126,519 research outputs found

    Constraints and opportunities facing women entrepreneurs in developing countries: a relational perspective

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    Purpose: this purpose of the paper to examine the interplay of constraints and opportunities affecting female entrepreneurship in developing countries. The paper integrates salient micro- and macro-level perspectives and provides a rounded account of opportunities and constraints as part of a holistic interdependent system.Design/methodology/approach: the paper adopts an integrative multi-level research design and an interpretive research methodology, capitalizing on in-depth interviews with ten women entrepreneurs to explore their perceptions and interpretations of constraints and opportunities facing female entrepreneurship in the Lebanese context.Findings: the findings presented in this paper clearly illustrate the relevance of micro-, meso-, and macro-level factors in entrepreneurship research and the usefulness of integrating multiple lens and units of analysis to capture the complexity of the women entrepreneurship experience in any particular context.Originality/value: the value added of this research lies in adapting a framework recently popularized in the context of diversity management for use in entrepreneurship research, helping to capture in turn the dynamic interplay of multiple levels of analysis and objective/subjective factors influencing female entrepreneurshi

    Dima yunnana Fleutiaux 1916

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    <i>Dima yunnana</i> Fleutiaux, 1916 <p> <i>Dima yunnana</i> Fleutiaux, 1916: 256.</p> <p> <i>Dima yutmana</i>: Cate 2007: 184 [unavailable name, incorrect subsequent spelling (ICZN 1999, Αrt. 33.3)].</p> <p> <b>Type depositories.</b> Lectotype, sex undetermined (MHNP; see Schimmel & Platia 1991); 5 paralectotypes, sex undetermined (MHNP).</p> <p> <b>Type locality.</b> China: Yunnan.</p> <p> <b>Distribution.</b> China (Yunnan).</p> <p> <b>Literature.</b> Fleutiaux (1916): original description; Schenkling (1927): catalogue; Fleutiaux (1943): remark; Suzuki (1979): comparison with other species; Suzuki (1985): comparison with other species; Schimmel & Cate (1991): remark; Schimmel & Platia (1991): review; Jiang (1993): catalogue; Schimmel (1993): comparison with other species; Schimmel (1996a): catalogue; Hua (2002): catalogue; Cate (2007): catalogue.</p>Published as part of <i>Kundrata, Robin, Musalkova, Marketa & Kubaczkova, Magdalena, 2018, Annotated catalogue of the click-beetle tribe Dimini (Coleoptera: Elateridae: Dendrometrinae), pp. 1-75 in Zootaxa 4412 (1)</i> on page 28, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4412.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/1221884">http://zenodo.org/record/1221884</a&gt

    Dima sanamensis Schimmel 2006

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    <i>Dima sanamensis</i> Schimmel, 2006b <p> <i>Dima sanamensis</i> Schimmel, 2006b: 152.</p> <p> <b>Type depositories.</b> Holotype, male (SMNS); paratype, female (PCRS). <b>Type locality.</b> Nepal: Solukhumbu Distr., Sanam, 2700–2800 m. <b>Distribution.</b> Nepal.</p> <p> <b>Literature.</b> Schimmel (2006b): original description.</p>Published as part of <i>Kundrata, Robin, Musalkova, Marketa & Kubaczkova, Magdalena, 2018, Annotated catalogue of the click-beetle tribe Dimini (Coleoptera: Elateridae: Dendrometrinae), pp. 1-75 in Zootaxa 4412 (1)</i> on page 26, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4412.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/1221884">http://zenodo.org/record/1221884</a&gt

    Dima schnitteri Platia 2013

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    <i>Dima schnitteri</i> Platia, 2013 <p> <i>Dima schimmeli</i> Platia, 2013: 97.</p> <p> <b>Type depositories.</b> Holotype, male (NKME); 11 paratypes, 5 males, 6 females (NKME, PCGP). <b>Type locality.</b> Greece: Peloponnese, Erimanthos Mts., Panapoulos [Panap]. <b>Distribution.</b> Greece.</p> <p> <b>Literature.</b> Platia (2013): original description; Mertlik <i>et al.</i> (2017): revision.</p>Published as part of <i>Kundrata, Robin, Musalkova, Marketa & Kubaczkova, Magdalena, 2018, Annotated catalogue of the click-beetle tribe Dimini (Coleoptera: Elateridae: Dendrometrinae), pp. 1-75 in Zootaxa 4412 (1)</i> on page 26, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4412.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/1221884">http://zenodo.org/record/1221884</a&gt

