4,646 research outputs found
Developing transferable management skills through Action Learning
There has been increasing criticism of the relevance of the Master of Business Administration (MBA) in developing skills and competencies. Action learning, devised to address problem-solving in the workplace, offers a potential response to such criticism. This paper offers an insight into one university’s attempt to integrate action learning into the curriculum. Sixty-five part-time students were questioned at two points in their final year about their action learning experience and the enhancement of relevant skills and competencies. Results showed a mixed picture. Strong confirmation of the importance of selected skills and competencies contrasted with weaker agreement about the extent to which these were developed by action learning. There was, nonetheless, a firm belief in the positive impact on the learning process. The paper concludes that action learning is not a panacea but has an important role in a repertoire of educational approaches to develop relevant skills and competencies
Development of probabilistic models for quantitative pathway analysis of plant pest introduction for the EU territory
This report demonstrates a probabilistic quantitative pathway analysis model that can be used in risk assessment for plant pest introduction into EU territory on a range of edible commodities (apples, oranges, stone fruits and wheat). Two types of model were developed: a general commodity model that simulates distribution of an imported infested/infected commodity to and within the EU from source countries by month; and a consignment model that simulates the movement and distribution of individual consignments from source countries to destinations in the EU. The general pathway model has two modules. Module 1 is a trade pathway model, with a Eurostat database of five years of monthly trade volumes for each specific commodity into the EU28 from all source countries and territories. Infestation levels based on interception records, commercial quality standards or other information determine volume of infested commodity entering and transhipped within the EU. Module 2 allocates commodity volumes to processing, retail use and waste streams and overlays the distribution onto EU NUTS2 regions based on population densities and processing unit locations. Transfer potential to domestic host crops is a function of distribution of imported infested product and area of domestic production in NUTS2 regions, pest dispersal potential, and phenology of susceptibility in domestic crops. The consignment model covers the several routes on supply chains for processing and retail use. The output of the general pathway model is a distribution of estimated volumes of infested produce by NUTS2 region across the EU28, by month or annually; this is then related to the accessible susceptible domestic crop. Risk is expressed as a potential volume of infested fruit in potential contact with an area of susceptible domestic host crop. The output of the consignment model is a volume of infested produce retained at each stage along the specific consignment trade chain
Alternating groups and moduli space lifting Invariants
Main Theorem: Spaces of r-branch point 3-cycle covers, degree n or Galois of
degree n!/2 have one (resp. two) component(s) if r=n-1 (resp. r\ge n). Improves
Fried-Serre on deciding when sphere covers with odd-order branching lift to
unramified Spin covers. We produce Hurwitz-Torelli automorphic functions on
Hurwitz spaces, and draw Inverse Galois conclusions. Example: Absolute spaces
of 3-cycle covers with +1 (resp. -1) lift invariant carry canonical even (resp.
odd) theta functions when r is even (resp. odd). For inner spaces the result is
independent of r. Another use appears in,
http://www.math.uci.edu/~mfried/paplist-mt/twoorbit.html, "Connectedness of
families of sphere covers of A_n-Type." This shows the M(odular) T(ower)s for
the prime p=2 lying over Hurwitz spaces first studied by,
http://www.math.uci.edu/~mfried/othlist-cov/hurwitzLiu-Oss.pdf, Liu and
Osserman have 2-cusps. That is sufficient to establish the Main Conjecture: (*)
High tower levels are general-type varieties and have no rational points.For
infinitely many of those MTs, the tree of cusps contains a subtree -- a spire
-- isomorphic to the tree of cusps on a modular curve tower. This makes
plausible a version of Serre's O(pen) I(mage) T(heorem) on such MTs.
