951 resultados para Christie, Nils
Resumo:
This study investigates the relationship between top management team (TMT) innovation orientation and new product portfolio performance in small and medium-sized family firms by exploring two family firm-specific sources of TMT diversity as moderators: the number of generations involved in the TMT and the ratio of family members in the TMT. Results indicate that family-induced diversity in the TMT has opposing moderating effects. Although a positive relationship exists between TMT innovation orientation and new product portfolio performance when multiple generations are involved in the TMT, TMT innovation orientation and new product portfolio performance experience a negative relationship when the ratio of family members in the TMT is high. The study discusses theoretical and managerial implications of the findings and develops avenues for future research.
Resumo:
Die NMR-SF ist die Kurzversion der NMR Skala. Die NMR-SF misst die selbsteingeschätze Fähigkeit zur Regulation negativer Stimmungen. Das von der NMR-SF erfasste Konstrukt spielt in der Ätiologie und Psychotherapie psychischer Störungen eine wichtige Rolle. Die vorliegende Studie untersucht die Konstruktvalidität des Verfahrens in 2 nicht-klinischen und einer depressiven Stichprobe. Die NMR-SF korreliert positiv mit funktionalen Strategien zum Umgang mit negativen Stimmungen und negativ mit dysfunktionalen Strategien. Hohe Werte in der NMR-SF gehen weiterhin mit weniger psychischen Beschwerden einher. Die NMR-SF korreliert leicht positiv mit sozialer Erwünschtheit. Die Ergebnisse der aktuellen Studie unterstützen die Konstruktvalidität der NMR-SF. Die NMR-SF stellt sich als ein psychometrisch gutes Verfahren zur Messung von NMR-Erwartungen dar. Aufgrund ihrer Ökonomie empfiehlt sich die NMR-SF für die Anwendung in klinischen Stichproben, insbesondere im Rahmen von Verlaufsmessungen.
Resumo:
Much previous research has demonstrated the plasticity of myoglobin concentrations in both cardiac and skeletal myocytes in response to hypoxia and training. No study has yet looked at the effect of thermal acclimation on myoglobin in fish. Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) from two different populations, i.e. the North Sea and the North East Arctic, were acclimated to 10 and 4 degrees C. Both the myoglobin mRNA and myoglobin protein in cod hearts increased significantly by up to 3.7 and 2.3 fold respectively as a result of acclimation to 4 degrees C. These increments were largest in the Arctic population, which in earlier studies have been shown to possess cold compensated metabolic demands at low temperatures. These metabolic demands associated with higher mitochondrial capacities may have driven the increase in cardiac myoglobin concentrations, in order to support diffusive oxygen supply. At the same time the increase in myoglobin levels may serve further functions during cold acclimation, for example, protection of the cell against reactive oxygen species, and scavenging nitric oxide, thereby contributing to the regulation of mitochondrial volume density.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Quantitative myocardial PET perfusion imaging requires partial volume corrections. METHODS: Patients underwent ECG-gated, rest-dipyridamole, myocardial perfusion PET using Rb-82 decay corrected in Bq/cc for diastolic, systolic, and combined whole cycle ungated images. Diastolic partial volume correction relative to systole was determined from the systolic/diastolic activity ratio, systolic partial volume correction from phantom dimensions comparable to systolic LV wall thicknesses and whole heart cycle partial volume correction for ungated images from fractional systolic-diastolic duration for systolic and diastolic partial volume corrections. RESULTS: For 264 PET perfusion images from 159 patients (105 rest-stress image pairs, 54 individual rest or stress images), average resting diastolic partial volume correction relative to systole was 1.14 ± 0.04, independent of heart rate and within ±1.8% of stress images (1.16 ± 0.04). Diastolic partial volume corrections combined with those for phantom dimensions comparable to systolic LV wall thickness gave an average whole heart cycle partial volume correction for ungated images of 1.23 for Rb-82 compared to 1.14 if positron range were negligible as for F-18. CONCLUSION: Quantitative myocardial PET perfusion imaging requires partial volume correction, herein demonstrated clinically from systolic/diastolic absolute activity ratios combined with phantom data accounting for Rb-82 positron range.