    Dima etoliensis Platia 2012

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    <i>Dima etoliensis</i> Platia, 2012 <p> <i>Dima etoliensis</i> Platia, 2012: 200.</p> <p> <b>Type depository.</b> Holotype, female (PCGP).</p> <p> <b>Type locality.</b> Greece: Etolia – Akarnania, Panetolikó Mts., Nerosirtis, 850 m. <b>Distribution.</b> Greece.</p> <p> <b>Literature.</b> Platia (2012): original description; Mertlik <i>et al.</i> (2017): revision.</p>Published as part of <i>Kundrata, Robin, Musalkova, Marketa & Kubaczkova, Magdalena, 2018, Annotated catalogue of the click-beetle tribe Dimini (Coleoptera: Elateridae: Dendrometrinae), pp. 1-75 in Zootaxa 4412 (1)</i> on page 16, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4412.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/1221884">http://zenodo.org/record/1221884</a&gt

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed

    Dima arndti Platia 2013

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    <i>Dima arndti</i> Platia, 2013 <p> <i>Dima arndti</i> Platia, 2013: 98.</p> <p> <b>Type depositories.</b> Holotype, male (NKME); 2 paratypes, male, female (NKME, PCGP). <b>Type locality.</b> Greece: Peloponnese, Langada Pass.</p> <p> <b>Distribution.</b> Greece (Peloponnese).</p> <p> <b>Literature.</b> Platia (2013): original description; Mertlik <i>et al.</i> (2017): revision.</p>Published as part of <i>Kundrata, Robin, Musalkova, Marketa & Kubaczkova, Magdalena, 2018, Annotated catalogue of the click-beetle tribe Dimini (Coleoptera: Elateridae: Dendrometrinae), pp. 1-75 in Zootaxa 4412 (1)</i> on page 11, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4412.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/1221884">http://zenodo.org/record/1221884</a&gt

    Dima rugosicollis Schimmel 2001

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    <i>Dima rugosicollis</i> Schimmel, 2001 <p> <i>Dima rugosicollis</i> Schimmel, 2001: 209.</p> <p> <b>Type depositories.</b> Holotype, male (SMTD); 10 paratypes, 3 males, 7 females (PCRS, SMTD). <b>Type locality.</b> Nepal: SE Annapurna, Telbrung Danda, 3200 m. <b>Distribution.</b> Nepal.</p> <p> <b>Literature.</b> Schimmel (2001): original description; Cate (2007): catalogue.</p>Published as part of <i>Kundrata, Robin, Musalkova, Marketa & Kubaczkova, Magdalena, 2018, Annotated catalogue of the click-beetle tribe Dimini (Coleoptera: Elateridae: Dendrometrinae), pp. 1-75 in Zootaxa 4412 (1)</i> on page 26, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4412.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/1221884">http://zenodo.org/record/1221884</a&gt

    DiMA (Diginorm-MSP-Velvet) strategy.

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    <p>This figure depicts the DiMA assembly strategy combined with the Velvet assembler. The process begins by cleaning the original data with a three-phase Digital Normalization algorithm. The cleaned data are distributed on different disk partitions based on the MSP algorithm. Then, the <b>velveth</b> program runs followed by <b>velvetg</b> on each partition. These programs constitute the Velvet assembler’s distinct phases (overlapping computation using hashing and graph construction) and the results are stored on the disk. A merging phase creates the final assembly graph and Velvet’s traversing algorithm produces the final results.</p

    DIMA 3.0: Domain Interaction Map.

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    Domain Interaction MAp (DIMA, available at http://webclu.bio.wzw.tum.de/dima) is a database of predicted and known interactions between protein domains. It integrates 5807 structurally known interactions imported from the iPfam and 3did databases and 46,900 domain interactions predicted by four computational methods: domain phylogenetic profiling, domain pair exclusion algorithm correlated mutations and domain interaction prediction in a discriminative way. Additionally predictions are filtered to exclude those domain pairs that are reported as non-interacting by the Negatome database. The DIMA Web site allows to calculate domain interaction networks either for a domain of interest or for entire organisms, and to explore them interactively using the Flash-based Cytoscape Web software
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