2,531 research outputs found

    The effectiveness of university regulations to foster science-based entrepreneurship

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    In this study, we analyze the effect of the introduction of university regulations supporting academic entrepreneurship. Using a sample of 611 companies spun-off from the 64 Italian Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics and Medicine (STEMM) universities between 2002 and 2012, we show that university regulations in support of academic entrepreneurship have a positive effect on the creation of academic spin-offs. Nevertheless, their effectiveness is conditioned by specific contingencies. First, the characteristics of university departments influence the positive effect of the regulation: in some cases, there is a substitution effect rather than a complementary one. Second, the design of the regulation impacts the decisions of academic staff regarding whether to start a new venture. Finally, the effect of the regulation is maximized four years after its introduction and then becomes less effective. This paper contributes to the debate on the evaluation of policies supporting science-based entrepreneurship

    Plants' responses to novel environmental pressures

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    Plants have been exposed to multiple environmental stressors on long-term (seasonal) and short-term (daily) basis since their appearance on land. During the last decades, however, plants have been frequently exposed to sudden changes in their environment (imposed by global change) which indeed involves the acclimation/adaptation syndrome of living organisms. The frequency of these unpredictable \u2018stress\u2019 events is expected to increase further in the near future. Such severe, even transient alterations in environmental stimuli (variables) represent new challenges to plants, which do not possess the \u2018flight\u2019 strategy usually displayed by other organisms. Plants have developed, however, a multiplicity of highly integrated adjustments, involving morpho-anatomical, physiological and biochemical traits, to cope with challenges imposed by novel, harsher environments: these constitute the \u2018flight strategy of sessile organisms\u2019. Interestingly, several habitats threatened by the novel stresses are biodiversity hotspots. For example, Mediterranean basin, in which high light growing plants face heat waves coupled with the scarcity of rainfall of increasing frequency and severity, represents just 2% of the earth\u2019s land area, but account for 16% of the world\u2019s plant species. This implies that plants have been and are capable to display a wide range of acclimation/adaptation strategies to cope with most unfavorable environments. Nonetheless, the unpreceded rate at which climate changes may exceed the capacity of plants to acclimate and adapt successfully to the novel environmental pressures, further exacerbated by an increase in anthropogenic pressure. Understanding the mechanisms through which plants respond to new challenges posed by the concurrent effect of different stress agents is crucial, as obvious, to develop strategies of biodiversity conservation and ecosystem functionality. This is exactly the focus of this Research Topic. Review, Opinion as well as Original Research articles are welcome covering basic and applied research on plant functioning under adverse environmental conditions. The frequency of extreme stress events, mostly due to the concurrent effects of different stressors, is increasing particularly in the arid and semi-arid regions, which represent indeed among the most fragile ecosystems worldwide. Papers dealing with the effects of multiple stress agents on plant functioning are, therefore, particularly welcome. We are, however, also interested to receive contributions dissecting response mechanisms (from molecular to organism and whole-plant levels) of plants to a wide range of individual stressors, with a view to a rapidly changing climate, covering plant responses from other regions of the world. These include, but are not limited to drought and heat stress, excess light stress (including UV radiation), cold, ozone and rising CO2 concentration, and their combinations. Theories that predict the plant behavior, acclimation and plant plasticity are also inside the scope of this topi

    Co-axial dual-core resonant leaky fibre for optical amplifiers

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    We present a co-axial dual-core resonant leaky optical fibre design, in which the outer core is made highly leaky. A suitable choice of parameters can enable us to resonantly couple power from the inner core to the outer core. In a large-core fibre, such a resonant coupling can considerably increase the differential leakage loss between the fundamental and the higher order modes and can result in effective single-mode operation. In a small-core single-mode fibre, such a coupling can lead to sharp increase in the wavelength dependent leakage loss near the resonant wavelength and can be utilized for the suppression of amplified spontaneous emission and thereby gain equalization of an optical amplifier. We study the propagation characteristics of the fibre using the transfer matrix method and present an example of each, the large-mode-area design for high power amplifiers and the wavelength tunable leakage loss design for inherent gain equalization of optical amplifiers.Comment: 6 page

    Foreword

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    How entrepreneurial intentions influence entrepreneurial career choices: The moderating influence of social context

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    In this paper, we build on social cognitive career theory to examine the relation between entrepreneurial intention and new venture creation (i.e., the entrepreneurial career choice). We model how contextual influences at different levels may favor or inhibit the translation of entrepreneurial intention into new venture creation. Using unique longitudinal data from almost the entire population of Italian university graduates, we are able to assess how the immediate (i.e., the influence of relevant others) and larger context (i.e., organizational and environmental influences) affect new venture creation. Our research contributes to the emerging literature of the intention–behavior link in entrepreneurship
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