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Working paper
Inheritance Patterns in Citation Networks Reveal Scientific Memes
In: Physical Review X 4 (2014) 041036
SSRN
Study on Honeypot based secure Network System
In this modern world the use of computers are increasing day by day.As the result of this computer revolution the use of internet and computer networks also increases.People are so habituated to Internet as they do all kinds of work like food orders,online shopping,job assignments,online education by just one click.By sitting in home we can know what is happening around the world.though it has several advantages,it has its own risks and and vulnerabilities too.The private industries and government organizations which uses internet must adopt some security measures to safe guard their networks from cyber attacks.This paper explains the concept of honeypot an intrusion detection system that provide security to networks.This model runs as a virtual machine with small vulnerability which is created on purpose to lure the attackers so that the intruder can gain company's content which is a fake information.this model is used to capture patterns and various techniques used by intruders and create a list activities.By using this list the network system can be protected from cuber attacks.Honeypots can capture any kind of unauthorized access ,record and report it to the admin to prevent those attacks and go further with legal actions.Group of honeypots are combined to form honeynet that provide security to several networks
BASE
Endogenous Production Networks and Supply Chain Disruptions
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Gendering delinquent networks: A gendered analysis of violent crimes and the structure of boys'and girls'co-offending networks
In: Young: Nordic journal of youth research, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 247-267
ISSN: 1741-3222
Using network analysis and employing a gender theoretical perspective as the primary analytical tool, this study examines violent offences committed by young people. Although crime, and violent offending in particular, is strongly associated with men and masculinity, the use of a gendered perspective has, until recently, been something of a rarity in the context of criminological research into violence. The current study focuses on similarities and differences in the structure of girls' and boys' violent offending in Stockholm, Sweden. Apart from differences in levels of offending, the patterns of suspected violent offending found among girls and boys are very similar. The violent offences of both sexes appear primarily to constitute a means of creating hierarchies in relation to others of the same sex, hence according to the present study, violent crimes committed by girls cannot generally be interpreted as a form of opposition against male dominance. Instead they seem to be a way of subordinating other girls, just as the boys subordinate other boys. Nevertheless, girls' subordination of other girls can in part be seen as a consequence of male dominance.
A typology of knowledge sharing networks in practice
In: Knowledge and process management: the journal of corporate transformation ; the official journal of the Institute of Business Process Re-engineering, Band 18, Heft 1, S. 34-44
ISSN: 1099-1441
AbstractKnowledge intensive organizations often rely on knowledge sharing networks. Such networks, often called 'communities of practice' are found in many organizations but their forms and functions appear to be quite diverse. In this article we determine and discuss a number of basic types of knowledge networks. A literature analysis and a study of 38 networks in large organizations yielded two dimensions of networks, institutionalization and proximity. On the basis of these dimensions four basic types of knowledge networks were discerned: strategic networks, informal networks, question and answer networks, and on‐line strategic networks. The recognition of this variety of knowledge networks highlights the different ways in which knowledge sharing and creating can be organized and shows that these different forms of organizing require different technological and organizational support. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Gender and Social Networks on Bank Boards
In: FEDS Working Paper No. 2021-021 https://doi.org/10.17016/FEDS.2021.021
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Firm Social Networks, Trust, and Security Issuances
In: The European Journal of Finance, Forthcoming
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Multimarket Facility Network Design with OffShoring Applications
In: Manufacturing & Service Operations Management 11(1) 90-108, 2009
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Institutional Design: Changing Institutional Features of Networks
In: Public management review, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 141-160
ISSN: 1471-9045
Expert network interaction in the European Medicines Agency
In: Regulation & governance, Band 17, Heft 2, S. 491-511
ISSN: 1748-5991
AbstractThe need for supranational regulatory capacity and the drive for governmental control are two colliding forces in international governance. As a solution to this governance dilemma, European administrative networks need to simultaneously fulfill the demand for supranational institutions and maintain governmental control. The assessment of risks associated with medicines authorized on the European market is carried out by such a network of national regulators as part of the European Medicines Agency. To uncover how these double‐hatted experts navigate the opportunity structures created by supranational and intergovernmental forces, this study employs social network analysis. Developing exponential random graph models, this study tests to what extent members can act as professional experts in service of the supranational administration and to what extent national features shape interaction. The results indicate that while PRAC members are socialized as professionals in service of supranational deliberation on pharmacovigilance, intergovernmental forces do structure their interactions.
Ruin Probabilities for Risk Processes in Stochastic Networks
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Network Interconnectivity and Entry into Platform Markets
In: Harvard Business School Technology & Operations Mgt. Unit Working Paper No. 19-062
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Working paper
A Knowledge Base of Charters for Generating Networks
Talk given in the session 212 "Network Analysis for Medieval Studies, II: The Dynamics of Medieval Political and Personal Networks" at the IMC 2018 in Leeds.
BASE
Innovation networks and knowledge transfer in information management
In: Sociology international journal, Band 7, Heft 3, S. 90-97
ISSN: 2576-4470
In the present investigation, an analysis of the situation of the main coffee organizations characterized as associative structures is carried out, based on a thread at their level of organization that seeks to optimize their knowledge, articulation and internal improvement actions entailed from the objective oriented in the knowledge transfer based on innovation networks and their influence on information management in coffee producers in the province of Utcubamba - Amazonas - Peru. With the change management proposal within a corporate project supported by procedures and innovation networks, it is expected to promote positive externalities in the business model. What is proposed is instituted through an applied-basic type analysis, approached with the contrasting technique - explanatory with a succession design. As a result, within this process, key elements are articulated such as: knowledge, information and communication, strong identity and coordination and articulation rules, trust in sharing knowledge, information and communication technologies (ICT), linked to networks. That allow strengthening the Local Support Network by identifying its strategic competencies. As a conclusion, it was possible to demonstrate the importance of institutional support from public policies, the structural characteristics that innovation networks must have and actions to develop human capital, a vision of the structural, relational and organizational approach. That allow strengthening the Local Support Network by identifying its strategic competencies. As a conclusion, it was possible to demonstrate the importance of institutional support from public policies, the structural characteristics that innovation networks must have and actions to develop human capital, a vision of the structural, relational and organizational approach. That allow strengthening the Local Support Network by identifying its strategic competencies. As a conclusion, it was possible to demonstrate the importance of institutional support from public policies, the structural characteristics that innovation networks must have and actions to develop human capital, a vision of the structural, relational and organizational approach.