2,405 research outputs found

    DCXNET: E-Transformation at DaimlerChrysler

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    The teaching case covers the story of DCXNET, the e-business initiative of DaimlerChrysler from 2000 to 2002. It focuses on the challenges for the automotive industry due to the evolution of e-business technology and how these challenges have been dealt with at DaimlerChrysler. The case is embedded in the context of todayís the e-business hype and describes the management approach, results, and success factors of the initiative as well as lessons learned

    Vagus nerve stimulation: A new approach to reduce heart failure

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    Autonomic imbalance with increased adrenergic and reduced parasympathetic activity is involved in the development and progress of heart failure (HF). Experimental data have demonstrated that stimulation of the vagus nerve is able to reverse ventricular remodeling of the failing heart. There is also evidence that increasing parasympathetic activity may stimulate the production of nitric oxide, and reduce the devastating inflammatory process involved in HF. Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) has been successfully applied for many years to treat drug resistant epilepsy. The first study of right vagus stimulation in patients with advance HF has proven the feasibility and safety of this new approach. Long term follow-up of increased vagal tone over 12 months with a specially designed stimulating system (CardioFit, BioControl, Yehud, Israel) has demonstrated that symptoms of HF can be significantly diminished, left ventricular ejection fraction increased, and ventricular volumes reduced. These recently published data are very promising and may offer another approach for patients with advanced HF already treated with optimal medical therapy. A prospective randomized trial with a larger patient cohort is needed to confirm these beneficial results of VNS. (Cardiol J 2010; 17, 6: 638-643

    POWTEX Neutron Diffractometer at FRM II - new perspectives for in-situ rock deformation analysis

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    EGU2012-13521 In Geoscience quantitative texture analysis here defined as the quantitative analysis of the crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO), is a common tool for the investigation of fabric development in mono- and polyphase rocks, their deformation histories and kinematics. Bulk texture measurements also allow the quantitative characterisation of the anisotropic physical properties of rock materials. A routine tool to measure bulk sample volumes is neutron texture diffraction, as neutrons have large penetration capabilities of several cm in geological sample materials. The new POWTEX (POWder and TEXture) Diffractometer at the neutron research reactor FRM II in Garching, Germany is designed as a high-intensity diffractometer by groups from the RWTH Aachen, Forschungszentrum Jülich and the University of Göttingen. Complementary to existing neutron diffractometers (SKAT at Dubna, Russia; GEM at ISIS, UK; HIPPO at Los Alamos, USA; D20 at ILL, France; and the local STRESS-SPEC and SPODI at FRM II) the layout of POWTEX is focused on fast time-resolved experiments and the measurement of larger sample series as necessary for the study of large scale geological structures. POWTEX is a dedicated beam line for geoscientific research. Effective texture measurements without sample tilting and rotation are possible firstly by utilizing a range of neutron wavelengths simultaneously (Time-of-Flight technique) and secondly by the high detector coverage (9.8 sr) and a high flux (�~1x10 7 n/cm2s) at the sample. Furthermore the instrument and the angular detector resolution is designed also for strong recrystallisation textures as well as for weak textures of polyphase rocks. These instrument characteristics allow in-situ time-resolved texture measurements during deformation experiments on rocksalt, ice and other materials as large sample environments will be implemented at POWTEX. The in-situ deformation apparatus is operated by a uniaxial spindle drive with a maximum axial load of 250 kN, which will be redesigned to minimize shadowing effects inside the cylindrical detector. The HT deformatione experiments will be carried out in uniaxial compression or extension and an upgrade to triaxial deformation conditions is envisaged. The load frame can alternatively be used for ice deformation by inserting a cryostat cell for temperatures down to 77 K with a triaxial apparatus allowing also simple shear experiments on ice. Strain rates range between 10-8 and 10-3 s-1 reaching to at least 50% axial strain. The deformation apparatus is designed for continuous long-term deformation experiments and can be exchanged between in-situ and ex-situ placements during continuous operation inside and outside the neutron detector

    Why Should We Care About CARE-HF?

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    Previous trials of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) have suggested that this therapy can significantly improve functional class and exercise capacity during short-term follow-up. The impact of this therapy on morbidity and mortality has only recently been reported. The Cardiac Resynchronization-Heart Failure (CARE-HF) study has definitively shown that CRT significantly reduces mortality (36%, p < 0.002) in patients with NYHA functional class III and IV heart failure and ventricular dyssynchrony. This study also shows that CRT reverses ventricular remodeling and improves myocardial performance progressively for at least 18 months. In heart failure patients, the CARE-HF and Comparison of Medical Therapy, Pacing, and Defibrillation in Heart Failure (COMPANION) (the earlier major morbidity/mortality trial) studies together show the unequivocal benefit for CRT therapy and CRT therapy with back-up defibrillation to significantly reduce mortality and hospitalization compared with optimal medical therapy. Both studies suggest the benefit of adding the implantable cardiac defibrillator to CRT devices, as over one-third of deaths in the CRT-pacemaker arm of both the COMPANION and CARE-HF studies were sudden

    Quality and resource efficiency in hospital service provision: A geoadditive stochastic frontier analysis of stroke quality of care in Germany

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    We specify a Bayesian, geoadditive Stochastic Frontier Analysis (SFA) model to assess hospital performance along the dimensions of resources and quality of stroke care in German hospitals. With 1,100 annual observations and data from 2006 to 2013 and risk-adjusted patient volume as output, we introduce a production function that captures quality, resource inputs, hospital inefficiency determinants and spatial patterns of inefficiencies. With high relevance for hospital management and health system regulators, we identify performance improvement mechanisms by considering marginal effects for the average hospital. Specialization and certification can substantially reduce mortality. Regional and hospital-level concentration can improve quality and resource efficiency. Finally, our results demonstrate a trade-off between quality improvement and resource reduction and substantial regional variation in efficiency.DFG, 325093850, Open Access Publizieren 2017 - 2018 / Technische Universität Berli

    Study of internal stresses in a TWIP steel analyzing transient and permanent softening during reverse shear tests.

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    Recent Bauschinger-type tests conducted on a twinning-induced plasticity (TWIP) steel highlights the important contribution of internal stresses to work hardening [1]. Along this line we present Bauschinger experiments in a Fe-22Mn wt.%-0.6C wt.% TWIP steel. The mechanical behaviour upon load reversal shows transient and permanent softening effects. Determination of the internal stress from the magnitude of the permanent softening yields a contribution to work hardening of the order of 20%. Analysis of the transient softening, during strain reversal, indicates that internal stress are consistent with reported data on high carbon spheroidized steels.Acknowledgements The authors would like to acknowledge the financial support by the German Research Foundation within the framework of the SFB 761 ‘‘steel ab initio’’ and the CICYT grant MAT2009-14452 awarded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation.Peer reviewe
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