3,532 research outputs found
The Two Faces of Collaboration: Impacts of University-Industry Relations on Public Research
We analyze the impact of university-industry relationships on public research. Our inductive study of university-industry collaboration in engineering suggests that basic projects are more likely to yield academically valuable knowledge than applied projects. However, applied projects show higher degrees of partner interdependence and therefore enable exploratory learning by academics, leading to new ideas and projects. This result holds especially for research-oriented academics working in the âsciences of the artificialâ and engaging in multiple relationships with industry. Our learning-centred interpretation qualifies the notion of entrepreneurial science as a driver of applied university-industry collaboration. We conclude with implications for science and technology policy.University industry relations; Collaborative research; Contract research; Academic consulting; Science technology links; Engineering
Towards a new paradigm of healthcare: Addressing challenges to professional identities through Community Operational Research
Healthcare worldwide faces severe quality and cost issues, and the search for sustainability in healthcare establishes a grand challenge. Public interest is growing in a systemic re-conceptualizing of healthcare, from primarily a consumerist problem of individual need for treatment to a need for communities themselves to become more effective in systemic prevention, coping and caring. In community led approaches, scarce resources are moved away from ever-increasing consumerist services to empower, develop and enable communities to plan their own health and community improvements in mutually interdependent patterns of care often seen as âco-productionâ. This approach is exemplified by the innovative NUKA system of community led healthcare which originated in Alaska and which was trialled in Scotland in 2012, where it did not achieve similar acclaim as in the United States. In the Scottish NUKA trial opposition from professionals meant the trial was ended early. Our research found that omitting to account for the strong professional identity of GPs and other practice staff was instrumental in the failure of the trial. Beyond deficiencies inadequately considering professional identities, the trial also failed to engage the community and its patients as owners and architects of the system. We argue that the root cause of these problems, was a more general critical systemic failure to manage participatory boundaries and associated identities. Community Operational Research practitioners have developed relevant theories, methodologies and methods to address issues of participation and identity, so could make a significant contribution to opening up new solutions for community led healthcare
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An Overview of the Main Environmental Issues Affecting Kisumu and Lake Victoria's Winam Gulf
This overview was produced in response to a request from the Mayor of Kisumu, who expressed the urgent need to deal with the deteriorating environment in and around the City and in the Winam Gulf of Lake Victoria. Researched and written by experts at the Earth Institute, the Millennium Cities Initiative (MCI) and the environmental team of the MDG Centre in Nairobi, it describes and analyses the current environmental condition in Kisumu and its surrounding catchment; discusses some of the factors contributing to the ongoing degradation, and proposes a set of recommendations for constructive action
Bounded rationality, capital budgeting decisions and small business
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to provide insight into the capital budgeting decision-making of Canadian and Mexican entrepreneurs in small businesses in the food sector. The objective is to understand the capital budgeting decisions through the lens of bounded rationality and how these decisions are affected by different (national) contexts. Design/methodology/approach This is a comparative study in which the use of constructivist grounded theory allowed deep conversations about capital budgeting decisions. Data was collected from forty semi-structured interviews with entrepreneurs/managers in two regions, Mexico and Canada. Findings Insights from this study suggest that entrepreneursâ capital budgeting decisions are not only taken under conditions of bounded rationality but also suggest a prominent role of context in how bounded rationality is applied differently towards investment decisions. Research limitations/implications While the findings cannot simply be generalized, exploring how capital budgeting decisions are made differently across two regional contexts adds to the understanding of the nexus of context, bounded rationality and capital budgeting decision-making. Practical implications Using a bounded rationality lens, this study contrasts and explains similarities and differences in the entrepreneurâs capital budgeting decision-making within small businesses. The insights add to the body of knowledge and help entrepreneurs to reflect on their approach to decision-making. Originality/value The paper uses a less commonly applied approach to understand two under-researched regional contexts. We use constructivist grounded theory to explore entrepreneursâ capital budgeting decision-making in small businesses in two regions, Canada and Mexico. The comparative approach and the findings add to the understanding of decision-making, highlight the prominent role of context and also challenge some insights from previous research
Land Degradation Surveillance Framework (LSDF): field guide
The field methods employed in the soil health component of the AfSIS (Africa Soil Information Service) project are referred to as the Land Degradation Surveillance Framework (LDSF). This field guide outlines field protocols for measuring indicators of the âhealthâ of an ecosystem, including vegetation cover, structure and floristic composition, historic land use, visible signs of soil degradation, and soil physical characteristics. It is designed to provide a biophysical baseline at landscape level, and a monitoring and evaluation framework for assessing processes of land degradation and the effectiveness of rehabilitation measures over time
Determination of Local Slope on the Greenland Ice Sheet Using a Multibeam Photon-Counting Lidar in Preparation for the ICESat-2 Mission
