1,994 research outputs found

    Discovering and Transforming Exhaust Data to Realize Managerial Value

    Get PDF
    “Exhaust data” is “extra data” or “left over” data from “core data” digital transactions collected either intentionally or unintentionally but for which there is no initial, specific purpose for its collection. In this paper, we differentiate core data from exhaust data, define and describe exhaust data, and propose how to turn it into core data to provide value for firms. We present a framework for discovering and transforming exhaust data and apply it to four case studies involving Internet search data, accounting entries and data security, social media disclosures, and EDGAR use logs. From the cases, we extract five managerial challenges and generate five recommendations to help managers identify exhaust data applications for realizing potential value

    Electrically tunable selective reflection of light from ultraviolet to visible and infrared by heliconical cholesterics

    Get PDF
    Cholesteric liquid crystals with helicoidal molecular architecture are known for their ability to selectively reflect light with the wavelength that is determined by the periodicity of molecular orientations. Here we demonstrate that by using a cholesteric with oblique helicoidal(heliconical) structure, as opposed to the classic right-angle helicoid, one can vary the wavelength of selectively reflected light in a broad spectral range, from ultraviolet to visible and infrared (360-1520 nm for the same chemical composition) by simply adjusting the electric field applied parallel to the helicoidal axis. The effect exists in a wide temperature range (including the room temperatures) and thus can enable many applications that require dynamically controlled transmission and reflection of electromagnetic waves, from energy-saving smart windows to tunable organic lasers, reflective color display, and transparent see-through displays.Comment: 11 pages, 5figure

    Plugging the Knowledge Drain: Strategies and Technologies for Acquiring Knowledge in Lean Organizations

    Get PDF
    Recent programs for organizational improvement (reengineering, downsizing, and outsourcing) have apparently resolved the productivity paradox by making organizations leaner and more efficient. However, these same programs have drained knowledge from organizations, threatening the future performance of lean organizations. Knowledge management, which focuses on the acquisition, internalization, and maintenance of an organization\u27s intellectual assets, is currently a popular approach used to plug the knowledge drain. Designed and managed properly, knowledge management programs can repair significant damage to organizations affected by work force reductions. In this paper, we analyze the process of organizational knowledge acquisition, which most directly addresses the problem of knowledge drain. We discuss strategies and technologies for acquiring knowledge by restocking from external sources and by regenerating from internal processes. We conclude that the technological infrastructure for knowledge acquisition must be complemented by an organizational culture that is committed to learning. A commitment to learning not only values the acquisition of new knowledge but also the preservation of old knowledge

    National Center for Biomedical Ontology: Advancing biomedicine through structured organization of scientific knowledge

    Get PDF
    The National Center for Biomedical Ontology is a consortium that comprises leading informaticians, biologists, clinicians, and ontologists, funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Roadmap, to develop innovative technology and methods that allow scientists to record, manage, and disseminate biomedical information and knowledge in machine-processable form. The goals of the Center are (1) to help unify the divergent and isolated efforts in ontology development by promoting high quality open-source, standards-based tools to create, manage, and use ontologies, (2) to create new software tools so that scientists can use ontologies to annotate and analyze biomedical data, (3) to provide a national resource for the ongoing evaluation, integration, and evolution of biomedical ontologies and associated tools and theories in the context of driving biomedical projects (DBPs), and (4) to disseminate the tools and resources of the Center and to identify, evaluate, and communicate best practices of ontology development to the biomedical community. Through the research activities within the Center, collaborations with the DBPs, and interactions with the biomedical community, our goal is to help scientists to work more effectively in the e-science paradigm, enhancing experiment design, experiment execution, data analysis, information synthesis, hypothesis generation and testing, and understand human disease

    Experimental, Numerical and Analytical Characterization of Slosh Dynamics Applied to In-Space Propellant Storage, Management and Transfer

    Get PDF
    Experimental and numerical results are presented from a new cryogenic fluid slosh program at the Florida Institute of Technology (FIT). Water and cryogenic liquid nitrogen are used in various ground-based tests with an approximately 30 cm diameter spherical tank to characterize damping, slosh mode frequencies, and slosh forces. The experimental results are compared to a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model for validation. An analytical model is constructed from prior work for comparison. Good agreement is seen between experimental, numerical, and analytical results

