523,789 research outputs found
An agent-based dynamic information network for supply chain management
One of the main research issues in supply chain management is to improve the global efficiency of supply chains.
However, the improvement efforts often fail because supply chains are complex, are subject to frequent changes, and collaboration and information sharing in the supply chains are often infeasible. This paper presents a practical
collaboration framework for supply chain management wherein multi-agent systems form dynamic information networks and coordinate their production and order planning according to synchronized estimation of market demands. In the framework, agents employ an iterative relaxation contract net protocol to find the most desirable
suppliers by using data envelopment analysis. Furthermore, the chain of buyers and suppliers, from the end markets to raw material suppliers, form dynamic information networks for synchronized planning. This paper presents an agent-based dynamic information network for supply chain management and discusses the associated
pros and cons
Origin of synchronized traffic flow on highways and its dynamic phase transitions
We study the traffic flow on a highway with ramps through numerical
simulations of a hydrodynamic traffic flow model. It is found that the presence
of the external vehicle flux through ramps generates a new state of recurring
humps (RH). This novel dynamic state is characterized by temporal oscillations
of the vehicle density and velocity which are localized near ramps, and found
to be the origin of the synchronized traffic flow reported recently [PRL 79,
4030 (1997)]. We also argue that the dynamic phase transitions between the free
flow and the RH state can be interpreted as a subcritical Hopf bifurcation.Comment: 4 pages, source TeX file and 4 figures are tarred and compressed via
uufile
QCD Sum Rule for S_{11}(1535)
We propose a new interpolating field for S(1535) to determine its mass
from QCD sum rules. In the nonrelativistic limit, this interpolating field
dominantly reduces to two quarks in the s-wave state and one quark in the
p-wave state. An optimization procedure, which makes use of a duality relation,
yields the interpolating field which overlaps strongly with the negative-parity
baryon and at the same time does not couple at all to the low lying
positive-parity baryon. Using this interpolating field and applying the
conventional QCD sum rule analysis, we find that the mass of S is
reasonably close to the experimentally known value, even though the precise
determination depends on the poorly known quark-gluon condensate. Hence our
interpolating field can be used to investigate the spectral properties of
S(1535).Comment: 12 pages, Revtex, 1 ps figure available from author
Black String Solutions with arbitrary Tension
We consider 1+4 dimensional black string solutions which are invariant under
translation along the fifth direction. The solutions are characterized by the
two parameters, mass and tension, of the source. The Gregory-Laflamme solution
is shown to be characterized by the tension whose magnitude is one half of the
mass per unit length of the source. The general black string solution with
arbitrary tension is presented and its properties are discussed.Comment: 10 page
Uranium isotopes quantitatively determined by modified method of atomic absorption spectrophotometry
Hollow-cathode discharge tubes determine the quantities of uranium isotopes in a sample by using atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Dissociation of the uranium atoms allows a large number of ground state atoms to be produced, absorbing the incident radiation that is different for the two major isotopes
New York’s School Teachers Say No to the Status Quo! A Chronicle of New York State’s Teachers Union’s (NYSUT) First Contested Election
Other than a scattered mentioning on educational blogs, and a few uninspired national references, the New York State United Teacher’s (NYSUT) April 2014 first contested election in its four decade history did not seem to matter very much. We saw it differently at Cornell’s ILR School. NYSUT is known as a highly efficient, top down, union powerhouse, yet we learned that this election saw school teachers and their local union leaders utilizing their organization’s design and structure for the members’ advantage in a stunning “bottom up” political victory. This surprising outcome is why we decided to research how this occurred and write this report.
Along the way, we met brilliant strategists, courageous political novitiates, remarkable communication specialists, and never-ending tenacity wrapped in purposefulness that ensured school-based leaders their electoral success. In doing so, they joined their insurgent teacher colleagues in Massachusetts, Milwaukee, Chicago, Los Angeles, St. Paul and elsewhere, affirming that school teacher trade unionists can and will respond to the attacks upon them and public education.
The following pages chart why this contested election occurred and how the insurgents proceeded. The information is based primarily upon extensive interviews with rank and file leaders and discussions with former and newly elected leaders. There are also specific references to observations shared by the defeated President, Richard Iannuzzi, who graciously offered his candor in explaining how he saw what was happening to the union and why he acted as he did in the period leading up to his defeat.
This report begins with some brief comments about NYSUT’s history, placement of the election in both a national and New York state context, and an explanation about how NYSUT’s structure had so much to do with the election. The bulk of the writing describes how rank and file forces slowly but molecularly developed into a force able to successfully challenge the president and leadership team of the largest state union in America. Throughout, the detail presented suggests that power wielded by rank and file union members of the teaching profession is the best hope to restore balance to public education in the country. The next few years will tell us whether this “suggestion” is so
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