5,893 research outputs found
Selection of planned supply initiatives: the role of senior management expertise
Purpose
– The purpose of this paper is to assess the selection of planned supply initiatives and the role of senior management expertise. The drivers that influence the selection of particular supply initiatives by firms are of major interest to both practitioners and academics, as choices indicate priorities for resources, potential performance gaps and needs for future research. Moreover, theory indicates that senior management expertise and firm‐level resources might influence the likelihood of selecting particular initiatives.
Design/methodology/approach
– A synthesis of the literature supported the development of a five‐dimensional framework of major supply initiatives. Logistic regression was conducted with data from a survey of chief purchasing officers at large North American firms. The impact of firm‐level resources and senior management expertise, including background and experience, was assessed for the selection of supply initiatives.
Findings
– After controlling for general industry‐level factors, both firm resources and senior management expertise were found to systematically affect the likelihood of a firm planning to pursue particular initiatives. First, hiring senior management from outside the firm decreased the likelihood that network‐based initiatives were planned, while senior management who last worked in supply were found to be negatively related to planned supply strategy initiatives. Second, firms with greater use of e‐business technologies favored additional investment in supply networks.
Research limitations/implications
– This research focused on large firms in developed countries, and additional research is needed to explore the generalizability to small and medium‐sized enterprises and less‐developed countries. Moreover, additional work is needed to explore trade‐offs between planned and emergent initiatives, as only the former were empirically assessed.
Originality/value
– Senior management expertise has received relatively little attention in prior research, yet was found to be a significant factor influencing strategic, process and network‐related supply initiatives. Moreover, the framework of supply initiatives provides a basis for assessing and benchmarking firm‐level supply chain strategy and investment patterns. Finally, empirical evidence emerged that both firm and individual‐level factors influenced the probability of selecting particular initiatives
Realization of Haldane's Exclusion Statistics in a Model of Electron-Phonon Interactions
We discuss an integrable model describing one-dimensional electrons
interacting with two-dimensional anharmonic phonons. In the low temperature
limit it is possible to decouple phonons and consider one-dimensional
excitations separately. They have a trivial two-body scattering matrix and obey
fractional statistics. As far as we know the original model presents the first
example of a model with local bare interactions generating purely statistical
interactions between renormalized particles. As a by-product we obtain
non-trivial thermodynamic equations for the interacting system of
two-dimensional phonons.Comment: 4 page
Equivalent bosonic theory for the massive Thirring model with non-local interaction
We study, through path-integral methods, an extension of the massive Thirring
model in which the interaction between currents is non-local. By examining the
mass-expansion of the partition function we show that this non-local massive
Thirring model is equivalent to a certain non-local extension of the
sine-Gordon theory. Thus, we establish a non-local generalization of the famous
Coleman's equivalence. We also discuss some possible applications of this
result in the context of one-dimensional strongly correlated systems and
finite-size Quantum Field Theories.Comment: 15 pages, latex, no figure
Heavy Quarks on Anisotropic Lattices: The Charmonium Spectrum
We present results for the mass spectrum of mesons simulated on
anisotropic lattices where the temporal spacing is only half of the
spatial spacing . The lattice QCD action is the Wilson gauge action plus
the clover-improved Wilson fermion action. The two clover coefficients on an
anisotropic lattice are estimated using mean links in Landau gauge. The bare
velocity of light has been tuned to keep the anisotropic, heavy-quark
Wilson action relativistic. Local meson operators and three box sources are
used in obtaining clear statistics for the lowest lying and first excited
charmonium states of , , , and . The
continuum limit is discussed by extrapolating from quenched simulations at four
lattice spacings in the range 0.1 - 0.3 fm. Results are compared with the
observed values in nature and other lattice approaches. Finite volume effects
and dispersion relations are checked.Comment: 36 pages, 6 figur
Lattice study on kaon nucleon scattering length in the I=1 channel
Using the tadpole improved clover Wilson quark action on small, coarse and
anisotropic lattices, scattering length in the I=1 channel is calculated
within quenched approximation. The results are extrapolated towards the chiral
and physical kaon mass region. Finite volume and finite lattice spacing errors
are also analyzed and a result in the infinite volume and continuum limit is