The greatest changes in elevation in Greenland and Antarctica are happening along the margins of the ice sheets where the surface frequently has significant slopes. For this reason, the upcoming Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite-2 (ICESat-2) mission utilizes pairs of laser altimeter beams that are perpendicular to the flight direction in order to extract slope information in addition to elevation. The Multiple Altimeter Beam Experimental Lidar (MABEL) is a high-altitude airborne laser altimeter designed as a simulator for ICESat-2. The MABEL design uses multiple beams at fixed angles and allows for local slope determination. Here, we present local slopes as determined by MABEL and compare them to those determined by the Airborne Topographic Mapper (ATM) over the same flight lines in Greenland. We make these comparisons with consideration for the planned ICESat-2 beam geometry. Results indicate that the mean slope residuals between MABEL and ATM remain small (< 0.05) through a wide range of localized slopes using ICESat-2 beam geometry. Furthermore, when MABEL data are subsampled by a factor of 4 to mimic the planned ICESat-2 transmit-energy configuration, the results are indistinguishable from the full-data-rate analysis. Results from MABEL suggest that ICESat-2 beam geometry and transmit-energy configuration are appropriate for the determination of slope on 90-m spatial scales, a measurement that will be fundamental to deconvolving the effects of surface slope from the ice-sheet surface change derived from ICESat-2
Designing a recovery-orientated system of care: A community operational research perspective
Theory suggests health focused Community Operational Research (COR) projects and their participants can benefit from balancing a âglass half emptyâ concern for deficits, problems and weaknesses with a âglass half fullâ concern for identifying health assets and bringing them into use. We present a COR systemic intervention in the care of persons with addiction and substance use/ misuse problems in Clydeplace, Scotland (anonymised). Our research reveals how the Whole Person Recovery System is situated within a wider General Community Recovery System that offers a variety of health assets that can be mobilised to create and increase recovery capital. The project involved 20 semi-structured interviews, two asset mapping workshops, a certificated âhealth issuesâ course completed by seven âchampionsâ, and action planning and implementation. In the interviews participants found gaps were more easily identified than assets. During the workshops participants identified 388 discrete assets and gaps, prioritised these using a simple voting system and developed a series of actions to mobilise health assets including bringing into use local facilities and amenities and involving a number of individuals and groups in local events and activities. Our study suggests that even in the impoverished system of Clydeplace, a âCommunity Catalystâ in the form of a Community Operational Researcher can act to stimulate the co-development of health assets, build relationships and enable the creation of social capital. It is not clear though when such systems become âself-catalysing.
Computing for Perturbative QCD - A Snowmass White Paper
We present a study on high-performance computing and large-scale distributed
computing for perturbative QCD calculations.Comment: 21 pages, 5 table
Large-Scale Automatic Audiobook Creation
An audiobook can dramatically improve a work of literature's accessibility
and improve reader engagement. However, audiobooks can take hundreds of hours
of human effort to create, edit, and publish. In this work, we present a system
that can automatically generate high-quality audiobooks from online e-books. In
particular, we leverage recent advances in neural text-to-speech to create and
release thousands of human-quality, open-license audiobooks from the Project
Gutenberg e-book collection. Our method can identify the proper subset of
e-book content to read for a wide collection of diversely structured books and
can operate on hundreds of books in parallel. Our system allows users to
customize an audiobook's speaking speed and style, emotional intonation, and
can even match a desired voice using a small amount of sample audio. This work
contributed over five thousand open-license audiobooks and an interactive demo
that allows users to quickly create their own customized audiobooks. To listen
to the audiobook collection visit \url{https://aka.ms/audiobook}
Satellite galaxies in hydrodynamical simulations of Milky Way sized galaxies
Collisionless simulations of the CDM cosmology predict a plethora of dark
matter substructures in the halos of Milky Way sized galaxies, yet the number
of known luminous satellites galaxies is very much smaller, a discrepancy that
has become known as the `missing satellite problem'. The most massive
substructures have been shown to be plausibly the hosts of the brightest
satellites, but it remains unclear which processes prevent star formation in
the many other, purely dark substructures. We use high-resolution hydrodynamic
simulations of the formation of Milky Way sized galaxies in order to test how
well such self-consistent models of structure formation match the observed
properties of the Galaxy's satellite population. For the first time, we include
in such calculations feedback from cosmic rays injected into the star forming
gas by supernovae as well as the energy input from supermassive black holes
growing at the Milky Way's centre and its progenitor systems. We find that
non-thermal particle populations quite strongly suppress the star formation
efficiency of the smallest galaxies. In fact, our cosmic ray model is able to
reproduce the observed faint-end of the satellite luminosity function, while
models that include only the effects of cosmic reionization, or galactic winds,
do significantly worse. Our simulated satellite population approximately
matches available kinematic data on the satellites and their observed spatial
distribution. We conclude that a proper resolution of the missing satellite
problem likely requires the inclusion of non-standard physics for regulating
star formation in the smallest halos, and that cosmic reionization alone may
not be sufficient.Comment: 20 pages, 17 figure
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