911 resultados para New Strategic Theory
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The present project aims to describe and study the nature and transmission of nerve pulses. First we review a classical model by Hodgkin-Huxley which describes the nerve pulse as a pure electric signal which propagates due to the opening of some time- and voltage-dependent ion channels. Although this model was quite successful when introduced, it fails to provide a satisfactory explanation to other phenomena that occur in the transmission of nerve pulses, therefore a new theory seems to be necessary. The soliton theory is one such theory, which we explain after introducing two topics that are important for its understanding: (i) the lipid melting of membranes, which are found to display nonlinearity and dispersion during the melting transition, and (ii) the discovery and the conditions required for the existence of solitons. In the soliton theory, the pulse is presented as an electromechanical soliton which forces the membrane through the transition while propagating. The action of anesthesia is also explained in the new framework by the melting point depression caused by anesthetics. Finally, we present a comparison between the two models.
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[EN] Purpose. This work aims to present, from the company viewpoint, a structured account of management proposals and practices directed toward improving the intensity and effectiveness of continuous management training (CMT). Design/methodology/approach. The article takes as its main theoretical referents the Theory of Human Capital, the Resource-Based Vision and the contributions made via the new institutional economy with regard to the problems of information asymmetry between companies, employees and training providers and completes the proposals that derive from this theoretical approach. To do this, experience-based contributions are collected from a selection of company training and HR managers from twelve Basque companies characterised by their strong investment in management training. The methodology used was qualitative and obtained by different qualitative techniques: Focus Groups, Nominal Groups and the Delphi Method, which make up the so-called Hybrid Delphi. Findings and implications. The proposals are aimed at the main agents in training activity: training providers, associations and public agents engaged in management training and, particularly, companies themselves. The initiatives seek above all to increase training market transparency, to improve mutual commitments between companies and managers, and to link training and development with culture and strategic management, so that firms make optimal investment in management training. Originality/value. The methodology used is original, and the contributions are consistent with the theory, have a proven practical utility, and are presented in a hierarchy, which facilitates decision making.
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Learning to perceive is faced with a classical paradox: if understanding is required for perception, how can we learn to perceive something new, something we do not yet understand? According to the sensorimotor approach, perception involves mastery of regular sensorimotor co-variations that depend on the agent and the environment, also known as the "laws" of sensorimotor contingencies (SMCs). In this sense, perception involves enacting relevant sensorimotor skills in each situation. It is important for this proposal that such skills can be learned and refined with experience and yet up to this date, the sensorimotor approach has had no explicit theory of perceptual learning. The situation is made more complex if we acknowledge the open-ended nature of human learning. In this paper we propose Piaget's theory of equilibration as a potential candidate to fulfill this role. This theory highlights the importance of intrinsic sensorimotor norms, in terms of the closure of sensorimotor schemes. It also explains how the equilibration of a sensorimotor organization faced with novelty or breakdowns proceeds by re-shaping pre-existing structures in coupling with dynamical regularities of the world. This way learning to perceive is guided by the equilibration of emerging forms of skillful coping with the world. We demonstrate the compatibility between Piaget's theory and the sensorimotor approach by providing a dynamical formalization of equilibration to give an explicit micro-genetic account of sensorimotor learning and, by extension, of how we learn to perceive. This allows us to draw important lessons in the form of general principles for open-ended sensorimotor learning, including the need for an intrinsic normative evaluation by the agent itself. We also explore implications of our micro-genetic account at the personal level.