    Photo-driven effects in twist-bend nematic phases : dynamic and memory response of liquid crystalline dimers

    Get PDF
    AMF would like to acknowledge the Scottish Government and the Royal Society of Edinburgh, for the award of one SAPHIRE project, the Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland, for the award of the RIG008586 project, the Royal Society, for the Research Grant RGS\R1\201397, and the Royal Society of Chemistry, for the award of the mobility grant M19-0000. AMF and AK would also like to acknowledge the Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland, for the award of one Carnegie Trust Vacation Scholarships. All authors would like to thank the School of Engineering and the Department of Chemistry of the University of Aberdeen, for financial support.Peer reviewedPostprin

    Photometry of Variable Stars from Dome A, Antarctica

    Get PDF
    Dome A on the Antarctic plateau is likely one of the best observing sites on Earth thanks to the excellent atmospheric conditions present at the site during the long polar winter night. We present high-cadence time-series aperture photometry of 10,000 stars with i<14.5 mag located in a 23 square-degree region centered on the south celestial pole. The photometry was obtained with one of the CSTAR telescopes during 128 days of the 2008 Antarctic winter. We used this photometric data set to derive site statistics for Dome A and to search for variable stars. Thanks to the nearly-uninterrupted synoptic coverage, we find 6 times as many variables as previous surveys with similar magnitude limits. We detected 157 variable stars, of which 55% are unclassified, 27% are likely binaries and 17% are likely pulsating stars. The latter category includes delta Scuti, gamma Doradus and RR Lyrae variables. One variable may be a transiting exoplanet.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal. PDF version with high-resolution figures available at http://faculty.physics.tamu.edu/lmacri/papers/wang11.pd

    Critical behavior of the optical birefringence at the nematic to twist bend nematic phase transition

    Get PDF
    This research was supported by the National Science Centre (Poland) under the grant no. 2016/22/A/ST5/00319. NV acknowledges the support of the Slovenian Research Agency (ARRS), through the research programme P1-0055.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Spherical-cap droplets of a photo-responsive bent liquid crystal dimer

    Get PDF
    The stays and research activities of J. Y. and F. A. in Hungary, and P. S. and A. B. in Japan are supported by the JSPS-HAS bilateral program. J. Y. was partially supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number 15K17739. A. J. acknowledges financial support by NSF DMR: 1307674. Financial support from the grants NKFIH PD 121019 and FK 125134 are acknowledged.Peer reviewedPostprin

    Liquid crystal dimers and the twist-bend nematic phase: on the role of spacers and terminal alkyl chains.

    Get PDF
    The synthesis and characterisation of four series of liquid crystal dimers based on benzylideneaniline mesogenic units, and in which the lengths of terminal alkyloxy chains are varied are reported. The series differ in terms of their flexible spacers, namely, heptamethylene, nonamethylene, hexyloxy, and oxypentyloxy chains. The heptamethylene- and nonamethylene-linked dimers both show conventional nematic, N, and twist-bend nematic, NTB, phases with short terminal chains, and smectic behaviour emerges on increasing terminal chain length. This is attributed to increased molecular inhomogeneity driving microphase separation. The dimers containing the shorter heptamethylene spacer show a smectic A phase whereas those with the longer nonamethylene spacer exhibit an anticlinic smectic C phase. Smectic behaviour is not observed for the dimers containing either a hexyloxy spacer which exhibit nematic and twist-bend nematic phases, or with an oxypentyloxy spacer which show only a conventional nematic phase. A general observation is that TNTBN and TNI alternate in the same sense in a homologous series on varying the length of the terminal alkyl chains suggesting that the spatial uniformity of the molecular curvature is an important factor in stabilising the NTB phase. The transitional properties of the four corresponding dimers possessing nitrile terminal substituents are also described. These show enantiotropic nematic phases, and in addition, for those containing either polymethylene or hexyloxy spacers, a twist-bend nematic phase is observed. Differences in the thermal behaviour of the dimers may be attributed largely to changes in molecular shape arising from the nature of the link between the spacer and mesogenic units
    corecore