539 research outputs found
Price competition within and between airlines and high-speed trains: the case of the Milan–Rome route.
In the travel industry high-speed trains and airlines are increasingly competing for passengers, and the diffusion of price optimization based on real time demand fluctuations poses new challenges in the analysis of price competition between operators. This paper presents an analysis of how different competitors simultaneously adjust their prices in the short run. The empirical model accounts for dynamic price variations, exploring both intramodal and intermodal price competition. The results, based on 12,506 price observations, show that intermodal competition presents some kind of asymmetric behaviour, with airlines reacting more than trains to competitors' price changes. The paper concludes with the implications of this heterogeneous behaviour for the tourism and travel industries
How long does it take to pull an ideal polymer into a small hole?
We present scaling estimates for characteristic times and
of pulling ideal linear and randomly branched polymers of
monomers into a small hole by a force . We show that the absorbtion process
develops as sequential straightening of folds of the initial polymer
configuration. By estimating the typical size of the fold involved into the
motion, we arrive at the following predictions: and , and we also confirm them by
the molecular dynamics experiment.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
A Triaxial Failure Diagram to predict the forming limit of 3D sheet metal parts subjected to multiaxial stresses
Accurate prediction of failure and forming limits is essential when modelling sheet metal forming processes. Since traditional Forming Limit Curves (FLCs) are not valid for materials subjected to triaxial loading, a new failure criterion is proposed in this paper based on the stress triaxility and the effective plastic strain accumulated during the history of material loading. Formability zones are identified inside the proposed Triaxial Failure Diagram (TFD). FLCs may be mapped into the TFD defining a new Triaxial Failure Curve, or it can be defined by triaxial failure experiments. Several TFD examples are validated and constrasted showing acceptable accuracy in the numerical prediction of forming failure/limit of 3D thick sheet parts.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
Interacting crumpled manifolds
In this article we study the effect of a delta-interaction on a polymerized
membrane of arbitrary internal dimension D. Depending on the dimensionality of
membrane and embedding space, different physical scenarios are observed. We
emphasize on the difference of polymers from membranes. For the latter,
non-trivial contributions appear at the 2-loop level. We also exploit a
``massive scheme'' inspired by calculations in fixed dimensions for scalar
field theories. Despite the fact that these calculations are only amenable
numerically, we found that in the limit of D to 2 each diagram can be evaluated
analytically. This property extends in fact to any order in perturbation
theory, allowing for a summation of all orders. This is a novel and quite
surprising result. Finally, an attempt to go beyond D=2 is presented.
Applications to the case of self-avoiding membranes are mentioned
Wandering of a contact line at thermal equilibrium
We reconsider the problem of the solid-liquid-vapour contact-line on a
disordered substrate, in the collective pinning regime. We go beyond scaling
arguments and perform an analytic computation, through the replica variational
method, of the fluctuations of the line. We show how gravity effects must be
included for a proper quantitative comparison with available experimental data
of the wetting of liquid helium on a caesium substrate. The theoretical result
is in good agreement with experimental findings for this case.Comment: 24 laTex pages with 5 EPS figures included. submitted to Phys. Rev
Adsorption of a random heteropolymer at a potential well revisited: location of transition point and design of sequences
The adsorption of an ideal heteropolymer loop at a potential point well is
investigated within the frameworks of a standard random matrix theory. On the
basis of semi-analytical/semi-numerical approach the histogram of transition
points for the ensemble of quenched heteropolymer structures with bimodal
symmetric distribution of types of chain's links is constructed. It is shown
that the sequences having the transition points in the tail of the histogram
display the correlations between nearest-neighbor monomers.Comment: 11 pages (revtex), 3 figure
Localization in simple multiparticle catalytic absorption model
We consider the phase transition in the system of n simultaneously developing
random walks on the halfline x>=0. All walks are independent on each others in
all points except the origin x=0, where the point well is located. The well
depth depends on the number of particles simultaneously staying at x=0. We
consider the limit n>>1 and show that if the depth growth faster than 3/2 n
ln(n) with n, then all random walks become localized simultaneously at the
origin. In conclusion we discuss the connection of that problem with the phase
transition in the copolymer chain with quenched random sequence of monomers
considered in the frameworks of replica approach.Comment: 17 pages in LaTeX, 5 PostScript figures; submitted to J.Phys.(A):
Math. Ge
Universality in movie rating distributions
In this paper histograms of user ratings for movies (1,...,10) are analysed.
The evolving stabilised shapes of histograms follow the rule that all are
either double- or triple-peaked. Moreover, at most one peak can be on the
central bins 2,...,9 and the distribution in these bins looks smooth
`Gaussian-like' while changes at the extremes (1 and 10) often look abrupt. It
is shown that this is well approximated under the assumption that histograms
are confined and discretised probability density functions of L\'evy skew
alpha-stable distributions. These distributions are the only stable
distributions which could emerge due to a generalized central limit theorem
from averaging of various independent random avriables as which one can see the
initial opinions of users. Averaging is also an appropriate assumption about
the social process which underlies the process of continuous opinion formation.
Surprisingly, not the normal distribution achieves the best fit over histograms
obseved on the web, but distributions with fat tails which decay as power-laws
with exponent -(1+alpha) (alpha=4/3). The scale and skewness parameters of the
Levy skew alpha-stable distributions seem to depend on the deviation from an
average movie (with mean about 7.6). The histogram of such an average movie has
no skewness and is the most narrow one. If a movie deviates from average the
distribution gets broader and skew. The skewness pronounces the deviation. This
is used to construct a one parameter fit which gives some evidence of
universality in processes of continuous opinion dynamics about taste.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publicatio
Rationality versus reality: the challenges of evidence-based decision making for health policy makers
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Current healthcare systems have extended the evidence-based medicine (EBM) approach to health policy and delivery decisions, such as access-to-care, healthcare funding and health program continuance, through attempts to integrate valid and reliable evidence into the decision making process. These policy decisions have major impacts on society and have high personal and financial costs associated with those decisions. Decision models such as these function under a shared assumption of rational choice and utility maximization in the decision-making process.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>We contend that health policy decision makers are generally unable to attain the basic goals of evidence-based decision making (EBDM) and evidence-based policy making (EBPM) because humans make decisions with their naturally limited, faulty, and biased decision-making processes. A cognitive information processing framework is presented to support this argument, and subtle cognitive processing mechanisms are introduced to support the focal thesis: health policy makers' decisions are influenced by the subjective manner in which they individually process decision-relevant information rather than on the objective merits of the evidence alone. As such, subsequent health policy decisions do not necessarily achieve the goals of evidence-based policy making, such as maximizing health outcomes for society based on valid and reliable research evidence.</p> <p>Summary</p> <p>In this era of increasing adoption of evidence-based healthcare models, the rational choice, utility maximizing assumptions in EBDM and EBPM, must be critically evaluated to ensure effective and high-quality health policy decisions. The cognitive information processing framework presented here will aid health policy decision makers by identifying how their decisions might be subtly influenced by non-rational factors. In this paper, we identify some of the biases and potential intervention points and provide some initial suggestions about how the EBDM/EBPM process can be improved.</p
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