127 research outputs found
Modelling airport and airline choice behaviour with the use of stated preference survey data
The majority of studies of air travel choice behavior make use of revealed preference (RP) data, generally in the form of survey data collected from departing passengers. While the use of RP data has certain methodological advantages over the use of stated preference (SP) data, major issues arise because of the often low quality of the data relating to the un-chosen alternatives, in terms of explanatory variables as well as availability. As such, studies using RP survey data often fail to recover a meaningful fare coefficient, and are generally not able to offer a treatment of the effects of airline allegiance. In this paper, we make use of SP data for airport and airline choice collected in the US in 2001. The analysis retrieves significant effects relating to factors such as airfare, access time, flight time and airline and airport allegiance, illustrating the advantages of SP data in this context. Additionally, the analysis explores the use of non-linear transforms of the explanatory variables, as well as the treatment of continuous variations in choice behavior across respondents
N. W. Thomas and Colonial Anthropology in British West Africa: Reappraising a Cautionary Tale
As the first government anthropologist to be appointed by the British Colonial Office, Northcote Whitridge Thomas (1868-1936) has earned a place in the footnotes of anthropological history. Historians of the discipline have discussed his career in West Africa in their wider explorations of the relationship between anthropology and colonial administration in the early twentieth century. Through this work an orthodox account of Thomas has emerged as an eccentric dilettante who damaged the reputation of the discipline, setting back its adoption as a practical science of value to colonial governance by a generation or more. Adopting a micro-historical approach, closer scrutiny of the archival evidence challenges this orthodoxy, and places Thomas more centrally within the professional networks and practices of British anthropology in the period 1900 to 1915. As well as correcting the record concerning Thomas’s professional reputation, a more complex picture emerges regarding the colonial authorities’ attitudes towards anthropology and the reason why this early experiment in colonial anthropology failed
Comparison of blood lipids, lipoproteins, anthropometric measures, and resting and exercise cardiovascular responses in children, 6-7 years old
The purpose of this investigation was to determine sex differences and interrelationships in anthropometric, blood lipids and lipoproteins, steady rate and maximal bicycle ergometric measures in boys (N = 38) and girls (N= 28) ages 6 to 7 years. After adjusting for a significantly (P P -1 whereas no differences (P> 0.05) existed in preexercise and maximal heart rates. Multiple regression analyses resulted in weak but significant (P P r = 0.46) was obtained for the girls. These data indicate that sex differences exist for selected ergometric, anthropometric, and blood lipid and lipoprotein measures as early as 6 years. Also, the association among blood lipid and lipoprotein measures may differ between boys and girls.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/24221/1/0000480.pd
The political dimension: added value for cross-cultural analysis:Nozawa and Smits, two CEO's and their public statements
Work-related cultural differences, which were familiarized by scholars such as Hall and Hofstede, offer important concepts to help us understand various forms of cooperation and communication. However, the predominant focus of cultural analysis on collectivistic harmony prevents us from gaining an understanding of strategy and conflict. In an attempt to grasp how conflicts are handled, a political analysis can provide new insights. This is illustrated by a comparative study of two CEOs who gave public statements concerning management failure: Shouhei Nozawa of Yamaichi and Paul Smits of KPN. Their statements were strikingly different in several ways, but the classical insights of cross-cultural analysis can only partly explain the differences. This is where political analysis comes in, focusing on interest relationships, responsibilities and virtues, tactics and strategy
Axial Concentration Profiles and NO Flue Gas in a Pilot-Scale Bubbling Fluidized Bed Coal Combustor
Atmospheric bubbling fluidized bed coal combustion of a bituminous coal and anthracite with
particle diameters in the range 500-4000 Ăm was investigated in a pilot-plant facility. The
experiments were conducted at steady-state conditions using three excess air levels (10, 25, and
50%) and bed temperatures in the 750-900 °C range. Combustion air was staged, with primary
air accounting for 100, 80, and 60% of total combustion air. For both types of coal, high NO
concentrations were found inside the bed. In general, the NO concentration decreased monotonically
along the freeboard and toward the exit flue; however, during combustion with high air
staging and low to moderate excess air, a significant additional NO formation occurred near the
secondary air injection point. The results show that the bed temperature increase does not affect
the NO flue gas concentration significantly. There is a positive correlation between excess air
and the NO flue gas concentration. The air staging operation is very effective in lowering the
NO flue gas, but there is a limit for the first stage stoichiometry below which the NO flue gas
starts rising again. This effect could be related with the coal rank
Solid-Phase Synthesis of Diverse Peptide Tertiary Amides By Reductive Amination
The
synthesis of libraries of conformationally constrained peptide-like
oligomers is an important goal in combinatorial chemistry. In this
regard an attractive building block is the N-alkylated peptide, also
known as a peptide tertiary amide (PTA). PTAs are conformationally
constrained because of allylic 1,3 strain interactions. We report
here an improved synthesis of these species on solid supports through
the use of reductive amination chemistry using amino acid-terminated,
bead-displayed oligomers and diverse aldehydes. The utility of this
chemistry is demonstrated by the synthesis of a library of 10 000
mixed peptoid-PTA oligomers
Learning for the water sector: quenching the thirst for knowledge and bridging the banks?. Editorial
- …