8,832 research outputs found
A Study On Dividend Determinants For Korea's Information Technology Firms
In this study, we analyse the determinants of dividend policies of information technology
(IT) firms listed on the Korean stock market and use a logit regression model to examine
Korean IT firms' propensity to pay dividends based on the life-cycle hypothesis. The
analysis yields several findings: first, the firms pay relatively small dividends in the
growth stage, which increase over time as their businesses mature. Second, profitability
shows a positive correlation with propensity to pay dividends. Third, firms that paid out
more dividends in the past continue to pay relatively more dividends. Meanwhile,
dividend policies do not show a significant correlation with firm size or growth
opportunities. In addition, dividend policies have no relation to the catering incentive
(investor fads for dividends) or risk. These observations suggest that Korean IT firms'
propensity to pay dividends is supported by the life-cycle hypothesis and that the
declining dividends from the mid-2000s can be attributed to deteriorating profits
Enhancing quantum entanglement for continuous variables by a coherent superposition of photon subtraction and addition
We investigate how the entanglement properties of a two-mode state can be
improved by performing a coherent superposition operation of photon subtraction
and addition, proposed by Lee and Nha [Phys. Rev. A 82, 053812 (2010)], on each
mode. We show that the degree of entanglement, the EPR-type correlation, and
the performance of quantum teleportation can be all enhanced for the output
state when the coherent operation is applied to a two-mode squeezed state. The
effects of the coherent operation are more prominent than those of the mere
photon subtraction and the addition particularly in the small squeezing regime,
whereas the optimal operation becomes the photon subtraction in the
large-squeezing regime.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, published versio
EFFECTS OF CUSTOM-MADE 3D PRINTED INSOLES FOR FLAT-FOOT PEOPLE ON GAIT PARAMETERS: A PRELIMINARY STUDY
The purpose of this study was to make low-cost and custom-made 3D printed insoles for flat-foot people and to investigate the feasibility of these insoles in walking and running. Thirty people (15 normal and 15 flat-foot people) participated in this study. 3D scanner, 3D printer, and CAD software were used to produce insoles and motion capturing system and a force plate were used to perform gait analysis. Results indicated that custom-made 3D printed insoles were not effective on joint angles and ground reaction forces, but they affected the trajectory of COP positively during stance phase. Further study with different filling rate and materials of insoles are required to generalize 3D printed insoles for flatfoot people
- …