMB who also underwent brain computed tomography (CT) imaging were identified and their cerebral arterial calcification was quantified to evaluate the relationship between the extent of intracranial calcification and CMB burden. A total of 64 stroke patients (mean age 73.1 Ā± 11.0, 47% males) had CMB on baseline and follow-up MRI studies. During a mean follow-up period of 22.6 months, four strokes occurred (4/64, 6%; 3 ischemic, 1 hemorrhagic), producing mild neurological deficit. Progression of CMB was observed in 54% of patients with two MRIs and was significantly associated with length of follow-up. Subjects with intracranial calcification score > 300 cm3 had higher CMB count than those with scores <300 cm3 at both baseline (12.6 Ā± 11.7 vs. 4.9 Ā± 2.2, p = 0.02) and follow-up (14.1 Ā± 11.8 vs. 5.6 Ā± 2.4, p = 0.03) MRI evaluations. Patients with CMB had a relatively benign overall clinical course. The association between CMB burden and intracranial calcification warrants further study
Tau functions as Widom constants
We define a tau function for a generic Riemann-Hilbert problem posed on a
union of non-intersecting smooth closed curves with jump matrices analytic in
their neighborhood. The tau function depends on parameters of the jumps and is
expressed as the Fredholm determinant of an integral operator with block
integrable kernel constructed in terms of elementary parametrices. Its
logarithmic derivatives with respect to parameters are given by contour
integrals involving these parametrices and the solution of the Riemann-Hilbert
problem. In the case of one circle, the tau function coincides with Widom's
determinant arising in the asymptotics of block Toeplitz matrices. Our
construction gives the Jimbo-Miwa-Ueno tau function for Riemann-Hilbert
problems of isomonodromic origin (Painlev\'e VI, V, III, Garnier system, etc)
and the Sato-Segal-Wilson tau function for integrable hierarchies such as
Gelfand-Dickey and Drinfeld-Sokolov.Comment: 26 pages, 6 figure
The antiestrogen ICI 182,780 induces early effects on the adult male mouse reproductive tract and long-term decreased fertility without testicular atrophy
BACKGROUND: Estrogen receptors (ER) have important physiological roles in both the female and male reproductive systems. Previous studies using the estrogen receptor-Ī± knockout mouse (Ī±ERKO) or antiestrogen treatment in adult rodents have shown that ERĪ± is essential for normal function of the male reproductive tract. In the present study, time-response effects of the antiestrogen ICI 182,780 were determined to better understand ERĪ± function in the adult male. METHODS: Adult male mice, 30 days old, were injected subcutaneously with ICI 182,780 (5 mg) once per week for 17 weeks. Tissues were fixed by vascular perfusion to study the time responses from day 2 to 125 post treatment. RESULTS: No difference was seen in body weight due to treatment. Testis weight was decreased 18% on day 59 and 21.4% on day 125. Other significant treatment-related effects included the following: 1) dilation of rete testis and efferent ductule lumen; 2) decreased height of the rete testis and efferent ductule epithelium; 3) decreased height of the supranuclear epithelial cytoplasm in efferent ductules; 4) decreased height of the efferent ductule epithelial microvilli, particularly in the proximal ductules; 5) decrease in the PAS-positive granules and endocytotic vesicles in nonciliated epithelial cells of efferent ductules; 6) capping and vesiculation of narrow cells in the initial segment of the epididymis; 7) accumulation of PAS-positive granules in apical cells of the caput epididymis; 8) increase in lysosomal granules in clear cells of the corpus and cauda epididymis; 9) limited induction of atrophic seminiferous tubules and abnormal spermatogenesis; and 10) decreases in the concentration of cauda sperm, progressive sperm motility and decreased fertility. CONCLUSIONS: Antiestrogen treatment of the pubertal male mouse resulted in reproductive effects similar to those observed in the Ī±ERKO mouse as early as day 4; however, testis weight did not increase substantially and total atrophy was not observed with extended treatment
Green's function approach to transport through a gate-all-around Si nanowire under impurity scattering
We investigate transport properties of gate-all-around Si nanowires using
non-equilibrium Green's function technique. By taking into account of the
ionized impurity scattering we calculate Green's functions self-consistently
and examine the effects of ionized impurity scattering on electron densities
and currents. For nano-scale Si wires, it is found that, due to the impurity
scattering, the local density of state profiles loose it's interference
oscillations as well as is broaden and shifted. In addition, the impurity
scattering gives rise to a different transconductance as functions of
temperature and impurity scattering strength when compared with the
transconductance without impurity scattering.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
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