3,095 research outputs found

    Surviving Spin-offs as a Measure of Research Funding Effectiveness

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    Companies spun-off from university laboratories that commercialize intellectual property are significant drivers of innovation in Canada, where spin-offs are created at a much higher rate per research dollar than in the U.S. This paper is based on data from nine Canadian universities active in technology transfer on the spin-offs they created between 1995 and 2003

    Measuring Knowledge Management: A New Indicator of Innovation in Enterprises

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    This paper is part of a larger research project, which has two primary goals: (1) To develop analytic tools for examining Regional Systems of Innovation for policy makers, and (2) To identify and design new indicators of innovation and knowledge-creation in this context. It draws on the results of research conducted in a non-metropolitan region of British Columbia, in this case the Okanagan region of south-central B.C

    The Link between Innovation and the Use of Human Resources in BC Enterprises

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    This research finds that firms serving non-metropolitan regional markets tend to have low exports, relying on suppliers and customers as sources of innovation. These firms import knowledge to a region. On the other hand, firms serving transnational markets export products or services beyond their regional or national milieu, and rely on internal R&D as a source of innovation

    Innovation and the Management of Human Resources

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    Regional innovation clusters are the building blocks of the Canadian national system of innovation. But in the knowledge-based economy, where knowledge, embedded in the training of the human capital of the innovative firm is the primary resource for the innovative firms. This paper addresses the question: What is the relationship between the innovative behavior of the firm and the way it manages its human resources

    Characteristics of Innovation in a Non-Metropolitan Area: The Okanagan Valley of British Columbia

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    This paper addresses the characteristics of innovation in industrial clusters in a Non-Metropolitan area of British Columbia. The Okanagan houses strong high technology, agrifood, forest products, and construction sectors. These sectors were surveyed for common characteristics indicative of a strong industrial cluster

    Science lives: School choices and ‘natural tendencies’

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    An analysis of 12 semi-structured interviews with university-based scientists and non-scientists illustrates their life journeys towards, or away from, science and the strengths and impact of life occurrences leading them to choose science or non-science professions. We have adopted narrative approaches and used Mezirow's transformative learning theory framework. The areas of discussion from the result have stressed on three main categories that include ‘smooth transition’, ‘incremental wavering transition' and ‘transformative transition’. The article concludes by discussing the key influences that shaped initial attitudes and direction in these people through natural inclination, environmental inspirations and perceptions of science

    Intermediate phase, network demixing, boson and floppy modes, and compositional trends in glass transition temperatures of binary AsxS1-x system

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    The structure of binary As_xS_{1-x} glasses is elucidated using modulated-DSC, Raman scattering, IR reflectance and molar volume experiments over a wide range (8%<x<41%) of compositions. We observe a reversibility window in the calorimetric experiments, which permits fixing the three elastic phases; flexible at x<22.5%, intermediate phase (IP) in the 22.5%<x<29.5% range, and stressed-rigid at x>29.5%. Raman scattering supported by first principles cluster calculations reveal existence of both pyramidal (PYR, As(S1/2)3) and quasi-tetrahedral(QT, S=As(S1/2)3) local structures. The QT unit concentrations show a global maximum in the IP, while the concentration of PYR units becomes comparable to those of QT units in the phase, suggesting that both these local structures contribute to the width of the IP. The IP centroid in the sulfides is significantly shifted to lower As content x than in corresponding selenides, a feature identified with excess chalcogen partially segregating from the backbone in the sulfides, but forming part of the backbone in selenides. These ideas are corroborated by the proportionately larger free volumes of sulfides than selenides, and the absence of chemical bond strength scaling of Tgs between As-sulfides and As-selenides. Low-frequency Raman modes increase in scattering strength linearly as As content x of glasses decreases from x = 20% to 8%, with a slope that is close to the floppy mode fraction in flexible glasses predicted by rigidity theory. These results show that floppy modes contribute to the excess vibrations observed at low frequency. In the intermediate and stressed rigid elastic phases low-frequency Raman modes persist and are identified as boson modes. Some consequences of the present findings on the optoelectronic properties of these glasses is commented upon.Comment: Accepted for PR

    Seismic structure of the southern Gulf of California from Los Cabos block to the East Pacific Rise

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    Multichannel reflection and coincident wide-angle seismic data collected during the 2002 Premier Experiment, Sea of Cortez, Addressing the Development of Oblique Rifting (PESCADOR) experiment provide the most detailed seismic structure to date of the southern Gulf of California. Multichannel seismic (MCS) data were recorded with a 6-km-long streamer, 480-channel, aboard the R/V Maurice Ewing, and wide-angle data was recorded by 19 instruments spaced every similar to 12 km along the transect. The MCS and wide-angle data reveal the seismic structure across the continent-ocean transition of the rifted margin. Typical continental and oceanic crust are separated by a similar to 75-km-wide zone of extended continental crust dominated by block-faulted basement. Little lateral variation in crustal thicknesses and seismic velocities is observed in the oceanic crust, suggesting a constant rate of magmatic productivity since seafloor spreading began. Oceanic crustal thickness and mean crustal velocities suggest normal mantle temperature (1300 degrees C) and passive mantle upwelling at the early stages of seafloor spreading. The crustal thickness, width of extended continental crust, and predicted temperature conditions all indicate a narrow rift mode of extension. On the basis of upper and lower crust stretching factors, an excess of lower crust was found in the extended continental crust. Total extension along transect 5W is estimated to be similar to 35 km. Following crustal extension, new oceanic crust similar to 6.4-km-thick was formed at a rate of similar to 48 mm a(-1) to accommodate plate separation
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