2,160 research outputs found
Open heavy flavour and J/psi production in proton-proton collisions measured with the ALICE experiment at LHC
Open heavy flavour and J/psi production are powerful tools to test pQCD
calculations in proton-proton collisions in the new LHC energy regime. In
addition, they provide the necessary reference for the ALICE heavy-ion program.
The ALICE experiment at the LHC collected proton-proton collisions at sqrt{s} =
7 and 2.76 TeV in 2010 and 2011. We report here the latest results of open
heavy flavour and J/psi production at both mid- and forward-rapidity via their
various hadronic and leptonic decay channels. These include, among other
topics, the first LHC result on J/psi polarization, multiplicity dependence of
the J/psi production, D-meson measurement down to low transverse momentum and
J/psi production from B-hadron decays. Comparisons with different theoretical
models will be discussed as well.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Proceedings of the Hard Probes 2012 conference,
to be published on Nuclear Physics
European universities : an interpretative history
Abstract not availableEconomics ;
University participation in community programmes : how does the selection process work ?
Abstract not availableresearch and development
Determinants of university participation in EU R & D cooperative projects
Abstract not availableresearch and development ;
Allocation of funds and research output : the case of UK universities
The paper develops an empirical approach for analysing the relationships between funding and research output. In particular, it focuses on how the changes in the funding structure of multi-disciplinary old British universities have affected their propensity to carry out research of a more applied nature. First, the evolution of the funding structure of UK universities in the period 1989-93 is studied. Then, in order to assess the influence of the funding structure on the research output, the characteristics of 47 multi-disciplinary universities are examined at the start and at the end of the period considered. The analysis developed offers some evidence to support the hypothesis that policies oriented towards a decreasing state financing of university research aimed at a larger university funding from industry may be to the detriment of the scientific research output of these institutions as measured by publications per researcher.research and development ;
Remixing Cinema: The case of the Brighton Swarm of Angels
Disintermediation, web 2.0, distributed problem solving, collaborative creation/art, user-centred innovation, creative common
Modelling and Measuring Scientific Production: Results for a Panel of OECD Countries
This paper presents results from employing an econometric approach to examine the determinants of scientific production at cross-country level. The aim of this paper is not to provide accurate and robust estimates of investment elasticities (a doubtful task given the poor quality of the data sources and the modelling problems), but to develop and critically assess the validity of an empirical approach for characterising the production of science and its impact from a comparative perspective. We employ and discuss the limitations of a production function approach to relate investment inputs to scientific outputs using a sample of 14 countries for which we have information about Higher Education Research and Development (HERD). The outputs are taken from the Thomson ISI® National Science Indicators (2002) database on published papers and citations. The inputs and outputs for this sample of countries have been recorded for a period of 21 years (1981-2002). A thorough discussion of data shortcomings is presented in this paper. On the basis of this panel dataset we investigate the profile of the time lag between the investment in HERD and the research output and the returns to national investment in science. We devote particular attention to analysis of the presence of cross-country spillovers. We show their relevance and underline the international effect of the US system.productivity of science, lag structure, returns to HERD investment, international spillovers
The governance of University knowledge transfer
European Universities, Knowledge Transfer, Governance, Intellectual Property, Knowledge Transfer Organization
University Patenting and its Effects on Academic Research
The paper explores the possible consequences for academic research of increased patenting in European universities. It underlines that most of the policy literature refers to the advantages of university patenting without balancing them against the costs or the risks involved in the activities. We provide a brief description of university patenting activity in Europe examining both university-owned patents and university-invented patents. The review of the literature reveals that unlike the United States, little is known in Europe about the changes taking place in public research as a result of increased patenting and increased institutionalisation of patents. We discuss possible analytical approaches to identify both short-term and long-term effects. Concluding remarks addressing the key issues for future empirical assessments are presented in the last section.University patenting, university-industry relationships, technology transfer, European universities.
- …