5 research outputs found

    Lines-of-inquiry and sources of evidence in work-based research

    Get PDF
    There is synergy between the investigative practices of police detectives and social scientists, including work-based researchers. They both develop lines-of-inquiry and draw on multiple sources of evidence in order to make inferences about people, trends and phenomena. However, the principles associated with lines-of-inquiry and sources of evidence have not so far been examined in relation to work-based research methods, which are often unexplored or ill-defined in the published literature. We explore this gap by examining the various direct and indirect lines-of-inquiry and the main sources of primary and secondary evidence used in work-based research, which is especially relevant because some work-based researchers are also police detectives. Clearer understanding of these intersections will be useful in emerging professional contexts where the work-based researcher, the detective, and the social scientist cohere in the one person and their research project. The case we examined was a Professional Studies programme at a university in Australia, which has many police detectives doing work-based research, and from their experience we conclude there is synergy between work-based research and lines of enquiry. Specifically, in the context of research methods, we identify seven sources of evidence: 1) creative, unstructured, and semi-structured interviews; 2) structured interviews; 3) consensus group methods; 4) surveys; 5) documentation and archives; 6) direct observations and participant observations; and 7) physical or cultural artefacts, and show their methodological features related to data and method type, reliability, validity, and types of analysis, along with their respective advantages and disadvantages. This study thereby unpacks and isolates those characteristics of work-based research which are relevant to a growing body of literature related to the messy, co-produced and wicked problems of private companies, government agencies, and non-government organisations and the research methods used to investigate them

    Solving the Minimum String Cover Problem

    No full text
    A string cover C of a set of strings S is a set of substrings from S such that every string in S can be written as a concatenation of the strings in C. Given costs assigned to each substring from S, the Minimum String Cover (MSC) problem asks for a cover of minimum total cost. This NP-hard problem has so far only been approached from a purely theoretical perspective. A previous integer linear programming (ILP) formulation was designed for a special case, in which each string in S must be generated by a (small) constant number of substrings. If this restriction is removed, the ILP has an exponential number of variables, for which we show the pricing problem to be NP-hard. We propose an alternative flow-based ILP formulation of polynomial size, whose structure is particularly favorable for a Lagrangian relaxation approach. By making use of the strong bounds obtained through a repeated shortest path computation in a branch-and-bound manner, we show for the first time that non-trivial MSC instances can be solved to provable optimality in reasonable time. We also provide and solve real-world instances derived from the classic text “Alice in Wonderland”. On almost all instances, our Lagrangian relaxation approach outperforms a CPLEX-based implementation by an order of magnitude. Our software is available under the terms of the GNU general public license

    Maximizing Olympic impacts by building up legacies

    No full text
    This contribution adds to the controversial discussion of the investment of scarce public resources in mega sport events such as the Olympic Games. The positive, or negative, legacy of mega sport events will be considered. A definition of legacy will be given, how legacy might be measured is discussed and the key elements that make up a legacy are identified. Examples are taken from recent Olympic Games and other mega sports events such as the Manchester Commonwealth Games in 2002
    corecore