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Student corporate brand identification: An exploratory case study
Purpose: We investigate student corporate brand identification towards three corporate brands: a UK University, a leading UK business school and its overseas collaborative partner institute in Asia.
Methodology: A theory-building case study within the phenomenological/ qualitative research tradition
Findings: The strength of student identification to a corporate brand is predicated on awareness, knowledge and experience of a brand. The data revealed three types of corporate brand identification. This reflects different types of student relationships within the three institutions examined. We categorise these as follows: brand member (a contractual/legal relationship with a corporate brand); brand supporter (a trusting corporate brand relationship) and brand owner (an emotional ownership/relationship with the corporate brand). In explaining the above we view the above states in terms of a corporate brand identification management hierarchy which we categorise as legalisation, realisation and, finally, (brand) actualisation. Senior managers should strive for brand actualisation.
Research Limitations: The insights from a single, exploratory, case study might not be generalisable.
Practical Implications: We conceptualise that a bureaucratic/product management approach is more likely to result in low brand identification (legalisation); that a diplomatic/communications management approach is more likely to result in moderate brand identification (realisation) and finally, that a custodial/brand values and promise management approach is more likely to result in high brand identification (brand actualisation). These categorisations can have a utility in ascertaining the effectiveness of corporate brand management.
Originality/value of paper: Examines multiple student identification (towards a University, Business School and a non degree-awarding Overseas Institute)
Two-dimensional gases of generalized statistics in a uniform magnetic field
We study the low temperature properties of two-dimensional ideal gases of
generalized statistics in a uniform magnetic field. The generalized statistics
considered here are the parafermion statistics and the exclusion statistics.
Similarity in the behaviours of the parafermion gas of finite order and the
gas with exclusion coefficient at very low temperatures is noted. These
two systems become exactly equivalent at . Qumtum Hall effect with these
particles as charge carriers is briefly discussed.Comment: Latex file, 14 pages, 5 figures available on reques
Magnetic Component of Quark-Gluon Plasma
We describe recent developments of the "magnetic scenario" of sQGP. We show
that at there is a dense plasma of monopoles, capable of
supporting metastable flux tubes. Their existence allows to quantitatively
explained the non-trivial -dependence of the static potential
energy calculated on the lattice. By molecular dynamics simulation we derived
transport properties (shear viscosity and diffusion constant) and showed that
the best liquid is given by most symmetric plasma, with 50%-50% of electric and
magnetic charges. The results are close to those of the ``perfect liquid''
observed at RHIC.Comment: Contribution to the 20th International Conference on Nucleus Nucleus
Collisions (Quark Matter 2008
Some Issues in a Gauge Model of Unparticles
We address in a recent gauge model of unparticles the issues that are
important for consistency of a gauge theory, i.e., unitarity and Ward identity
of physical amplitudes. We find that non-integrable singularities arise in
physical quantities like cross section and decay rate from gauge interactions
of unparticles. We also show that Ward identity is violated due to the lack of
a dispersion relation for charged unparticles although the Ward-Takahashi
identity for general Green functions is incorporated in the model. A previous
observation that the unparticle's (with scaling dimension d) contribution to
the gauge boson self-energy is a factor (2-d) of the particle's has been
extended to the Green function of triple gauge bosons. This (2-d) rule may be
generally true for any point Green functions of gauge bosons. This implies that
the model would be trivial even as one that mimics certain dynamical effects on
gauge bosons in which unparticles serve as an interpolating field.Comment: v1:16 pages, 3 figures. v2: some clarifications made and presentation
improved, calculation and conclusion not modified; refs added and updated.
Version to appear in EPJ
Dynamical theory of single photon transport in a one-dimensional waveguide coupled to identical and non-identical emitters
We develop a general dynamical theory for studying a single photon transport
in a one-dimensional (1D) waveguide coupled to multiple emitters which can be
either identical or non-identical. In this theory, both the effects of the
waveguide and non-waveguide vacuum modes are included. This theory enables us
to investigate the propagation of an emitter excitation or an arbitrary single
photon pulse along an array of emitters coupled to a 1D waveguide. The
dipole-dipole interaction induced by the non-waveguide modes, which is usually
neglected in the literatures, can significantly modify the dynamics of the
emitter system as well as the characteristics of output field if the emitter
separation is much smaller than the resonance wavelength. Non-identical
emitters can also strongly couple to each other if their energy difference is
smaller than or of the order of the dipole-dipole energy shift. Interestingly,
if their energy difference is close but non-zero, a very narrow transparency
window around the resonance frequency can appear which does not occur for
identical emitters. This phenomenon may find important applications in quantum
waveguide devices such as optical switch and ultra narrow single photon
frequency comb generator.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figure
Testing for co-jumps in high-frequency financial data: an approach based on first-high-low-last prices
This paper proposes a new test for simultaneous intraday jumps in a panel of high frequency financial data. We utilize intraday first-high-low-last values of asset prices to construct estimates for the cross-variation of returns in a large panel of high frequency financial data, and then employ these estimates to provide a first-high-low-last price based test statistic to detect common large discrete movements (co-jumps). We study the finite sample behavior of our first-high-low-last price based test using Monte Carlo simulation, and find that it is more powerful than the Bollerslev et al (2008) return-based co-jump test. When applied to a panel of high frequency data from the Chinese mainland stock market, our first-high-low-last price based test identifies more common jumps than the return-based test in this emerging market.Covariance, Co-jumps, High-frequency data, First-High-Low-Last price, Microstructure bias, Nonsynchronous trades, Realized covariance, Realized co-range.
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