28,958 research outputs found
Assessing overall network structure in regional innovation policies: a case study of cluster policy in the West Midlands in the UK
Revisiting the theoretical roots of the key concepts of âembeddednessâ and ânetworksâ that underpin many recent regional innovation polices, this paper strives to achieve a more systematic understanding of the overall network structure of geographic agglomerations, which helps to form a more convincing model of regional development based on learning. This also helps to establish an analytical framework with indicators to assess the overall network structure in regional innovation policies. Employing the framework, the examination of cluster policy in the West Midlands highlights its weakness in addressing the overall cluster network structure and the contingent factors influencing the structure. The analysis suggests that there may be similar weaknesses in other regional innovation policies and the theories underpinning them as they share a common weakness in addressing the structural characteristics of overall networks
Do PRSPs Empower Poor Countries And Disempower The World Bank, or is it the Other Way Round?
Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) have been introduced by the World Bank and the IMF as a necessary aspect of securing HIPC debt relief and access to other funds. They are intended to increase national 'ownership' of programmes, through extensive participation. This paper assesses whether they actually do empower poor countries, by exploring the process and content of the PRSPs. It finds that as far as civil society is concerned, the PRSPs currently permit little significant contribution to programme design. Governments appear to take a bigger role, but are also heavily constrained, especially with respect to macro-policy. The fact that the content of PRSPs is very similar to previous adjustment packages suggest that little real change has occurred through this process. Moreover, some large IFI programmes are unaffected by the process. Hence PRSPs do not significantly empower poor countries. They may give the appearance of greater ownership, but so long as there is no significant underlying change, such a change in perceptions about ownership, which could make IFI designed programmes more effective and thereby empower them, is likely to be short lived
Morphology investigation on direct current pulsed gas tungsten arc welded additive layer manufactured Ti6Al4V alloy
The effects of pulsed gas tungsten arc weldingparameters on the morphology of
additive layer manufacturedTi6Al4V has been investigated in this study. Thepeak/
base current ratio and pulse frequency are found tohave no significant effect on
the refinement of prior betagrain size. However, it is found that the wire feed
ratehas a considerable effect on the prior beta grainrefinement at a given heat
input. This is due to the extrawire input being able to supply many
heterogeneousnucleation sites and also results in a negative temperaturegradient
in the front of the liquidus which blocks thecolumnar growth and changes the
columnar growth toequiaixal growth
Kinematics of Clustering
The dynamical system for inertial particles in fluid flow has both attracting
and repelling regions, the interplay of which can localize particles. In
laminar flow experiments we find that particles, initially moving throughout
the fluid domain, can undergo an instability and cluster into subdomains of the
fluid when the flow Reynolds number exceeds a critical value that depends on
particle and fluid inertia. We derive an expression for the instability
boundary and for a universal curve that describes the clustering rate for all
particles.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
The Density Perturbation Power Spectrum to Second-Order Corrections in the Slow-Roll Expansion
We set up a formalism that can be used to calculate the power spectrum of the
curvature perturbations produced during inflation up to arbitrary order in the
slow-roll expansion, and explicitly calculate the power spectrum and spectral
index up to second-order corrections.Comment: 11 pages, errors correcte
Developing and applying an integrated modular design methodology within a SME
Modularity within a product can bring advantages to the design process by facilitating enhanced design reuse, reduced lead times, decreased cost and higher levels of quality. While the benefits of modularity are becoming increasingly better known, at present it is usually left to the designers themselves to introduce modularity into products. Studies into modularity have shown that byimplementing 'formal' methods, further benefits can be made in terms of time, cost, quality and performance. Current approaches that have been proposed for the formal development of modular design methodologies fail to accurately represent knowledge that is inherently produced during design projects and fail to consider design from the different viewpoints of the development process. This work, built on previous work on modularity and design for reuse, aims to develop an integrated design methodology that will optimise the modules created through the design process and allow for modularity to be 'built-in' to product development from the initial stages. The methodology andassociated tools have been developed to provide an easy-to-use approach to modularity that has support for design rationales and company knowledge that aid in effective design decision making. The methodology, named GeMoCURE, provides an integrated total solution to modular design based on reuse of proven physical and knowledge modules. Its incremental nature allows for the optimalstructure to be maintained as the design progresses. A special focus has been on the application of this approach for Small to Medium Enterprises (SMEs), which are typically challenged by a lack of design human resources and expertise
The benefits of in silico modeling to identify possible small-molecule drugs and their off-target interactions
Accepted for publication in a future issue of Future Medicinal Chemistry.The research into the use of small molecules as drugs continues to be a key driver in the development of molecular databases, computer-aided drug design software and collaborative platforms. The evolution of computational approaches is driven by the essential criteria that a drug molecule has to fulfill, from the affinity to targets to minimal side effects while having adequate absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) properties. A combination of ligand- and structure-based drug development approaches is already used to obtain consensus predictions of small molecule activities and their off-target interactions. Further integration of these methods into easy-to-use workflows informed by systems biology could realize the full potential of available data in the drug discovery and reduce the attrition of drug candidates.Peer reviewe
Zero-determinant strategies in finitely repeated games
Direct reciprocity is a mechanism for sustaining mutual cooperation in
repeated social dilemma games, where a player would keep cooperation to avoid
being retaliated by a co-player in the future. So-called zero-determinant (ZD)
strategies enable a player to unilaterally set a linear relationship between
the player's own payoff and the co-player's payoff regardless of the strategy
of the co-player. In the present study, we analytically study zero-determinant
strategies in finitely repeated (two-person) prisoner's dilemma games with a
general payoff matrix. Our results are as follows. First, we present the forms
of solutions that extend the known results for infinitely repeated games (with
a discount factor w of unity) to the case of finitely repeated games (0 < w <
1). Second, for the three most prominent ZD strategies, the equalizers,
extortioners, and generous strategies, we derive the threshold value of w above
which the ZD strategies exist. Third, we show that the only strategies that
enforce a linear relationship between the two players' payoffs are either the
ZD strategies or unconditional strategies, where the latter independently
cooperates with a fixed probability in each round of the game, proving a
conjecture previously made for infinitely repeated games.Comment: 24 pages, 2 figure
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