587 research outputs found

    On the relationship between firms and their legal environment: The role of cultural consonance

    Get PDF
    In this study we seek to reconcile diverging dominant views on the relationship between firms and their legal environment by offering a cultural contingency perspective.We begin by accepting the notion that a new law will likely exert a powerful influence on targeted firms and that firms’ strategic responses include efforts to shape the impact of the new law. However, we suggest that the success of such response will be contingent on the degree of cultural consonance of firms’ strategic responses and the dominant cultural context at that time. We elaborate this view in our detailed qualitative and quantitative analyses of the automotive Safety Act of 1966 and the response by targeted firms. We provide evidence showing that the changes in the degree of cultural consonance of firms' strategic response and the predominant cultural beliefs/values explain both the early failure of firms’ efforts to shape the impact of the law in the mid-1960s and the later success by the end of the 1970s. We highlight how firms’ cultural context provides both a constraint and an opportunity for firms seeking to shape legal environmental pressures, and we conclude by discussing the implications of our dynamic contingency perspective for research on law, culture, and strategy

    Keypics: free–hand drawn iconic keywords

    Get PDF
    We propose an iconic indexing of images to be exposed on the Web. This should be accomplished by “Keypics”, i.e. auxiliary, simplified pictures referring to the geometrical and/or the semantic content of the indexed image. Keypics should not be rigidly standardized; they should be left free to evolve, to express nuances and to stress details. A mathematical tool for dealing with such freedom, in the retrieval task, already exists: Size Functions. An experiment on 494 Keypics with Size Functions based on three measuring functions (distances, projections and jumps) and their combination is presented

    The mitochondrial permeability transition pore is a dispensable element for mitochondrial calcium efflux

    Get PDF
    AbstractThe mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) has long been known to have a role in mitochondrial calcium (Ca2+) homeostasis under pathological conditions as a mediator of the mitochondrial permeability transition and the activation of the consequent cell death mechanism. However, its role in the context of mitochondrial Ca2+ homeostasis is not yet clear. Several studies that were based on PPIF inhibition or knock out suggested that mPTP is involved in the Ca2+ efflux mechanism, while other observations have revealed the opposite result.The c subunit of the mitochondrial F1/FO ATP synthase has been recently found to be a fundamental component of the mPTP. In this work, we focused on the contribution of the mPTP in the Ca2+ efflux mechanism by modulating the expression of the c subunit. We observed that forcing mPTP opening or closing did not impair mitochondrial Ca2+ efflux. Therefore, our results strongly suggest that the mPTP does not participate in mitochondrial Ca2+ homeostasis in a physiological context in HeLa cells

    Conceptual development from the perspective of a brain-inspired robotic architecture

    Get PDF
    Concepts are central to reasoning and intelligent behaviour. Scientific evidence shows that conceptual development is fundamental for the emergence of high-cognitive phenomena. Here, we model such phenomena in a brain-inspired cognitive robotic model and examine how the robot can learn, categorise, and abstract concepts to voluntary control behaviour. The paper argues that such competence arises with sufficient conceptual content from physical and social experience. Hence, senses, motor abilities and language, all contribute to a robot's intelligent behaviour. To this aim, we devised a method for attaining concepts, which computationally reproduces the steps of the inductive thinking strategy of the Concept Attainment Model (CAM). Initially, the robot is tutor-guided through socio-centric cues to attain concepts and is then tested consistently to use these concepts to solve complex tasks. We demonstrate how the robot uses language to create new categories by abstraction in response to human language-directed instructions. Linguistic stimuli also change the representations of the robot's experiences and generate more complex representations for further concepts. Most notably, this work shows that this competence emerges by the robot's ability to understand the concepts similarly to human understanding. Such understanding was also maintained when concepts were expressed in multilingual lexicalisations showing that labels represent concepts that allowed the model to adapt to unfamiliar contingencies in which it did not have directly related experiences. The work concludes that language is an essential component of conceptual development, which scaffolds the cognitive continuum of a robot from low-to-high cognitive skills, including its skill to understand

    Nanopatterning of colloidal nanocrystals emitters dispersed in a PMMA matrix by e-beam lithography

