1,379 research outputs found

    Organizational factors and total quality management - an empirical study

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    The level of awareness of Total Quality Management (TQM) has increased considerably over the last few years. Different sets of organizational requirements are prescribed by quality management gurus and practitioners for the effective practice of TQM. These requirements do not seem to have been formulated on the basis of systematic empirical research. Many researchers point out that tacit factors, e.g. employee empowerment, open culture and executive commitment, and not TQM tools and techniques alone, could drive TQM success, and that organizations would need to acquire these factors to stay successful. Many TQM advocates have also suggested that a conducive organizational environment would be essential for an effective practice of TQM. However, they did not offer any empirical evidence. There appears to be no empirical study reported in the literature that could establish a relation between TQM and organizational factors. The objective of this paper is to describe an empirical research on TQM conducted in Indian business units carried out recently by considering some organizational factors, e.g. quality of work life, organizational climate and communication. The methodology and findings are discussed in detail

    Some open questions in "wave chaos"

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    The subject area referred to as "wave chaos", "quantum chaos" or "quantum chaology" has been investigated mostly by the theoretical physics community in the last 30 years. The questions it raises have more recently also attracted the attention of mathematicians and mathematical physicists, due to connections with number theory, graph theory, Riemannian, hyperbolic or complex geometry, classical dynamical systems, probability etc. After giving a rough account on "what is quantum chaos?", I intend to list some pending questions, some of them having been raised a long time ago, some others more recent

    Experiences with Mycobacterium leprae soluble antigens in a leprosy endemic population

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    Rees and Convit antigens prepared from armadillo-derived Mycobacterium leprae were used for skin testing in two leprosy endemic villages to understand their use in the epidemiology of leprosy. In all, 2602 individuals comprising 202 patients with leprosy detected in a prevalence survey, 476 household contacts and 1924 persons residing in non-case households were tested with two antigens. There was a strong and positive correlation ( r = 0.85) between reactions to the Rees and Convit antigens. The distribution of reactions was bimodal and considering reactions of 12 mm or more as ‘positive’, the positivity rate steeply increased with the increase in age. However. the distributions of reactions to these antigens in patients with leprosy. their household contacts and persons living in non-case households were very similar. These results indicate that Rees and Convit antigens are not useful in the identification of M. leprae infection or in the confirmation of leprosy diagnosis in a leprosy endemic population with a high prevalence of nonspecific sensitivity

    Radon--Nikodym representations of Cuntz--Krieger algebras and Lyapunov spectra for KMS states

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    We study relations between (H,β)(H,\beta)--KMS states on Cuntz--Krieger algebras and the dual of the Perron--Frobenius operator LβH\mathcal{L}_{-\beta H}^{*}. Generalising the well--studied purely hyperbolic situation, we obtain under mild conditions that for an expansive dynamical system there is a one--one correspondence between (H,β)(H,\beta)--KMS states and eigenmeasures of LβH\mathcal{L}_{-\beta H}^{*} for the eigenvalue 1. We then consider representations of Cuntz--Krieger algebras which are induced by Markov fibred systems, and show that if the associated incidence matrix is irreducible then these are \ast--isomorphic to the given Cuntz--Krieger algebra. Finally, we apply these general results to study multifractal decompositions of limit sets of essentially free Kleinian groups GG which may have parabolic elements. We show that for the Cuntz--Krieger algebra arising from GG there exists an analytic family of KMS states induced by the Lyapunov spectrum of the analogue of the Bowen--Series map associated with GG. Furthermore, we obtain a formula for the Hausdorff dimensions of the restrictions of these KMS states to the set of continuous functions on the limit set of GG. If GG has no parabolic elements, then this formula can be interpreted as the singularity spectrum of the measure of maximal entropy associated with GG.Comment: 30 pages, minor changes in the proofs of Theorem 3.9 and Fact

    A cube Slice that is not a Zonoid

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    Let QQ be the unit cube in Rn\mathbb{R}^n and HH a hyperplane thru the Origin. The intersection is called Cube slice and was investigated by Henesley, Vaaler, Ball and others. We give an example of a cube slice in R4\mathbb{R}^4 that is not a zonoid. This contrasts with a result in R3\mathbb{R}^3 that follows from a Theorem due to Herz and Lindenstrauss where every cube slice is a zonoid. The volume of this slice is computed and used to determine the likely known result, the value of the sinc integral I4I_4

    Volume product

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    In this expository paper we discuss the volume product P(K) of convex bodies K in RnR^n; this is the product of volumes of K and its polar K*. The Blaschke- Santalo inequalities state that always P(K)P(B2) P(K) \le P(B_2) and P(B1)P(K) P(B_1)\le P(K) . Here the Closed unit Ball in norm of l2l_2 is denoted by B2B_2 and like wise for the l1l_1 unit ball. The upper bound is classical, due to Santalo in general and Blaschke and Mahler much earlier in 1930 s for dimensions 2 and 3. The lower bound is open for general K. However the result of Gordon, Meyer and Riesner says that the class of zonoids K attain the lower bound. There is Bianchi and Kelly' s proof of the upper bound in general,involving Paley-Wiener Theorem , as generalized to RnR^n by Stein . For the lower bound, there is the result of of Kim and Zvavitch on its stability under perturbations of unconditional K . Further there are results on " functional" versions of Blashke -Santalo Inequality . In this context we discuss the newer concept of "Polar f* " for certain type of functions f and its relevance here and mention as a "functional" example a result by S.Artstein, B.Klartag and V.Milman . We mention a later one by Huang and Ai- Jun Li and discuss Ball's Inequality for unconditional bodies,another strengthening of the Blaschke-Santalo inequality .Comment: 22 pg

    Tuberculosis prevalence survey in Kashmir valley

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    A tuberculosis prevalence survey was conducted in about 18,000 persons in Kashmir valley situated about 1650 m above the mean sea level. All persons were tested with 3 IU of PPD-S and 10 units of PPD-B. Persons aged 5 yr and above were X-rayed (70 mm X-ray), and from such persons whose photofluorograms were interpreted as abnormal two specimens of sputum were collected and bacteriologically examined. In addition, a large X-ray of the chest was taken for children aged 0-4 yr who had reactions of 10 mm or more to PPD-S. They were then clinically examined by a paediatrician, taking into account all available data, for evaluation for any evidence of tuberculosis. The results of the survey showed that the prevalence of non-specific sensitivity (59%) in the Kashmir valley is significant. The prevalence of tuberculous infection was 38 per cent. The prevalence of culture positive tuberculous patients (3 per 1000) and that of abacillary X-ray positive patients (14 per 1000) were found to be similar in the two sexes contrary to the usual experience of a higher prevalence among males. Results from studies of phage typing, susceptibility to thiophen-2-carbonic acid hydrazide (TCH) and virulence in the guineapig of strains obtained from patients diagnosed in the survey showed that most of these strains belonged to phage type A, were resistant to TCH and were not of low virulence. Regional variations in the prevalence rates were seen, the- problem of tuberculosis appeared to he more in the Baramulla district as compared to Srinagar and Anantnag districts. A comparison of results obtained from the present survey with those obtained from the BCG trial in Chingleput (Tamil Nadu) revealed that the tuberculosis situation in the two areas was quite different
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