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Many social relationships are a locus of struggle and suffering, either at the individual or interactional level. In this paper we explore why this is the case and suggest a modeling approach for dyadic interactions and the well-being of the participants. To this end we bring together an enactive approach to self with dynamical systems theory. Our basic assumption is that the quality of any social interaction or relationship fundamentally depends on the nature and constitution of the individuals engaged in these interactions. From an enactive perspective the self is conceived as an embodied and socially enacted autonomous system striving to maintain an identity. This striving involves a basic two-fold goal: the ability to exist as an individual in one's own right, while also being open to and affected by others. In terms of dynamical systems theory one can thus consider the individual self as a self-other organized system represented by a phase space spanned by the dimensions of distinction and participation, where attractors can be defined. Based on two everyday examples of dyadic relationship we propose a simple model of relationship dynamics, in which struggle or well-being in the dyad is analyzed in terms of movements of dyadic states that are in tension or in harmony with individually developed attractors. Our model predicts that relationships can be sustained when the dyad develops a new joint attractor toward which dyadic states tend to move, and well-being when this attractor is in balance with the individuals' attractors. We outline how this can inspire research on psychotherapy. The psychotherapy process itself provides a setting that supports clients to become aware how they fare with regards to the two-fold norm of distinction and participation and develop, through active engagement between client (or couple) and therapist, strategies to co-negotiate their self-organization.
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Os recentes avanços tecnológicos fizeram aumentar o nível de qualificação do pesquisador em epidemiologia. A importância do papel estratégico da educação não pode ser ignorada. Todavia, a Associação Brasileira de Pós-graduação em Saúde Coletiva (ABRASCO), no seu último plano diretor (2005-2009), aponta uma pequena valorização na produção de material didático-pedagógico e, ainda, a falta de uma política de desenvolvimento e utilização de software livre no ensino da epidemiologia. É oportuno, portanto, investir em uma perspectiva relacional, na linha do que a corrente construtivista propõe, uma vez que esta teoria tem sido reconhecida como a mais adequada no desenvolvimento de materiais didáticos informatizados. Neste sentido, promover cursos interativos e, no bojo destes, desenvolver material didático conexo é oportuno e profícuo. No âmbito da questão política de desenvolvimento e utilização de software livre no ensino da epidemiologia, particularmente em estatística aplicada, o R tem se mostrado um software de interesse emergente. Ademais, não só porque evita possíveis penalizações por utilização de software comercial sem licença, mas também porque o franco acesso aos códigos e programação o torna uma ferramenta excelente para a elaboração de material didático em forma de hiperdocumentos, importantes alicerces para uma tão desejada interação docentediscente em sala de aula. O principal objetivo é desenvolver material didático em R para os cursos de bioestatística aplicada à análise epidemiológica. Devido a não implementação de certas funções estatísticas no R, também foi incluída a programação de funções adicionais. Os cursos empregados no desenvolvimento desse material fundamentaram-se nas disciplinas Uma introdução à Plataforma R para Modelagem Estatística de Dados e Instrumento de Aferição em Epidemiologia I: Teoria Clássica de Medidas (Análise) vinculadas ao departamento de Epidemiologia, Instituto de Medicina Social (IMS) da Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (UERJ). A base teórico-pedagógica foi definida a partir dos princípios construtivistas, na qual o indivíduo é agente ativo e crítico de seu próprio conhecimento, construindo significados a partir de experiências próprias. E, à ótica construtivista, seguiu-se a metodologia de ensino da problematização, abrangendo problemas oriundos de situações reais e sistematizados por escrito. Já os métodos computacionais foram baseados nas Novas Tecnologias da Informação e Comunicação (NTIC). As NTICs exploram a busca pela consolidação de currículos mais flexíveis, adaptados às características diferenciadas de aprendizagem dos alunos. A implementação das NTICs foi feita através de hipertexto, que é uma estrutura de textos interligados por nós ou vínculos (links), formando uma rede de informações relacionadas. Durante a concepção do material didático, foram realizadas mudanças na interface básica do sistema de ajuda do R para garantir a interatividade aluno-material. O próprio instrutivo é composto por blocos, que incentivam a discussão e a troca de informações entre professor e alunos.
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The objective of this dissertation is to study the theory of distributions and some of its applications. Certain concepts which we would include in the theory of distributions nowadays have been widely used in several fields of mathematics and physics. It was Dirac who first introduced the delta function as we know it, in an attempt to keep a convenient notation in his works in quantum mechanics. Their work contributed to open a new path in mathematics, as new objects, similar to functions but not of their same nature, were being used systematically. Distributions are believed to have been first formally introduced by the Soviet mathematician Sergei Sobolev and by Laurent Schwartz. The aim of this project is to show how distribution theory can be used to obtain what we call fundamental solutions of partial differential equations.
