1,955 research outputs found

    On demand-side sources of service innovation ideas

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    Abstract. Increasing degree of consensus has been made among academics and practitioners, that firms should pay special attention to the demand-side factors just to design and produce products/services that gain most loyalty. This article discusses further the specific demand-side sources of service innovation ideas in a multi-layer direct marketing context. Experience marketing, value perception, and re-purchasing process are proposed and articulated. Implications for research and practices are offered. Keywords. Demand-side drivers, Service innovation, Multi-layer direct marketing.JEL. M10, M11, M14

    SASMU: boost the performance of generalized recognition model using synthetic face dataset

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    Nowadays, deploying a robust face recognition product becomes easy with the development of face recognition techniques for decades. Not only profile image verification but also the state-of-the-art method can handle the in-the-wild image almost perfectly. However, the concern of privacy issues raise rapidly since mainstream research results are powered by tons of web-crawled data, which faces the privacy invasion issue. The community tries to escape this predicament completely by training the face recognition model with synthetic data but faces severe domain gap issues, which still need to access real images and identity labels to fine-tune the model. In this paper, we propose SASMU, a simple, novel, and effective method for face recognition using a synthetic dataset. Our proposed method consists of spatial data augmentation (SA) and spectrum mixup (SMU). We first analyze the existing synthetic datasets for developing a face recognition system. Then, we reveal that heavy data augmentation is helpful for boosting performance when using synthetic data. By analyzing the previous frequency mixup studies, we proposed a novel method for domain generalization. Extensive experimental results have demonstrated the effectiveness of SASMU, achieving state-of-the-art performance on several common benchmarks, such as LFW, AgeDB-30, CA-LFW, CFP-FP, and CP-LFW.Comment: under revie

    N 1,N 2-Bis(6-methyl-2-pyrid­yl)formamidine

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    In the crystal structure of the title mol­ecule, C13H14N4, the two pyridyl rings are not coplanar but twisted about the C—N bond with an inter­planar angle of 71.1 (1)°. In the crystal, the mol­ecules form dimers, situated on crystallographic centres of inversion, which are connected via a pair of N—H⋯N hydrogen bonds. C—H⋯π-electron ring inter­actions are also present in the crystal structure. The title mol­ecule adopts an s–cis–anti–s–cis conformation in the solid state

    Tetra­kis[μ-1,4-bis­(4,5-dihydro-1,3-oxazol-2-yl)benzene-κ2 N:N′]tetra­kis­(μ-methano­lato-κ2 O:O)bis­(μ-perchlorato-κ2 O:O′)tetra­copper(II) bis­(perchlorate)

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    The title tetra­nuclear CuII complex, [Cu4(C12H12N2O2)4(CH3O)4(ClO4)2](ClO4)2, is located around an inversion center. Each CuII atom is coordinated by two cis-O atoms from two bridging methano­late anions and two cis-N atoms from two bridging 1,4-bis­(4,5-dihydro-1,3-oxazol-2-yl)benzene (L) ligands in the basal plane, and is further coordinated by one O atom of the bridging perchlorate anion, forming a distorted square-pyramidal geometry. The Cu⋯Cu separations in the recta­ngular core are 2.9878 (11) and 6.974 (1) Å. In the asymmetric unit, there are two L ligands with a syn conformation. In one L ligand, the dihedral angles between the central benzene ring and the terminal 4,5-dihydro-1,3-oxazol-2-yl mean planes are 22.1 (4) and 33.1 (4)°, and in the other L ligand the corresponding dihedral angles are 29.3 (4) and 29.9 (4)°. The uncoordinated perchlorate anion is linked with the complex mol­ecules via weak C—H⋯O hydrogen bonds

    The influence of the technical dimension, functional dimension, and tenant satisfaction on tenant loyalty: an analysis based on the theory of planned behavior

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    This study primarily explored the influence of the technical dimension, functional dimension, and tenant satisfaction on tenant loyalty. The theory of planned behavior served as the basis of this study, and the three aforementioned factors (the technical dimension, the functional dimension, and tenant satisfaction) were incorporated into a conceptual framework for tenant loyalty. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was employed for parameter estimation. The participants consisted of tenants residing in eight administrative districts in Kaohsiung City. 315 questionnaires were administered, all of which were returned. After removing 15 invalid responses, there were 300 valid responses, which indicated an effective recovery rate of 95.2%. The results showed that the technical dimension, the functional dimension, and attitude significantly and positively influenced tenant satisfaction. Tenant satisfaction, perceived behavioral control, and social norms significantly and positively influenced tenant loyalty. Tenant satisfaction mediated the influence of the technical dimension and the functional dimension on tenant loyalty; the mediating effect of the functional dimension on tenant loyalty was greater than that of the technical dimension. The findings of this study highlight the measures rental companies should adopt in order to enhance the technical dimension, functional dimension, and tenant satisfaction, as this is crucial to maintaining sustainable operations

    Intrathecal glutamate release during hindlimb tourniquet inflation and femoral artery occlusion in rats

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    Background/PurposeA tourniquet is commonly used in limb surgery. Tourniquet inflation after a period of time may produce painful sensation. While the mechanisms of tourniquet-induced pain are still unknown, two components, pressure and ischemia, have been proposed. In this study, in vivo microdialysis was used to detect changes in intrathecal glutamate, an excitatory amino acid highly relevant to pain transmission, following hindlimb tourniquet application and femoral artery occlusion in the rat.MethodsMale Wistar rats were used. For the tourniquet study, 6 rats of the study group received 30 minutes right hindlimb tourniquet inflation and another 6 rats as the control group received only tourniquet application without inflation. In the femoral artery occlusion study, 6 rats of the study group received 30 minutes right femoral artery occlusion and another 6 rats as the control group received only sham operation without femoral artery occlusion. Cerebrospinal fluid dialysates were collected prior to, during, and after tourniquet application or femoral artery occlusion. Glutamate was measured by HPLC.ResultsA significant increase in intrathecal glutamate release was found during the tourniquet inflation period, and it returned to baseline after tourniquet deflation. No change of glutamate release was noted during femoral artery occlusion or after femoral artery reperfusion.ConclusionThe intrathecal glutamate release was increased by the hindlimb tourniquet inflation, but not influenced by femoral artery occlusion in the rat
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