15 research outputs found
Dynamics of a disabled population in Morocco
BACKGROUND: The disabled population constitutes a class of people needing special care and necessitating important economic and social effort. METHODS: In this paper, using specific parameter settings, partial differential equations are used to model the temporal change of the proportion of the disabled population in Morocco. RESULTS: Combining different forms and values of the parameters, a numerical method is proposed and three scenarios are considered. These forms and values are determined by data fitting and simulation. CONCLUSIONS: The experiments show clearly the dynamical evolution of the disabled population with time and age according to each scenario
Introduction to the Journal of Evolutionary Economics special issue: the product characteristics approach to innovation studies
International audienceThis special issue collects a selection of papers that were originally presented at the workshop on ‘Demand, Product Characteristics and Innovation’ organized at the Friedrich Schiller University in Jena in October 2007. The workshop was funded by the DIME (Dynamics of Innovation and Markets) Network of Excellence of the European Commission. All these papers are empirical investigations of the dynamics of innovation in particular industries, based on the ‘twin characteristics’ approach pioneered by Saviotti and Metcalfe (1984) exactly 25 years ago. Altogether, the papers contained in this special issue provide a good illustration of the variety of approaches that can be employed in detailed studies of product characteristics. They also provide a good overview of the riches of insights that can be gained using this approach. As the availability of datasets and information on product prices and technical characteristics is likely to increase in the near future, empirical studies based on product characteristics seem to represent a research trajectory that is worthwhile pursuing, especially by younger generations of researchers
Do ethnic minorities “stretch” their time? UK household evidence on multitasking
Time use, Multitasking, Ethnic minorities, UK, J22, J15,