7,502 research outputs found
Dausara pamirensis Arora & Mandal 1974
<p> <b> 289. <i>Dausara pamirensis</i> Arora & Mandal, 1974: 29, fig. 1</b> </p> <p>Type locality: India, Arunachal Pradesh (Nefa), Subansiri Dist., Pamir, 564 m</p> <p>Distribution. Indian records: Pamir (Arunachal Pradesh), Shillong (Meghalaya) (Arora & Mandal 1974). Global records: unknown.</p>Published as part of <i>Singh, Navneet, Ranjan, Rahul, Talukdar, Avishek, Joshi, Rahul, Kirti, Jagbir Singh, Chandra, Kailash & Mally, Richard, 2022, A catalogue of Indian Pyraloidea (Lepidoptera), pp. 1-423 in Zootaxa 5197 (1)</i> on page 196, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5197.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/7252292">http://zenodo.org/record/7252292</a>
A Breath of Fresh Air? Firm Type, Scale, Scope, and Selection Effects in Drug Development
This paper compares the innovation performance of established pharmaceutical firms and biotech companies, controlling for differences in the scale and scope of research. We develop a structural model to analyze more than 3,000 drug research and development projects advanced to preclinical and clinical trials in the United States between 1980 and 1994. Key to our approach is careful attention to the issue of selection. Firms choose which compounds to advance into clinical trials. This choice depends not only on the technical promise of the compound, but also on commercial considerations such as the expected profitability of the market or concerns about product cannibalization. After controlling for selection, we find that (a) even after controlling for scale and scope in research, established pharmaceutical firms are more innovative than newly entered biotech firms; (b) older biotech firms display selection behaviors and innovation performances similar to established pharmaceutical firms; and (c) compounds licensed during preclinical trials are as likely to succeed as internal compounds of the licensor, which is inconsistent with the "lemons" hypothesis in technology markets.firm capabilities, drug development process, market for technology
LoRaWAN Class B Multicast Scalability
LoRaWAN has emerged as a popular IoT commu- nications technology. It comes with three classes of operation: A, B, and C. Although many IoT use-cases, like Firmware-over- the-Air updates, require multicast, Class A cannot be used for that purpose. Class C can, but consumes a lot of energy. This leaves Class B. In this paper, we investigate Class B multicast and its scalability properties. Issues like multicast member capacity, beacon blocking, and beacon collisions are highlighted, and several approaches to mitigate them are proposed: (1) “Ping-Slot Relaying,” to allow for more multicast members, (2) a scheduling approach indicating when to best send multicast packets, and (3) “Dynamic Region Formation” to coordinate the sending of beacons over multiple gateways. The proposed solutions do not require any modifications to the LoRaWAN protocol.Virtual/online event due to COVID-19 accepted author manuscriptEmbedded System
<b>Supplemental Material - (Re)framing built heritage through the machinic gaze</b>
Supplemental Material for (Re)framing built heritage through the machinic gaze by Vanicka Arora, Liam Magee and Luke Munn in Journal of Social Archaeology.</p
Ideas for rent: an overview of markets for technology
This article surveys some of the recent literature on technology markets, and summarizes its main issues and insights. We structure our analysis in three parts: the supply and demand of technology; the factors that condition the formation and growth of technology markets; industry structure and dynamic issues. In addition, we summarize some of the studies that have tried to document the size and growth of these markets. We find that the literature has focused mainly on the supply of technology, but several other aspects of these markets remain under-studied, including the demand for external technology, the role of uncertainty in technology markets, and the dynamic interaction between industry structure and the market for technology. Understanding these will illuminate whether markets for technology will continue to grow or remained confined to pockets of the economy. Copyright 2010 The Author 2010. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Associazione ICC. All rights reserved., Oxford University Press.
Metrics for analytics and visualization of big data with applications to activity recognition
Activity recognition systems detect the hidden actions of an agent from sensor measurements made on the agents' actions and the environmental conditions. For such systems, metrics are important for both performance evaluation and visualization purposes. In this thesis, such metrics are developed and illustrated. For human activity recognition datasets, a reporting structure is described to visualize the metrics in a systematic manner. The other contribution of this thesis is to describe a visualization tool for estimating the orientation (attitude) of a rigid body from streaming motion sensor (accelerometer and gyroscope) data. A feedback particle filter (FPF) is implemented algorithmically to solve the estimation problem.Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'Closed Access', the embargo will last until 2018-05-01The student, Rohan Arora, accepted the attached license on 2016-04-25 at 10:47.The student, Rohan Arora, submitted this Thesis for approval on 2016-04-25 at 10:48.This Thesis was approved for publication on 2016-04-27 at 15:05.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #9459 on 2016-07-07 at 14:17:57Made available in DSpace on 2016-07-07T21:18:02Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
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Previous issue date: 2016-04-27Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 93308
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Markets for technology in the knowledge economy.
The focus of this research has been the study of the nature and functioning of markets for technologyStrategic planning; Technological planning; Organizational change; Research & development;
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R Sharma, B Kumar, R Arora, S Ahlawat, AK Mishra and MS Tantia (2016) Genetic diversity estimates point to immediate efforts for conserving the endangered Tibetan sheep of India Meta Gene 8 : 14 - 20.Not AvailableNot Availabl
Supplemental Material, LANDMARKS - OrthoAligner “NAM”: A Case Series of Presurgical Infant Orthopedics (PSIO) Using Clear Aligneres
Supplemental Material, LANDMARKS for OrthoAligner “NAM”: A Case Series of Presurgical Infant Orthopedics (PSIO) Using Clear Aligneres by Puneet Batra, Bruno Frazāo Gribel, B. A. Abhinav, Anika Arora and Sreevatsan Raghavan in The Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Journal</p
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