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Open data for open innovation: managing absorptive capacity in SMEs
Open Data (OD) utilisation has been encouraged by governments because of its potential to fuel digital innovation. Despite this, there is a paucity of study into the role of OD for SMEs, in contrast to the growing literature that has focused on the collection and sharing of OD by the public sector. As such, our study contributes to open innovation research by analysing the main capabilities needed to overcome existing barriers to successfully manage OD in SMEs. Building upon the recent SME-oriented OI literature and adopting an interpretative absorptive capacity framework, we analyse the data collected from 30 semi-structured interviews with experts working in UK organisations adopting OD-based OI strategies. We find a number of core factors that shape OD acquisition, assimilation, transformation and exploitation by SMEs. Results show that without the specific OD capabilities identified in our study, it will be difficult for SMEs to successfully use OD, which may explain why the uptake of OD by SMEs more broadly has so far been limited. These unique OD capabilities need to be better developed by OD using SMEs, if this 'raw material' for the digital economy is to be fully exploited.
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The virtual combat air staff: the promise of information technologies ; Project Air Force, Rand
In: MR 759
In: AF
The Shuhi house between reformist China and revivalist Tibet
The Shuhi of Muli County, Sichuan province, inhabit the Tibetan-Chinese borderlands. In this paper, we focus on Shuhi kinship practices that accord the house the importance it appears to have for the Shuhi themselves. We demonstrate that the Shuhi engage in kinship practices that are 'hearth-oriented' (Hsu 1998b) in a dynamic process affected by the current political economic changes in reformist China and religious revivalism in Tibet. The 'hearth-oriented' kinship practices we discuss include issues of who among the offspring continues to live in the house of their parents, how places of worship in a house are oriented in relation to the physical environment and the divine landscape, and how practices regarding the naming of houses are changing from deictics of place to lineage and family names. Based on empirical data, gathered between 1996-2011, we show that there are significant differences in all practices, which reflect a Tibetan-Chinese gradient along the north-south axis of Shuhi settlements, but there are also striking continuities.
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Towards a New Normal: How Different Paths of US Monetary Policy Affect the World Economy
In: Economic notes, Band 44, Heft 3, S. 409-418
ISSN: 1468-0300
This note examines the impact of US monetary policy tightening on global output and consumer prices. We assess different paths of monetary policy normalization based on expectations of members and participants of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the US Federal Reserve's policy‐making body. In the medium term, we find considerable negative effects on world GDP but only moderate effects on international prices. These negative spillovers are not confined to emerging economies but tend to carry over to other industrialized economies as well.
Photonic band-gap effects on photoluminescence of silicon nanocrystals embedded in artificial opals
Si nanocrystals were formed in synthetic opals by Si-ion implantation and their optical properties studied using microphotoluminescence and reflection techniques. The properties of areas with high crystalline quality are compared with those of disordered regions of samples. The photoluminescencespectrum from Si nanocrystals embedded in silica spheres is narrowed by the inhibition of emission at wavelengths corresponding to the opalphotonic pseudoband gap (∼690 nm). Measurements of photoluminescencespectra from individual implanted silica spheres is also demonstrated and the number of emitting Si nanocrystals in single brightly emitting spheres is estimated to be of the order of one thousand. ; This work was supported by GACR (202/03/0789), NATO (PST.CLG.978100), and by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. One of the authors ~J.V.! appreciates financial support from the French government (program Echange).
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Photonic band-gap effects on photoluminescence of silicon nanocrystals embedded in artificial opals
Si nanocrystals were formed in synthetic opals by Si-ion implantation and their optical properties studied using microphotoluminescence and reflection techniques. The properties of areas with high crystalline quality are compared with those of disordered regions of samples. The photoluminescencespectrum from Si nanocrystals embedded in silica spheres is narrowed by the inhibition of emission at wavelengths corresponding to the opalphotonic pseudoband gap (∼690 nm). Measurements of photoluminescencespectra from individual implanted silica spheres is also demonstrated and the number of emitting Si nanocrystals in single brightly emitting spheres is estimated to be of the order of one thousand. ; This work was supported by GACR (202/03/0789), NATO (PST.CLG.978100), and by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. One of the authors ~J.V.! appreciates financial support from the French government (program Echange).
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Internationale Messkampagne der Aero-Gammaspektrometrie 2017 (ARM17) vom 26. - 30.06.2017 in der Schweiz: Bericht und Messresultate
In: BfS-SW 26/18
Antenatal Synthetic Glucocorticoid Exposure at Human Therapeutic Equivalent Doses Predisposes Middle-Age Male Offspring Baboons to an Obese Phenotype That Emerges With Aging
In: Reproductive sciences: RS : the official journal of the Society for Reproductive Investigation, Band 26, Heft 5, S. 591-599
ISSN: 1933-7205
The virtual combat air staff: The promise of information technologies
In: Rand Report, MR-759-AF
World Affairs Online
Eine kleine Batterie mit grossen Folgen
In: Swiss Medical Forum ‒ Schweizerisches Medizin-Forum, Band 14, Heft 19
ISSN: 1424-4020
Challenges and Prospects of Automated Disassembly of Fuel Cells for a Circular Economy
In: RCRADV-D-23-00012
SSRN
Legal situation and current practice of waste incineration bottom ash utilisation in Europe
Almost 500 municipal solid waste incineration plants in the EU, Norway and Switzerland generate about 17.6 Mt/a of incinerator bottom ash (IBA). IBA contains minerals and metals. Metals are mostly separated and sold to the scrap market and minerals are either disposed of in landfills or utilised in the construction sector. Since there is no uniform regulation for IBA utilisation at EU level, countries developed own rules with varying requirements for utilisation. As a result from a cooperation network between European experts an up-to-date overview of documents regulating IBA utilisation is presented. Furthermore, this work highlights the different requirements that have to be considered. Overall, 51 different parameters for the total content and 36 different parameters for the emission by leaching are defined. An analysis of the defined parameter reveals that leaching parameters are significantly more to be considered compared to total content parameters. In order to assess the leaching behaviour nine different leaching tests, including batch tests, up-flow percolation tests and one diffusion test (monolithic materials) are in place. A further discussion of leaching parameters showed that certain countries took over limit values initially defined for landfills for inert waste and adopted them for IBA utilisation. The overall utilisation rate of IBA in construction works is approximately 54 wt%. It is revealed that the rate of utilisation does not necessarily depend on how well regulated IBA utilisation is, but rather seems to be a result of political commitment for IBA recycling and economically interesting circumstances.
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