    Get PDF
    We report on the fabrication of periodic nanostructures embedding semiconductor colloidal nanocrystals (NCs) by directly exposing a polymer/NCs blend to electron beam lithography (EBL). Our technological approach for the fabrication of NCs-based photonic devices relies on the dispersion of CdSe/ZnS core/shell NCs into a layer of polymethilmethacrylate (PMMA) positive electron resist, which is patterned by means of an EBL process. The presence of NCs in the resist did not modify the peculiar behaviour of PMMA, which was selectively removed from the regions exposed to the electron beam. The morphology of the sample was assessed by scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy measurements. The optical analysis of the samples after the dispersion of the NCs into the PMMA matrix and the exposure to the e-beam showed the successful localization of the colloidal NCs, whose emission properties were preserved

    A review of numerical modelling and optimisation of the floating support structure for offshore wind turbines

    Get PDF
    AbstractCompared to onshore wind power, floating offshore wind power is a promising renewable energy source due to higher wind speeds and larger suitable available areas. However, costs are still too high compared to onshore wind power. In general, the economic viability of offshore wind technology decreases with greater water depth and distance from shore. Floating wind platforms are more competitive compared to fixed offshore structures above a certain water depth, but there is still great variety and no clear design convergence. Therefore, optimisation of the floating support structure in the preliminary phase of the design process is still of great importance, often up to personal experience and sensibility. It is fundamental that a suitable optimisation approach is chosen to obtain meaningful results at early development stages. This review provides a comparative overview of the methods, numerical tools and optimisation approaches that can be used with respect to the conceptual design of the support structure for Floating offshore wind turbines (FOWT) attempting to detail the limitations preventing the convergence to an optimal floating support structure. This work is intended to be as a reference for any researcher and developer that would like to optimise the support platform for FOWT

    Planning the decarbonisation of energy systems: the importance of applying time series clustering to long-term models

    Get PDF
    The study of future energy scenarios with high shares of variable renewable energy sources (VRES) requires an accurate representation of VRES variability and storage capacity. However, long-term optimal expansion models, which are typically used to prescribe the evolution of energy systems, make use of coarse time series to limit computational effort. This weakness can entail an incorrect sizing of VRES plants and storage facilities. In this work, a novel method is proposed to mitigate the current limitations and enable accurate long-term planning of high-VRES decarbonisation pathways. Clustering methods are applied to time series, preserving the possibility of having inter-day and intra-day energy storage. To this end, the temporal framework of an open-source energy system model, OSeMOSYS, is modified to allow the implementation of interconnected, clustered representative days. Traditional and novel approaches are compared and benchmarked for a reference case study, i.e., a remote island. The results show that time series clustering can significantly improve the evaluation of the overall system cost, leading to a relative error of -5% (novel approach) instead of -35% (traditional approach) when 24 representative days are considered. Similarly, the new approach improves the sizing of VRES and storage facilities. The new technique is found to require three orders of magnitude less computation time than the traditional technique to achieve a comparable level of accuracy

    On the relationship between firms and their legal environment: The role of cultural consonance

    Get PDF
    In this study we seek to reconcile diverging dominant views on the relationship between firms and their legal environment by offering a cultural contingency perspective.We begin by accepting the notion that a new law will likely exert a powerful influence on targeted firms and that firms’ strategic responses include efforts to shape the impact of the new law. However, we suggest that the success of such response will be contingent on the degree of cultural consonance of firms’ strategic responses and the dominant cultural context at that time. We elaborate this view in our detailed qualitative and quantitative analyses of the automotive Safety Act of 1966 and the response by targeted firms. We provide evidence showing that the changes in the degree of cultural consonance of firms' strategic response and the predominant cultural beliefs/values explain both the early failure of firms’ efforts to shape the impact of the law in the mid-1960s and the later success by the end of the 1970s. We highlight how firms’ cultural context provides both a constraint and an opportunity for firms seeking to shape legal environmental pressures, and we conclude by discussing the implications of our dynamic contingency perspective for research on law, culture, and strategy

    Local degradation of selectively oxidized AlGaAs/AlAs distributed Bragg reflectors in lateral-injection vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers

    Get PDF
    We show the local degradation of a selectively oxidized top distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) in a lateral-junction vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (LJ-VCSEL) working at room temperature in continuous-wave operation. The measurements were carried out by a scanning microluminescence system used in reflection mode. The injection of a few milliamps in continuous-wave operation at room temperature in the LJ-VCSEL induces damage both in the DBRs and in the active area. The submicron resolution maps of the reflected laser intensity, recorded from the top surface of the LJ-VCSEL, show a strong local change in the top DBR reflectivity before and after current injection. The ÎĽ-photoluminescence map, recorded after the device failure, shows that the radiative recombination is strongly decreased in the damaged area of the device
    • …
    corecore