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Apesar de ter produzido incansavelmente na área de ensino e aprendizagem de língua adicional com crianças, adolescentes e jovens adultos, a Linguística Aplicada (LA) ainda não desenvolveu um acervo que ilumine os diferentes aspectos do processo de ensino e aprendizagem de segunda língua para adultos da terceira idade. Entre os poucos estudos desenvolvidos na área, destacam-se as pesquisas de Pizzolatto (1995), sobre as características do processo de ensino e aprendizagem de segunda língua com adultos da terceira idade; de Conceição (1999), sobre as estratégias de aprendizagem utilizadas por idosos; de Scopinho (2009), acerca dos subsídios para elaboração e utilização de materiais didáticos desenhados para a terceira idade; e de Oliveira (2010), sobre as crenças e experiências de idosas aprendendo inglês em uma escola pública. Como forma de contribuir para o preenchimento dessa lacuna e concretizar um desejo pessoal, surgido a partir dos desafios experienciados enquanto estagiário de iniciação à docência de inglês nos anos de 2008 e 2009, esta pesquisa almeja entender o processo de ensino e aprendizagem de inglês com adultos da terceira idade a partir de três perspectivas: a das professoras, a dos alunos e a minha, enquanto pesquisador. Para tanto, três perguntas de pesquisa foram estabelecidas: (1) como os participantes do contexto (professoras, alunos e pesquisador) entendem o papel do curso e o processo de ensino e aprendizagem de inglês? (2) Que práticas pedagógicas são apreciadas pelos alunos? e (3) De que forma os materiais existentes se relacionam com as preferências dos alunos? Compartilhando com Richardson (1994) o conceito de cristalização, intenciono compreender diferentes aspectos do contexto investigado, a saber, as aulas de inglês do projeto Línguas Estrangeiras para Terceira Idade (LETI) da Universidade Aberta da Terceira Idade da UERJ (UnATI/UERJ), encarando-o como um cristal multifacetado. Para gerar dados, utilizei quatro instrumentos de pesquisa: um questionário socioeconômico e cultural, duas entrevistas inspiradas no conceito de grupos focais (GASKELL, 2002), uma realizada com as professoras e outra com cinco alunos, e observações de aulas com notas de campo. Este estudo se vale do aporte teórico das áreas de Aquisição de Segunda Língua, condição Pós-método, ensino e aprendizagem de línguas sob a ótica da teoria da complexidade, teoria dos posicionamentos e ensino e aprendizagem de inglês com adultos da terceira idade. Os fios temáticos emergentes das práticas discursivas dos participantes são (1) memória, (2) afeto e emoções, (3) socialização, (4) conversação, música e tradução, (5) dedicação ao estudo, (6) heterogeneidade dos grupos, (7) uso de novas tecnologias e (8) material didático. As categorias de análise são memória e afetividade na aprendizagem de língua estrangeira, teoria dos posicionamentos e macroestratégias da condição Pós-método. Entre os achados estão a importância da memória e da afetividade na aprendizagem de inglês, o desejo dos alunos por atividades de conversação, o apreço que eles têm pela música e a inexistência de materiais desenhados para o público da terceira idade. As práticas discursivas são analisadas e discutidas com vistas à elaboração de materiais didáticos para o público da terceira idade
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ICLARM has recently developed a strategic Plan for International research on living aquatic resources management which identifies tropical coastal resource systems as one of its areas of research emphasis. Details are given of a new approach for analysing and comparing coastal resource systems - the coastal cross-section concept. Agroecosystems analysis and farming systems research were used as a basis for the development of this concept.
