2,793 research outputs found

    An E-Readiness Assesment Framework and Two Field Studies

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    Although e-business is increasingly important to companies competing in global markets, rushed and ineffective implementation of e-business in companies results in valuable resources being wasted without achieving significant tangible benefits. To minimize risks and maximize potential benefits in e-business implementation, a company needs to know to what degree it is ready for e-business and in what aspects it needs to improve itself before implementing e-business. Although a few e-readiness assessment models are used in practice, relatively little is published in academic research journals on this issue. Further, the current practical e-readiness assessment models are largely based on the experience of e-business implementation in developed countries. Given the key differences between developed and developing countries, e-business implementation in developing countries could be different from that in developed countries. This paper proposes an e-readiness assessment framework from the perspective of developing countries. The assessment framework contains five hierarchical levels, including 67 specific assessment indicators. Two field studies were conducted to illustrate and test the usability of the proposed e-readiness assessment framework in 21 retail companies of China

    Incentives for food waste diversion:Exploration of a long term successful Chinese city residential scheme

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    There are no academic studies of incentives schemes for household recycling which are successful or useful on large scales in the longer term. For food waste sorting very few successful schemes have been reported, with or without incentives. Here the authors report findings about a two-year old, 23,000-household scheme in Nanjing, China, from an exploratory case study designed to identify key factors using observations, measurements, company data and interviews. Results indicate that residents were initially motivated by the incentives (e.g. points exchanged for eggs) and social influences, but habit was the key factor for maintaining their behaviour, and cited as the main reason they would continue if the incentives stopped. Interestingly, a perceived improvement in the community site’s cleanliness was also cited as an ongoing motivation, and social influences was not mentioned. The perceived success of the scheme was confirmed via measurements of participation rates (32%), the weight of food waste diverted (0.62kg per household), and estimates of the contamination rate (<1%) and food capture rate (30%) 22 months after start. This work identifies key factors for further studies of positive incentives as habit (and thus duration), site cleanliness, and variation in ranking with time of social norms

    Comparing Different Template Features for Recognizing People by Their Gait

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    To recognize people by their gait from a sequence of images, we have proposed a statistical approach which combined eigenspace transformation (EST) with canonical space transformation (CST) for feature transformation of spatial templates. This approach is used to reduce data dimensionality and to optimize the class separability of different gait sequences simultaneously. Good recognition rates have been achieved. Here, we incorporate temporal information from optical flows into three kinds of temporal templates and use them as features for gait recognition in addition to the spatial templates. The recognition performance for four kinds of template features has been evaluated in this paper. Experimental results show that spatial templates, horizontal-flow templates and the combined horizontal-flow and vertical-flow templates are better than vertical-flow templates for gait recognition

    Lifetime Maximization for Amplify-and-Forward Cooperative Networks

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    [[abstract]]Power allocation strategies are devised to maximize the network lifetime of amplify-and-forward (AF) cooperative networks. We consider the scenario where one source and multiple partners cooperate to transmit messages to the destination. The powers emitted by the users are subject to the SNR requirement at the destination. First, the power allocation strategy that demands the minimum instantaneous aggregate transmit power of all cooperating partners is described and analyzed. The optimal solution results in a form of selective relaying; namely, the user with the best channel condition is selected to help in relaying the message. However, this instantaneous power minimization strategy does not necessarily maximize the lifetime of battery-limited systems. Then, we propose three AF cooperative schemes to exploit the channel state information (CSI), the residual battery energy and the QoS requirement. It is shown that the network lifetime can be extended considerably by taking all these three factors into account.[[fileno]]2030137030021[[department]]電機工程學

    Hamiltonian Study of Improved U(1U(1 Lattice Gauge Theory in Three Dimensions

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    A comprehensive analysis of the Symanzik improved anisotropic three-dimensional U(1) lattice gauge theory in the Hamiltonian limit is made. Monte Carlo techniques are used to obtain numerical results for the static potential, ratio of the renormalized and bare anisotropies, the string tension, lowest glueball masses and the mass ratio. Evidence that rotational symmetry is established more accurately for the Symanzik improved anisotropic action is presented. The discretization errors in the static potential and the renormalization of the bare anisotropy are found to be only a few percent compared to errors of about 20-25% for the unimproved gauge action. Evidence of scaling in the string tension, antisymmetric mass gap and the mass ratio is observed in the weak coupling region and the behaviour is tested against analytic and numerical results obtained in various other Hamiltonian studies of the theory. We find that more accurate determination of the scaling coefficients of the string tension and the antisymmetric mass gap has been achieved, and the agreement with various other Hamiltonian studies of the theory is excellent. The improved action is found to give faster convergence to the continuum limit. Very clear evidence is obtained that in the continuum limit the glueball ratio MS/MAM_{S}/M_{A} approaches exactly 2, as expected in a theory of free, massive bosons.Comment: 13 pages, 15 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Cultivation arrangements and the cost efficiency of rice farming in Taiwan

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    In this paper, a switching regression model is developed to analyze farmers' choice behavior and cost efficiency in field plowing arrangement in Taiwan. We find that the decision on the choice of plowing arrangement is determined by a cost comparison between self-plowing and hired-service, and other non-cost considerations, such as the availability of family labor and machinery., education level, non-farm income, age, and regional effects, Across a spectrum of fanner characteristics, empirical results indicate a potentially substantial cost-savings by hiring service for field plowing than by self-plowing. Self-plowing farmers also subject to a significant level of cost inefficiency

    Bag Picture of the Excited QCD Vacuum with Static Q-Qbar Source

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    The gluon excitations of the QCD vacuum are investigated in the presence of a static quark-antiquark source. It is shown that the ground state potential and the excitation spectrum of dynamical gluon degrees of freedom, as determined in our lattice simulations, agree remarkably well with model predictions based on the diaelectric properties of the confining vacuum described as a dual superconductor. The strong chromoelectric field of the static Q-Qbar source creates a bubble (bag) in the condensed phase where weakly interacting gluon modes can be excited. Some features and predictions of the bag model are presented and the chromoelectric vortex limit at large quark-antiquark separation (string formation) is briefly discussed.Comment: 3 pages, Latex with espcrc2.sty, 5 Postscript figures, to appear in the proceedings of LATTICE'97, Edinburg

    Revisit of the Interaction between Holographic Dark Energy and Dark Matter

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    In this paper we investigate the possible direct, non-gravitational interaction between holographic dark energy (HDE) and dark matter. Firstly, we start with two simple models with the interaction terms QρdmQ \propto \rho_{dm} and QρdeQ \propto \rho_{de}, and then we move on to the general form QρmαρdeβQ \propto \rho_m^\alpha\rho_{de}^\beta. The cosmological constraints of the models are obtained from the joint analysis of the present Union2.1+BAO+CMB+H0H_0 data. We find that the data slightly favor an energy flow from dark matter to dark energy, although the original HDE model still lies in the 95.4% confidence level (CL) region. For all models we find c<1c<1 at the 95.4% CL. We show that compared with the cosmic expansion, the effect of interaction on the evolution of ρdm\rho_{dm} and ρde\rho_{de} is smaller, and the relative increment (decrement) amount of the energy in the dark matter component is constrained to be less than 9% (15%) at the 95.4% CL. By introducing the interaction, we find that even when c<1c<1 the big rip still can be avoided due to the existence of a de Sitter solution at z1z\rightarrow-1. We show that this solution can not be accomplished in the two simple models, while for the general model such a solution can be achieved with a large β\beta, and the big rip may be avoided at the 95.4% CL.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures, version accepted for publication in JCA

    Integrating Accessibility and Functional Requirements

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