39,014 research outputs found
Computing Multi-Relational Sufficient Statistics for Large Databases
Databases contain information about which relationships do and do not hold
among entities. To make this information accessible for statistical analysis
requires computing sufficient statistics that combine information from
different database tables. Such statistics may involve any number of {\em
positive and negative} relationships. With a naive enumeration approach,
computing sufficient statistics for negative relationships is feasible only for
small databases. We solve this problem with a new dynamic programming algorithm
that performs a virtual join, where the requisite counts are computed without
materializing join tables. Contingency table algebra is a new extension of
relational algebra, that facilitates the efficient implementation of this
M\"obius virtual join operation. The M\"obius Join scales to large datasets
(over 1M tuples) with complex schemas. Empirical evaluation with seven
benchmark datasets showed that information about the presence and absence of
links can be exploited in feature selection, association rule mining, and
Bayesian network learning.Comment: 11pages, 8 figures, 8 tables, CIKM'14,November 3--7, 2014, Shanghai,
Chin
Horizon-unbiased Investment with Ambiguity
In the presence of ambiguity on the driving force of market randomness, we
consider the dynamic portfolio choice without any predetermined investment
horizon. The investment criteria is formulated as a robust forward performance
process, reflecting an investor's dynamic preference. We show that the market
risk premium and the utility risk premium jointly determine the investors'
trading direction and the worst-case scenarios of the risky asset's mean return
and volatility. The closed-form formulas for the optimal investment strategies
are given in the special settings of the CRRA preference
Emerging Trends of Design Policy in the UK
This paper reviews design policy in the UK. As the UK does not currently have any written and acknowledged statement of cross-governmental design strategy, this article investigates the key organisations involved in developing and delivering policies that impact on design in the UK by reviewing their missions and strategies, thereby identifying opportunities, challenges and trends in British design policy
‘The Conception of Branding in Not-for-Profit SMEs’
Building on her previously published work (2004, 2006, 2007), Sun’s new research reported in this paper contributes to an understanding of the apparent resistance to branding among small not-for-profit (NfP) organisations. The originality of Sun’s approach is to apply existing models drawn from the literature of branding, which until now has focused on multinationals, to her case study. She asks how this modifies our understanding of branding more generally.
The research addresses the issue that, while large NfPs have embraced branding in similar ways to for-profit companies, small and medium NfPs have not. Sun's survey as part of this research clarifies several issues of attitude and practice. There may be reluctance among NfPs to embrace ‘alien’ commercial behaviours, although it can be argued that branding is actually a good fit to the rationale of NfPs by contrast with perhaps superficial marketing stances in the commercial world. Sun shows that small and medium NfPs tend to mirror the poor use of branding among SMEs generally.
An online questionnaire was targeted at 130 NfP SMEs, using 33 questions on attitudinal and practical issues, with Likert scale responses. The results showed that, although the general attitude towards the value of branding is positive, even among these the nature of marketing is poorly understood. Perceptions of impediments to brand development revealed little consensus, though size was a significant determinant. Respondent misunderstandings included a heavy emphasis on visual identity and image advertising; brand as the product of the marketer; brand maintenance focusing on appearance and style; and belief in reliance on a large marketing budget.
Further aspects of branding are represented by Sun et al. on Indian consumer psychology in new product strategy and O'Brien, Sun et al. 2009 on managing brands in China, both in ‘D2B2 Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium 2009’, Beijing, China
Mobility and Aging: Older Drivers’ Visual Searching, Lane Keeping and Coordination
This thesis examined older drivers’ mobility and behaviour through comprehensive measurements of driver-vehicle-environment interaction and investigated the associations between driving behaviour and cognitive functions. Data were collected and analysed for 50 older drivers using eye tracking, GNSS tracking, and GIS. Results showed that poor selective attention, spatial ability and executive function in older drivers adversely affect lane keeping, visual search and coordination. Visual-motor coordination measure is sensitive and effective for driving assessment in older drivers
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