658 research outputs found

    Knowledge Compensation in the German Automobile Industry

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    Knowledge is one of the most important determinants in single-industry studies of firm survival over the life cycle. Different kinds of knowledge, namely post-entry experience, pre-entry experience, and knowledge acquired by innovative activity positively influence the survival chances of firms. This paper investigates how the kinds of knowledge are able to compensate for each other. Therefore, a statistical survival analysis is performed for the German automobile industry which applies a new approach that combines the Cox regression with instrumental variable estimation. The results show that innovative activity is able to compensate for lacking post-entry experience, supporting Schumpeterian creative destruction.firm survival, patents, innovation, automobile industry, hazard rates

    Calibration of the outdoor comfort index Physiological Equivalent Temperature (PET) for Curitiba.

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    An?lise da rela??o entre conforto t?rmico e as condi??es clim?ticas de determinada localidade pode ser uma importante ferramenta de planejamento urbano. Uma das formas de avalia??o ? a utiliza??o de ?ndices de conforto, como, por exemplo, o PET (Physiological Equivalent Temperature), ?ndice amplamente utilizado em estudos de conforto t?rmico em espa?os abertos, contudo apenas ap?s a devida calibra??o ?s prefer?ncias t?rmicas da popula??o local. Este trabalho teve como objetivo apresentar uma calibra??o do ?ndice PET para Curitiba, PR, cidade de clima temperado de altitude (Cfb), por tr?s procedimentos distintos. Os dados clim?ticos e subjetivos foram obtidos em campanhas de monitoramento t?rmico entre 2009 e 2010, que abrangeram ver?o, outono e inverno. Para a calibra??o, foram utilizados tr?s m?todos, notadamente: (a) agrupamento dos votos de percep??o t?rmica a partir de entrevistados para varia??es discretas de 1 ?C na escala PET; (b) identifica??o de categorias mais frequentes para votos agrupados de percep??o t?rmica, por mesma varia??o de grau PET; e (c) m?todo das curvas Probit. O segundo m?todo foi considerado pouco preciso na defini??o dos limites para Curitiba, enquanto o m?todo Probit gerou resultados semelhantes aos obtidos pelo primeiro m?todo, a partir dosThe analysis of the relationship between thermal comfort and the climatic conditions of a given location can be an important tool for urban planning. A possible way to perform such evaluation is by means of comfort indices, such as PET (Physiological Equivalent Temperature), which is widely used in thermal studies in open-air environments, after duly calibration to local thermal preferences. This study aims to calibrate the PET index for Curitiba, a city characterized by a temperate climate (Cfb), according to three distinct procedures. Climatic and subjective data were obtained in outdoor thermal monitoring campaigns during 2009 and 2010, covering summer, autumn and winter. Calibration procedures involved three distinct methods: 1) binning method for 1 ?C discrete variations in the PET scale; 2) identifying the most prevailing thermal sensation categories in each 1 ?C PET-bin; 3) Probit analysis. Method 2 was considered less precise in defining limits for Curitiba while Probit results corresponded well with those from Method 1, by which a comfort zone for outdoor spaces was obtained

    The Long-Term Care System in Denmark

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    This document provides an overview of the long-term care system, the number and develop-ment of beneficiaries and the long-term care policy in Denmark. The report is part of the first stage of the European project ANCIEN (Assessing Needs of Care in European Nations), commissioned by the European Commission under the Seventh Framework Programme (FP7). The first part of the project aims to facilitate structured comparison of the long-term care systems and policies in European Nations. Thus, this report is one of comparable reports provided for most European countries

    Impact of soil and water conservation measuren on catchment hydrological response: a case in north Ethiopia

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    Impact studies of catchment management in the developing world rarely include detailed hydrological components. Here, changes in the hydrological response of a 200-ha catchment in north Ethiopia are investigated. The management included various soil and water conservation measures such as the construction of dry masonry stone bunds and check dams, the abandonment of post-harvest grazing, and the establishment of woody vegetation. Measurements at the catchment outlet indicated a runoff depth of 5 mm or a runoff coefficient (RC) of 1·6% in the rainy season of 2006. Combined with runoff measurements at plot scale, this allowed calculating the runoff curve number (CN) for various land uses and land management techniques. The pre-implementation runoff depth was then predicted using the CN values and a ponding adjustment factor, representing the abstraction of runoff induced by the 242 check dams in gullies. Using the 2006 rainfall depths, the runoff depth for the 2000 land management situation was predicted to be 26·5mm(RCD 8%), in line with current RCs of nearby catchments. Monitoring of the ground water level indicated a rise after catchment management. The yearly rise in water table after the onset of the rains (ΔT) relative to the water surplus (WS) over the same period increased between 2002-2003 (ΔT/WS D 3·4) and 2006 (ΔT/WS >11·1). Emerging wells and irrigation are other indicators for improved water supply in the managed catchment. Cropped fields in the gullies indicate that farmers are less frightened for the destructive effects of flash floods. Due to increased soil water content, the crop growing period is prolonged. It can be concluded that this catchment management has resulted in a higher infiltration rate and a reduction of direct runoff volume by 81% which has had a positive influence on the catchment water balance. © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd

    Concerted action at eight phosphodiester bonds by the BcgI restriction endonuclease

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    The BcgI endonuclease exemplifies a subset of restriction enzymes, the Type IIB class, which make two double-strand breaks (DSBs) at each copy of their recognition sequence, one either side of the site, to excise the sequence from the remainder of the DNA. In this study, we show that BcgI is essentially inactive when bound to a single site and that to cleave a DNA with one copy of its recognition sequence, it has to act in trans, bridging two separate DNA molecules. We also show that BcgI makes the two DSBs at an individual site in a highly concerted manner. Intermediates cut on one side of the site do not accumulate during the course of the reaction: instead, the DNA is converted straight to the final products cut on both sides. On DNA with two sites, BcgI bridges the sites in cis and then generally proceeds to cut both strands on both sides of both sites without leaving the DNA. The BcgI restriction enzyme can thus excise two DNA segments together, by cleaving eight phosphodiester bonds within a single-DNA binding event

    The formation of Brazilian minerals database for integrated SEM-EDS system applied to the gold ore characterization.

