11,029 research outputs found
STS in management education: connecting theory and practice
This paper explores the value of science and technology studies (STS) to management education. The work draws on an ethnographic study of second year management undergraduates studying decision making. The nature and delivery of the decision making module is outlined and the value of STS is demonstrated in terms of both teaching method and module content. Three particular STS contributions are identified and described: the social construction of technological systems; actor network theory; and ontological politics. Affordances and sensibilities are identified for each contribution and a discussion is developed that illustrates how these versions of STS are put to use in management education. It is concluded that STS has a pivotal role to play in critical management (education) and in the process offers opportunities for new forms of managin
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The hospital building as project and matter of concern: the role of representations in negotiating patient room designs and bodies
Mock-ups, scale models and drawings are ubiquitous in building design processes, circulating between various stakeholders. They contribute to the gradual evolution of design, but what else can specific material forms of representations do for the building design and project? The full-scale model of a hospital single-bed room can be different in terms of detail and medium, but in what sense might it perform different and similar functions? The mobilization of multiple forms of representations and visualizations suggest that design materialization might have several important roles to play in negotiating the building design and project, including the exposition and resolution of controversy concerning size of spaces and bodies. The paper compares the use of two different forms of representation of the same imagined spaceâa single-bed room in a hospital, and produced for similar purposesâto ascertain what the optimum (or minimum) spatial requirements should be to allow effective care of patients. The first representations are physical mock-ups of a single-bed room for Danish hospitals where actual medical and logistical procedures are simulated using real equipment and real people. The second is a three-dimensional augmented reality model of a single-bed room for a new hospital in the UK, using a Cave Automatic Virtual Environment where the room is reproduced virtually at one-to-one scale, and which can be explored or navigated using head-tracker technology and a joystick controller. Drawing on Latour's concepts of matters of concern and matters of fact, we compare these two cases to provide insights into the way different media produce specific senses of the design or imagined space, with consequences for on-going design work, and for the settling of controversy over the sizes of spaces and bodies
Using Childhood Memory to Gain Insight into Brand Meaning
In this article, the authors introduce the concept that people\u27s earliest and defining product memories can be used as a projective tool to help managers more fully understand consumers\u27 relationships to their products. The authors use a study on three generations of automobile consumers to illustrate how these memories symbolize the consumer-brand relationship and how they can be used to gain insights into brand meaning. The findings indicate that people\u27s earliest and defining experiences have an important influence on current and future preferences in predictable ways across the consumer life cycle. These memory experiences are symbolic to the consumer and represent a new lens for viewing brand meaning, which complements the toolbox of extant research methods. The authors provide details about this technique for managers who are searching for methods that recognize that consumers coproduce brand meanings
Quantitative spectral analysis of the sdB star HD 188112: a helium-core white dwarf progenitor
HD 188112 is a bright (V = 10.2 mag) hot subdwarf B (sdB) star with a mass
too low to ignite core helium burning and is therefore considered as a
pre-extremely low mass (ELM) white dwarf (WD). ELM WDs (M 0.3 Msun) are
He-core objects produced by the evolution of compact binary systems. We present
in this paper a detailed abundance analysis of HD 188112 based on
high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope (HST) near and far-ultraviolet
spectroscopy. We also constrain the mass of the star's companion. We use hybrid
non-LTE model atmospheres to fit the observed spectral lines and derive the
abundances of more than a dozen elements as well as the rotational broadening
of metallic lines. We confirm the previous binary system parameters by
combining radial velocities measured in our UV spectra with the already
published ones. The system has a period of 0.60658584 days and a WD companion
with M 0.70 Msun. By assuming a tidally locked rotation, combined with
the projected rotational velocity (v sin i = 7.9 0.3 km s) we
constrain the companion mass to be between 0.9 and 1.3 Msun. We further discuss
the future evolution of the system as a potential progenitor of a
(underluminous) type Ia supernova. We measure abundances for Mg, Al, Si, P, S,
Ca, Ti, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni, and Zn, as well as for the trans-iron elements Ga, Sn,
and Pb. In addition, we derive upper limits for the C, N, O elements and find
HD 188112 to be strongly depleted in carbon. We find evidence of non-LTE
effects on the line strength of some ionic species such as Si II and Ni II. The
metallic abundances indicate that the star is metal-poor, with an abundance
pattern most likely produced by diffusion effects.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
The golden circle: A way of arguing and acting about technology in the London ambulance service