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This is the report on the strategic fisheries stock assessment survey of the minor catchments in South West Cumbria 1996 with particular reference to salmonids, produced by North West Water in 1994. The 1996 Minor Catchment survey indicates variations in salmonid production within these catchments. Survey results indicate that production may be reaching its limit in certain areas whilst others are underachieving and others are unsuitable for salmonid production. Trout production within the catchments is higher and more widespread than that of salmon. Water quality levels vary considerably between catchments and intra-annually within individual catchments. The need for selective habitat surveys, with a view to habitat improvement schemes (H.I.S) is discussed. This report formed a basis for subsequent reports, thus, allowing data comparisons and analysis of production level fluctuations. It was the most extensive assessment of these catchments to date, taking into account comparisons with the new National Database on salmonid production in England and Wales.
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Chapter 13 Implementing Open Innovation: Challenges in Linking Strategic and Operational Factors for Large Firms Working with HTSFs
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In recent years, many industrial firms have been able to use roadmapping as an effective process methodology for projecting future technology and for coordinating technology planning and strategy. Firms potentially realize a number of benefits in deploying technology roadmapping (TRM) processes. Roadmaps provide information identifying which new technologies will meet firms' future product demands, allowing companies to leverage R&D investments through choosing appropriately out of a range of alternative technologies. Moreover, the roadmapping process serves an important communication tool helping to bring about consensus among roadmap developers, as well as between participants brought in during the development process, who may communicate their understanding of shared corporate goals through the roadmap. However, there are few conceptual accounts or case studies have made the argument that roadmapping processes may be used effectively as communication tools. This paper, therefore, seeks to elaborate a theoretical foundation for identifying the factors that must be considered in setting up a roadmap and for analyzing the effect of these factors on technology roadmap credibility as perceived by its users. Based on the survey results of 120 different R&D units, this empirical study found that firms need to explore further how they can enable frequent interactions between the TRM development team and TRM participants. A high level of interaction will improve the credibility of a TRM, with communication channels selected by the organization also positively affecting TRM credibility. © 2011 Elsevier Inc.
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Developing a theoretical description of turbulent plumes, the likes of which may be seen rising above industrial chimneys, is a daunting thought. Plumes are ubiquitous on a wide range of scales in both the natural and the man-made environments. Examples that immediately come to mind are the vapour plumes above industrial smoke stacks or the ash plumes forming particle-laden clouds above an erupting volcano. However, plumes also occur where they are less visually apparent, such as the rising stream of warmair above a domestic radiator, of oil from a subsea blowout or, at a larger scale, of air above the so-called urban heat island. In many instances, not only the plume itself is of interest but also its influence on the environment as a whole through the process of entrainment. Zeldovich (1937, The asymptotic laws of freely-ascending convective flows. Zh. Eksp. Teor. Fiz., 7, 1463-1465 (in Russian)), Batchelor (1954, Heat convection and buoyancy effects in fluids. Q. J. R. Meteor. Soc., 80, 339-358) and Morton et al. (1956, Turbulent gravitational convection from maintained and instantaneous sources. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. A, 234, 1-23) laid the foundations for classical plume theory, a theoretical description that is elegant in its simplicity and yet encapsulates the complex turbulent engulfment of ambient fluid into the plume. Testament to the insight and approach developed in these early models of plumes is that the essential theory remains unchanged and is widely applied today. We describe the foundations of plume theory and link the theoretical developments with the measurements made in experiments necessary to close these models before discussing some recent developments in plume theory, including an approach which generalizes results obtained separately for the Boussinesq and the non-Boussinesq plume cases. The theory presented - despite its simplicity - has been very successful at describing and explaining the behaviour of plumes across the wide range of scales they are observed. We present solutions to the coupled set of ordinary differential equations (the plume conservation equations) that Morton et al. (1956) derived from the Navier-Stokes equations which govern fluid motion. In order to describe and contrast the bulk behaviour of rising plumes from general area sources, we present closed-form solutions to the plume conservation equations that were achieved by solving for the variation with height of Morton's non-dimensional flux parameter Γ - this single flux parameter gives a unique representation of the behaviour of steady plumes and enables a characterization of the different types of plume. We discuss advantages of solutions in this form before describing extensions to plume theory and suggesting directions for new research. © 2010 The Author. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications. All rights reserved.