obtained which is compatible with the experiment and the results from Chiral
Perturbation Theory.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, typeset by latex using elsart.cls,minor change
Multi-wavelength analysis of high energy electrons in solar flares: a case study of August 20, 2002 flare
A multi-wavelength spatial and temporal analysis of solar high energy
electrons is conducted using the August 20, 2002 flare of an unusually flat
(gamma=1.8) hard X-ray spectrum. The flare is studied using RHESSI, Halpha,
radio, TRACE, and MDI observations with advanced methods and techniques never
previously applied in the solar flare context. A new method to account for
X-ray Compton backscattering in the photosphere (photospheric albedo) has been
used to deduce the primary X-ray flare spectra. The mean electron flux
distribution has been analysed using both forward fitting and model independent
inversion methods of spectral analysis. We show that the contribution of the
photospheric albedo to the photon spectrum modifies the calculated mean
electron flux distribution, mainly at energies below 100 keV. The positions of
the Halpha emission and hard X-ray sources with respect to the current-free
extrapolation of the MDI photospheric magnetic field and the characteristics of
the radio emission provide evidence of the closed geometry of the magnetic
field structure and the flare process in low altitude magnetic loops. In
agreement with the predictions of some solar flare models, the hard X-ray
sources are located on the external edges of the Halpha emission and show
chromospheric plasma heated by the non-thermal electrons. The fast changes of
Halpha intensities are located not only inside the hard X-ray sources, as
expected if they are the signatures of the chromospheric response to the
electron bombardment, but also away from them.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures, accepted to Solar Physic
Entropic C-theorems in free and interacting two-dimensional field theories
The relative entropy in two-dimensional field theory is studied on a cylinder
geometry, interpreted as finite-temperature field theory. The width of the
cylinder provides an infrared scale that allows us to define a dimensionless
relative entropy analogous to Zamolodchikov's function. The one-dimensional
quantum thermodynamic entropy gives rise to another monotonic dimensionless
quantity. I illustrate these monotonicity theorems with examples ranging from
free field theories to interacting models soluble with the thermodynamic Bethe
ansatz. Both dimensionless entropies are explicitly shown to be monotonic in
the examples that we analyze.Comment: 34 pages, 3 figures (8 EPS files), Latex2e file, continuation of
hep-th/9710241; rigorous analysis of sufficient conditions for universality
of the dimensionless relative entropy, more detailed discussion of the
relation with Zamolodchikov's theorem, references added; to appear in Phys.
Rev.
Under-five mortality: spatial-temporal clusters in Ifakara HDSS in South-eastern Tanzania.
BACKGROUND\ud
\ud
Childhood mortality remains an important subject, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa where levels are still unacceptably high. To achieve the set Millennium Development Goals 4, calls for comprehensive application of the proven cost-effective interventions. Understanding spatial clustering of childhood mortality can provide a guide in targeting the interventions in a more strategic approach to the population where mortality is highest and the interventions are most likely to make an impact.\ud
\ud
METHODS\ud
\ud
Annual child mortality rates were calculated for each village, using person-years observed as the denominator. Kulldorff's spatial scan statistic was used for the identification and testing of childhood mortality clusters. All under-five deaths that occurred within a 10-year period from 1997 to 2006 were included in the analysis. Villages were used as units of clusters; all 25 health and demographic surveillance sites (HDSS) villages in the Ifakara health and demographic surveillance area were included.\ud
\ud
RESULTS\ud
\ud
Of the 10 years of analysis, statistically significant spatial clustering was identified in only 2 years (1998 and 2001). In 1998, the statistically significant cluster (p < 0.01) was composed of nine villages. A total of 106 childhood deaths were observed against an expected 77.3. The other statistically significant cluster (p < 0.05) identified in 2001 was composed of only one village. In this cluster, 36 childhood deaths were observed compared to 20.3 expected. Purely temporal analysis indicated that the year 2003 was a significant cluster (p < 0.05). Total deaths were 393 and expected were 335.8. Spatial-temporal analysis showed that nine villages were identified as statistically significant clusters (p < 0.05) for the period covering January 1997-December 1998. Total observed deaths in this cluster were 205 while 150.7 were expected.\ud
\ud
CONCLUSION\ud
\ud
There is evidence of spatial clustering in childhood mortality within the Ifakara HDSS. Further investigations are needed to explore the source of clustering and identify strategies of reaching the cluster population with the existing effective interventions. However, that should happen alongside delivery of interventions to the broader population
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