This paper analyses the way in which the London Ambulance Service recovered from the events of October 1992, when it implemented a computer-aided despatch system (LASCAD) that remained in service for less than two weeks. It examines the enactment of a programme of long-term organizational change, focusing on the implementation of an alternative computer system in 1996. The analysis in this paper is informed by actor-network theory, both by an early statement of this approach developed by Callon in the sociology of translation, and also by concepts and ideas from Latourâs more recent restatement of his own position. The paper examines how alternative interests emerged and were stabilized over time, in a way of arguing and acting among key players in the change programme, christened the Golden Circle. The story traces four years in the history of the London Ambulance Service, from the aftermath of October 1992 through the birth of the Golden Circle to the achievement of National Health Service (NHS) trust status. LASCAD was the beginning of the story, this is the middle, an end lies in the future, when the remaining elements of the change programme are enacted beyond the Golden Circle
Scraping the Social? Issues in live social research
What makes scraping methodologically interesting for social and cultural research? This paper seeks to contribute to debates about digital social research by exploring how a âmedium-specificâ technique for online data capture may be rendered analytically productive for social research. As a device that is currently being imported into social research, scraping has the capacity to re-structure social research, and this in at least two ways. Firstly, as a technique that is not native to social research, scraping risks to introduce âalienâ methodological assumptions into social research (such as an pre-occupation with freshness). Secondly, to scrape is to risk importing into our inquiry categories that are prevalent in the social practices enabled by the media: scraping makes available already formatted data for social research. Scraped data, and online social data more generally, tend to come with âexternalâ analytics already built-in. This circumstance is often approached as a âproblemâ with online data capture, but we propose it may be turned into virtue, insofar as data formats that have currency in the areas under scrutiny may serve as a source of social data themselves. Scraping, we propose, makes it possible to render traffic between the object and process of social research analytically productive. It enables a form of âreal-timeâ social research, in which the formats and life cycles of online data may lend structure to the analytic objects and findings of social research. By way of a conclusion, we demonstrate this point in an exercise of online issue profiling, and more particularly, by relying on Twitter to profile the issue of âausterityâ. Here we distinguish between two forms of real-time research, those dedicated to monitoring live content (which terms are current?) and those concerned with analysing the liveliness of issues (which topics are happening?)
Just how hot are the Centauri extreme horizontal branch pulsators?
Past studies based on optical spectroscopy suggest that the five Cen
pulsators form a rather homogeneous group of hydrogen-rich subdwarf O stars
with effective temperatures of around 50 000 K. This places the stars below the
red edge of the theoretical instability strip in the log Teff diagram,
where no pulsation modes are predicted to be excited. Our goal is to determine
whether this temperature discrepancy is real, or whether the stars' effective
temperatures were simply underestimated. We present a spectral analysis of two
rapidly pulsating extreme horizontal branch (EHB) stars found in Cen.
We obtained Hubble Space Telescope/COS UV spectra of two Cen
pulsators, V1 and V5, and used the ionisation equilibrium of UV metallic lines
to better constrain their effective temperatures. As a by-product we also
obtained FUV lightcurves of the two pulsators. Using the relative strength of
the N IV and N V lines as a temperature indicator yields Teff values close to
60 000 K, significantly hotter than the temperatures previously derived. From
the FUV light curves we were able to confirm the main pulsation periods known
from optical data. With the UV spectra indicating higher effective temperatures
than previously assumed, the sdO stars would now be found within the predicted
instability strip. Such higher temperatures also provide consistent
spectroscopic masses for both the cool and hot EHB stars of our previously
studied sample.Comment: 9 pages, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Towards a new theory of practice for community health psychology
The article sets out the value of theorizing collective action from a social science perspective that engages with the messy actuality of practice. It argues that community health psychology relies on an abstract version of Paulo Freireâs earlier writing, the Pedagogy of the Oppressed, which provides scholar-activists with a âmapâ approach to collective action. The article revisits Freireâs later work, the Pedagogy of Hope, and argues for the importance of developing a âjourneyâ approach to collective action. Theories of practice are discussed for their value in theorizing such journeys, and in bringing maps (intentions) and journeys (actuality) closer together
Up the ANTe: Understanding Entrepreneurial Leadership Learning through Actor-network Theory
This paper explores the role of educators in supporting the development of entrepreneurial leadership learning though creating peer learning networks of owner-managers of small businesses. Using actor-network theory as a lens we think through the process of constructing and maintaining a peer learning network (conceived of as an actor-network) and frame entrepreneurial leadership learning as a network effect. Our paper is of significance to theory and practice in terms of understanding the dynamics, challenges and opportunities surrounding the construction and ongoing maintenance of networks and how to stimulate entrepreneurial leadership learning
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