1,813 research outputs found
Recursive formulas for the motivic Milnor basis
We give recursive formulas for the generating elements in the Milnor basis of
the mod 2 motivic Steenrod algebra.Comment: 10 page
Organizational Renewal: The Management of Large-Scale Organizational Change in Norwegian Firms
A study of large organizational change projects was done in 228 private and public sector firms across Norway to examine the causes and consequences of renewal efforts and the strategies used by firm level management and union leaders to involve the workforce in the planning, design and execution of change. The research focus was on management\u27s choice of different forms of worker participation and their effects on the project outcomes. Data came from structured interviews with the top manager and an elected employee representative in each firm.
The results showed that most major changes occurred in organizational structures and administration, undertaken primarily to increase efficiency and as a response to financial difficulties. In the private sector, the planning and design phases of change projects were dominated by top management, with very little involvement by non-managerial employees. Public sector employees played a larger role in the early phases of the projects, mostly through their elected representatives in legally prescribed forums. In both the private and public sector, there was more worker participation in the execution of change, both through elected representatives and more direct worker involvement of an ad hoc, firm-specific, nature.
Neither the extent nor form of participation contributed to the success of the change projects. Instead, the project outcomes were primarily a function of external pressures experienced by the organization, the importance of renewal for organizational survival, and the flexibility of management and labor to accommodate to change. Resistance to change did not decrease as a function of worker participation, but it was influenced by the degree of labor-management agreement in the firm
An Efficient and Cost Effective FPGA Based Implementation of the Viola-Jones Face Detection Algorithm
We present an field programmable gate arrays (FPGA) based implementation of the popular Viola-Jones face detection algorithm, which is an essential building block in many applications such as video surveillance and tracking. Our implementation is a complete system level hardware design described in a hardware description language and validated on the affordable DE2-115 evaluation board. Our primary objective is to study the achievable performance with a low-end FPGA chip based implementation. In addition, we release to the public domain the entire project. We hope that this will enable other researchers to easily replicate and compare their results to ours and that it will encourage and facilitate further research and educational ideas in the areas of image processing, computer vision, and advanced digital design and FPGA prototyping
Optimal control of risk process in a regime-switching environment
This paper is concerned with cost optimization of an insurance company. The
surplus of the insurance company is modeled by a controlled regime switching
diffusion, where the regime switching mechanism provides the fluctuations of
the random environment. The goal is to find an optimal control that minimizes
the total cost up to a stochastic exit time. A weaker sufficient condition than
that of (Fleming and Soner 2006, Section V.2) for the continuity of the value
function is obtained. Further, the value function is shown to be a viscosity
solution of a Hamilton-Jacobian-Bellman equation.Comment: Keywords: Regime switching diffusion, continuity of the value
function, exit time control, viscosity solutio
Weak Gravitational Lensing by a Sample of X-Ray Luminous Clusters of Galaxies -- II. Comparison with Virial Masses
Dynamic velocity dispersion and mass estimates are given for a sample of five
X-ray luminous rich clusters of galaxies at intermediate redshifts (z~0.3)
drawn from a sample of 39 clusters for which we have obtained gravitational
lens mass estimates. The velocity dispersions are determined from between 9 and
20 redshifts measured with the LDSS spectrograph of the William Herschel
Telescope, and virial radii are determined from imaging using the UH8K mosaic
CCD camera on the University of Hawaii 2.24m telescope.
Including clusters with velocity dispersions taken from the literature, we
have velocity dispersion estimates for 12 clusters in our gravitational lensing
sample. For this sample we compare the dynamical velocity dispersion estimates
with our estimates of the velocity dispersions made from gravitational lensing
by fitting a singular isothermal sphere profile to the observed tangential weak
lensing distortion as a function of radius. In all but two clusters, we find a
good agreement between the velocity dispersion estimates based on spectroscopy
and on weak lensing.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ. Version in
emulateapj format with only minor change
Disappearance of leprosy from Norway: an exploration of critical factors using an epidemiological modelling approach
BACKGROUND: By the middle of the 19th century, leprosy was a serious
public health problem in Norway. By 1920, new cases only rarely occurred.
This study aims to explain the disappearance of leprosy from Norway.
METHODS: Data from the National Leprosy Registry of Norway and population
censuses were used. The patient data include year of birth, onset of
disease, registration, hospital admission, death, and emigration. The
Norwegian data were analysed using epidemiological models of disease
transmission and control. RESULTS: The time trend in leprosy new case
detection in Norway can be reproduced adequately. The shift in new case
detection towards older ages which occurred over time is accounted for by
assuming that infected individuals may have a very long incubation period.
The decline cannot be explained fully by the Norwegian policy of isolation
of patients: an autonomous decrease in transmission, reflecting
improvements in for instance living conditions, must also be assumed. The
estimated contribution of the isolation policy to the decline in new case
detection very much depends on assumptions made on build-up of
contagiousness during the incubation period and waning of transmission
opportunities due to rapid transmission to close contacts. CONCLUSION: The
impact of isolation on interruption of transmission remains uncertain.
This uncertainty also applies to contemporary leprosy control that mainly
relies on chemotherapy treatment. Further research is needed to establish
the impact of leprosy interventions on transmission
Separability problem for multipartite states of rank at most four
One of the most important problems in quantum information is the separability
problem, which asks whether a given quantum state is separable. We investigate
multipartite states of rank at most four which are PPT (i.e., all their partial
transposes are positive semidefinite). We show that any PPT state of rank two
or three is separable and has length at most four. For separable states of rank
four, we show that they have length at most six. It is six only for some
qubit-qutrit or multiqubit states. It turns out that any PPT entangled state of
rank four is necessarily supported on a 3x3 or a 2x2x2 subsystem. We obtain a
very simple criterion for the separability problem of the PPT states of rank at
most four: such a state is entangled if and only if its range contains no
product vectors. This criterion can be easily applied since a four-dimensional
subspace in the 3x3 or 2x2x2 system contains a product vector if and only if
its Pluecker coordinates satisfy a homogeneous polynomial equation (the Chow
form of the corresponding Segre variety). We have computed an explicit
determinantal expression for the Chow form in the former case, while such
expression was already known in the latter case.Comment: 19 page
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