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    The mineralogical characterization of the Brazilian minerals variety occurrence is one of the key steps in the design of the mineral processing route and improving the overall process efficiency. This set of information is essential in assessing the technical and economic viability of a mineral Project. Among the variety mineralogical characterization techniques, automated analyzers are gaining great prominence because they provide qualitative and quantitative data in an automated manner, with great speed and accuracy. The system, available in the NanoLab at the Laboratory of the Mining-Metallurgic Centre/REDEMAT and specifically called TIMA-MIRA, is composed of a scan control program and analysis of mineral data (TIMA - Tescan Integrated Mineral Analyzer) and a scanning electron microscope with cannon field emission of electrons associated with two energy dispersive detector characteristic X-rays (MIRA - trade name). The system uses a mineral database consisting of association images by back scattered electrons of the mineral grains, with their characteristic X-ray spectra and their comparison with the characteristic spectra of a database. The equipment has an interface that allows you to add minerals and other materials to their underlying database, which is critical to the result accuracy because the original equipment database that is created only with data of mineral samples from other countries would not identify minerals of national origin with its characteristic major and minor elements. These limitations of the database integrated mineral analyzer TIMA-MIRA motivated the construction of a new database through a selection methodology, preparation and analysis by diffraction rays and the TIMA-MIRA system, different context samples Brazilian geological. Each mineral was determined to be analyzed in the integrated mineral analysis system by the XR diffraction analysis. Thereby, we obtained the maximum and minimum intensities values of chemical elements peaks that make up the analyzed mineral obtaining thus new identification rules for each selected species and adapted some existing rules to meet the needs presente

    Closed complex of the D-3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase induced by an enantiomeric competitive inhibitor.

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    D-3-Hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (HBDH) from Pseudomonas fragi showed a strict stereospecificity to the d-enantiomer of 3-hydroxybutyrate (d-3-HB) as a substrate. The l-enantiomer acts as a competitive inhibitor, with a K(i) value comparable to the K(m) value for d-3-HB. We have determined the crystal structures of the ternary complex of HBDH-NAD(+)-l-3-HB and the binary complex of HBDH-NAD(+). The former structure showed a so-called closed-form conformation, which is considered an active form for catalysis, while the latter stayed mostly in a open-form conformation. The determined structures along with the site-directed mutagenesis confirmed the substrate recognition mechanism that we proposed previously. The hydrogen bonding interaction between Gln196, located in the moving helix, and the carboxyl group of the substrate/inhibitor is important for the stable ternary complex formation. Finally, the crystal structures of the Thr190 mutants, T190S and T190A, indicate that the Thr190 is a key residue for the open-closed conformational change. T190S retained 37% of the activity. In T190A, however, the activity decreased to 0.1% that of the wild-type enzyme. Fixing the position of the hydroxyl group of Thr190 to form hydrogen bonds to the pyrophosphate moiety and the carboxamide of NAD(+) seems to be a significant factor for the open-closed conformational change

    Co-morbidity and visual acuity are risk factors for health-related quality of life decline: five-month follow-up EQ-5D data of visually impaired older patients

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Co-morbidity is a common phenomenon in the elderly and is considered to be a major threat to quality of life (QOL). Knowledge of co-existing conditions or patient characteristics that lead to an increased QOL decline is important for individual care, and for public health purposes. In visually impaired older adults, it remains unclear which co-existing conditions or other characteristics influence their health-related QOL. Our aim was to present a risk profile of characteristics and conditions which predict deterioration of QOL in visually impaired older patients.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Analyses were performed on data from an observational study among 296 visually impaired older patients from four Dutch hospitals. QOL was measured with the EuroQol-5D (EQ-5D) at baseline and at five-month follow-up. Nine co-existing condition categories (musculoskeletal; diabetes; heart; hypertension; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or asthma; hearing impairment; stroke; cancer; gastrointestinal conditions) and six patient characteristics (age; gender; visual acuity; social status; independent living; rehabilitation type) were tested in a linear regression model to determine the risk profile. The model was corrected for baseline EQ-5D scores. In addition, baseline EQ-5D scores were compared with reference scores from a younger visually impaired population and from elderly in the general population.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>From the 296 patients, 50 (16.9%) were lost to follow-up. Patients who reported diabetes, COPD or asthma, consequences of stroke, musculoskeletal conditions, cancer, gastrointestinal conditions or higher logMAR Visual Acuity values, experienced a lower QOL. After five months, visual acuity, musculoskeletal conditions, COPD/asthma and stroke predicted a decline in QOL (R<sup>2 </sup>= 0.20). At baseline, the visually impaired older patients more often reported moderate or severe problems on most EQ-5D dimensions than the two reference groups.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>In visually impaired older patients, visual acuity, musculoskeletal conditions, COPD/asthma and stroke predicted a relatively rapid decline in health-related QOL. With this risk profile, a specific referral by the ophthalmologist to another sub-specialty may have a beneficial effect on the patient's health-related QOL. A referral by the ophthalmologist or optometrist to a multidisciplinary rehabilitation service seems appropriate for some patients with co-morbidity. The current results need to be confirmed in studies using pre-structured questionnaires to assess co-morbidity.</p
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