Establishing these modular curve-like properties opens, to MTs, modular
curve-like thinking where modular curves have never gone before. A fuller html
description of this paper is at
http://www.math.uci.edu/~mfried/paplist-cov/hf-can0611591.html .Comment: To appear in the Israel Journal as of 1/5/09; v4 is corrected from
proof sheets, but does include some proof simplification in \S
On Bohr-Sommerfeld bases
This paper combines algebraic and Lagrangian geometry to construct a special
basis in every space of conformal blocks, the Bohr-Sommerfeld (BS) basis. We
use the method of [D. Borthwick, T. Paul and A. Uribe, Legendrian distributions
with applications to the non-vanishing of Poincar\'e series of large weight,
Invent. math, 122 (1995), 359-402, preprint hep-th/9406036], whereby every
vector of a BS basis is defined by some half-weighted Legendrian distribution
coming from a Bohr-Sommerfeld fibre of a real polarization of the underlying
symplectic manifold. The advantage of BS bases (compared to bases of theta
functions in [A. Tyurin, Quantization and ``theta functions'', Jussieu preprint
216 (Apr 1999), e-print math.AG/9904046, 32pp.]) is that we can use information
from the skillful analysis of the asymptotics of quantum states. This gives
that Bohr-Sommerfeld bases are unitary quasi-classically. Thus we can apply
these bases to compare the Hitchin connection with the KZ connection defined by
the monodromy of the Knizhnik-Zamolodchikov equation in combinatorial theory
(see, for example, [T. Kohno, Topological invariants for 3-manifolds using
representations of mapping class group I, Topology 31 (1992), 203-230; II,
Contemp. math 175} (1994), 193-217]).Comment: 43 pages, uses: latex2e with amsmath,amsfonts,theore
The Bethe ansatz in a periodic box-ball system and the ultradiscrete Riemann theta function
Vertex models with quantum group symmetry give rise to integrable cellular
automata at q=0. We study a prototype example known as the periodic box-ball
system. The initial value problem is solved in terms of an ultradiscrete
analogue of the Riemann theta function whose period matrix originates in the
Bethe ansatz at q=0.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
On the numerical evaluation of algebro-geometric solutions to integrable equations
Physically meaningful periodic solutions to certain integrable partial
differential equations are given in terms of multi-dimensional theta functions
associated to real Riemann surfaces. Typical analytical problems in the
numerical evaluation of these solutions are studied. In the case of
hyperelliptic surfaces efficient algorithms exist even for almost degenerate
surfaces. This allows the numerical study of solitonic limits. For general real
Riemann surfaces, the choice of a homology basis adapted to the
anti-holomorphic involution is important for a convenient formulation of the
solutions and smoothness conditions. Since existing algorithms for algebraic
curves produce a homology basis not related to automorphisms of the curve, we
study symplectic transformations to an adapted basis and give explicit formulae
for M-curves. As examples we discuss solutions of the Davey-Stewartson and the
multi-component nonlinear Schr\"odinger equations.Comment: 29 pages, 20 figure
Cognitive shifts within leader and follower teams:Where consensus develops in mental models during an organizational crisis
This empirical study investigates cognitive shifts in both leader and follower teams when developing consensus or agreement in how to resolve a slowly emerging organizational crisis over time. The cognitive maps of leaders and followers are analyzed in team settings to explain where consensus is formed. The findings indicate that consensus, or the agreement on the causal beliefs held to be critical to organizational adaptation and success, builds over time within both leader and follower teams. However, when comparing the development of consensus longitudinally, the findings confirm that the mental models of leadership teams converge towards follower teams, and not the other way around, during the crisis. The study provides new insights into the importance of the causal beliefs of follower teams when developing a vision to coordinate action to resolve a crisis
General relativistic gravitational field of a rigidly rotating disk of dust: Solution in terms of ultraelliptic functions
In a recent paper we presented analytic expressions for the axis potential,
the disk metric, and the surface mass density of the global solution to
Einstein's field equations describing a rigidly rotating disk of dust. Here we
add the complete solution in terms of ultraelliptic functions and quadratures.Comment: 5 pages, published in 1995 [Phys. Rev. Lett. 75 (1995) 3046
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