1,999 research outputs found
Faster is More Different: Mean-Field Dynamics of Innovation Diffusion
Based on a recent model of paradigm shifts by Bornholdt et al., we studied
mean-field opinion dynamics in an infinite population where an infinite number
of ideas compete simultaneously with their values publicly known. We found that
a highly innovative society is not characterized by heavy concentration in
highly valued ideas: Rather, ideas are more broadly distributed in a more
innovative society with faster progress, provided that the rate of adoption is
constant, which suggests a positive correlation between innovation and
technological disparity. Furthermore, the distribution is generally skewed in
such a way that the fraction of innovators is substantially smaller than has
been believed in conventional innovation-diffusion theory based on normality.
Thus, the typical adoption pattern is predicted to be asymmetric with slow
saturation in the ideal situation, which is compared with empirical data sets.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Réflexions sur le dialogue littéraire dans les manuels de FLE pour l'apprentissage langagier et littéraire en classe universitaire
International audienceThis study aims to articulate learning the French as a foreign language and literature for South Korean students. As they are beginners, we chose the 'literary' dialogue as language, literary and cultural support. Given the presence of literary dialogue and its treatment in textbooks, its use could be a track to consider possible methods of teaching
Réflexions sur le dialogue littéraire dans les manuels de FLE pour l'apprentissage langagier et littéraire en classe universitaire
International audienceThis study aims to articulate learning the French as a foreign language and literature for South Korean students. As they are beginners, we chose the 'literary' dialogue as language, literary and cultural support. Given the presence of literary dialogue and its treatment in textbooks, its use could be a track to consider possible methods of teaching
DOES EXCHANGE RATE MATTER TO AGRICULTURAL BILATERAL TRADE BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND CANAD?
This study examines the effects of the U.S.-Canada exchange rate on bilateral trade of agricultural goods between the two countries and on U.S. farm income. Special attention is given to agricultural trade between the two countries under the Canada - United States Free Trade Agreement (CUSTA). This study utilizes two time series models: the vector error correction model (VECM) and the vector moving average model (VMA) with quarterly time series data from 1983 to 2000. This study found that exchange rates have a significant impact on U.S. agricultural trade with Canada and that the exchange rate between the two currencies is weakly exogenous in the U.S. agricultural sector, indicating that it is not influenced by U.S. agricultural trade with Canada and U.S. farm income.cointegration, VECM, VMA, exchange rate impacts, weak exogeneity, over-identification, short- and long-run impulse response, International Relations/Trade,
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