23 research outputs found
Influencing Social Media Marketing Practies on Consumer Loyalty Towards Unique Commerical Co., LTD. (Swe Nwe Win,, 2022)
This study aims to examine the influencing social media marketing practices on consumer loyalty towards UNiQUE Commercial Co., Ltd. The study was conducted by using multiple regression analysis to reach the study objectives. The sample size in this study was 122 respondents, which is the result calculated by Raosoft. The population size is 1,000 consumers of UNiQUE’s social media. The survey was conducted by a simple random sampling method. A structured questionnaire was used to gather the answers from the respondents. The result of this study indicates that advertising and interaction (social media marketing practices) have a positive significant effect on satisfaction (consumer engagement); advertising, interaction, and EWOM have a positive significant effect on commitment (consumer engagement); interaction has a positive significant effect on trust (consumer engagement); and again, interaction has a positive significant effect on brand image (consumer engagement). It is also found that commitment and brand image (consumer engagement) have an effect on consumer loyalty towards UNiQUE Commercial Co., Ltd. This study recommends that the company try to find new attractive promotional marketing practices that can engage with high-income single women. In addition, the study also suggests the company maintain social media advertising, interaction, and EWOM to meet the requirements of the target market. In this way, the company can have the highest level of consumer engagement, which can lead to gaining the maximum loyalty of the consumers and sustainable growth of the company
Preventing Data loss in Bank Transactions using Write Ahead Logging Protocol
In business environment, banking systemplays one of the main roles in buying and sellingtransactions. A transaction is a logical unit ofwork. A transaction processing system (TPS) is asystem that monitors transaction programs.Transaction Processing Systems are the heart ofthe business operations today. Transactions areindeed the unit of recovery. Recovery in databasesystem means that restoring the database to acorrect state after some failure has rendered thecurrent state inconsistent. In this system, Logbased recovery using Write Ahead Logging (WAL)protocolis used to prevent data loss in Banktransfer
Synthetic Multimodal Dataset for Daily Life Activities
Outline
This dataset is originally created for the Knowledge Graph Reasoning Challenge for Social Issues (KGRC4SI)
Video data that simulates daily life actions in a virtual space from Scenario Data.
Knowledge graphs, and transcriptions of the Video Data content ("who" did what "action" with what "object," when and where, and the resulting "state" or "position" of the object).
Knowledge Graph Embedding Data are created for reasoning based on machine learning
This data is open to the public as open data
Details
Videos
mp4 format
203 action scenarios
For each scenario, there is a character rear view (file name ending in 0), an indoor camera switching view (file name ending in 1), and a fixed camera view placed in each corner of the room (file name ending in 2-5). Also, for each action scenario, data was generated for a minimum of 1 to a maximum of 7 patterns with different room layouts (scenes). A total of 1,218 videos
Videos with slowly moving characters simulate the movements of elderly people.
Knowledge Graphs
RDF format
203 knowledge graphs corresponding to the videos
Includes schema and location supplement information
The schema is described below
SPARQL endpoints and query examples are available
Script Data
txt format
Data provided to VirtualHome2KG to generate videos and knowledge graphs
Includes the action title and a brief description in text format.
Embedding
Embedding Vectors in TransE, ComplEx, and RotatE. Created with DGL-KE (https://dglke.dgl.ai/doc/)
Embedding Vectors created with jRDF2vec (https://github.com/dwslab/jRDF2Vec).
Specification of Ontology
Please refer to the specification for descriptions of all classes, instances, and properties: https://aistairc.github.io/VirtualHome2KG/vh2kg_ontology.htm
Related Resources
KGRC4SI Final Presentations with automatic English subtitles (YouTube)
VirtualHome2KG (Software)
VirtualHome-AIST (Unity)
VirtualHome-AIST (Python API)
Visualization Tool (Software)
Script Editor (Software
An Experimental Study of Indoor Radon Measurement in Department of Physics, Yangon University of Education
The present work was attempted to measure the estimation of the annual effective dose of
indoor radon in Department of Physics, Yangon University of Education. Many techniques
have been established for measuring the radiation in the environment. These techniques
are based on the detection of emissions from the decay of radioactive material and its
daughter products. Most of the methods are based on the detection of alpha particles, some
on detection of beta emission while a few utilize gamma decays. In this research, time
integrated long term radon measurement technique is used to measure radon concentration
in the samples under investigation. For the measurement of radon concentration, we have
used LR-115, Type II plastic track detector and irradiation time is 100 days, from 26th
April 2017 to 3rd August 2017. The annual effective doses due to radon are ranging
from 0.07 ± 0.0341 mSv/yr to 0.33 ± 0.0626 mSv/yr which are lower than 5 mSv/yr,
the annual effective doses fixed for public (ICRP,2007)
Water quality assessment of Ayeyarwady River in Myanmar
Water ManagementCivil Engineering and Geoscience
A low-cost water quality monitoring system for the Ayeyarwady River in Myanmar using a participatory approach
Newly developed mobile phone applications in combination with citizen science are used in different fields of research, such as public health monitoring, environmental monitoring, precipitation monitoring, noise pollution measurement and mapping, earth observation. In this paper, we present a low-cost water quality mobile phone measurement technique combined with sensor and test strips, and reported the weekly-collected data of three years of the Ayeyarwady River system by volunteers at seven locations and compared these results with the measurements collected by the lab technicians. We assessed the quality of the collected data and their reliability based on several indicators, such as data accuracy, consistency, and completeness. In this study, six local governmental staffs and one middle school teacher collected baseline water quality data with high temporal and spatial resolution. The quality of the data collected by volunteers was comparable to the data of the experienced lab technicians for sensor-based measurement of electrical conductivity and transparency. However, the lower accuracy (higher uncertainty range) of the indicator strips made them less useful in the Ayeyarwady with its relatively small water quality variations. We showed that participatory water quality monitoring in Myanmar can be a serious alternative for a more classical water sampling and lab analysis-based monitoring network, particularly as it results in much higher spatial and temporal resolution of water quality information against the very modest investment and running costs. This approach can help solving the invisible water crisis of unknown water quality (changes) in river and lake systems all over the world.Water Resource
Easy to build low-power GPS drifters with local storage and a cellular modem made from off-the-shelf components
Drifters that track their position are important tools in studying the hydrodynamic behavior of rivers. Drifters that can be tracked in real time have so far been rather expensive. Recently, due to the rise of the open-hardware revolution and the associated Arduino ecosystem, both GPS receivers and cellular modems have become available at lower prices to "tinkering scientists", i.e., scientists that like to build their own measurement devices as much as is possible. This article serves two goals. Firstly, we provide detailed instructions on how to build a low-power GPS drifter with local storage and cellular model that we tested in a fieldwork on the confluence of the Chindwin and Ayeyarwady rivers in Myanmar. The device was designed from easily connected off-the-shelf components, allowing construction without a background in electrical engineering. The instructions allow fellow geoscientists to recreate the device. Secondly, we set the following question: has the open-hardware revolution progressed to the point that a low-power GPS drifter that wirelessly transmits its position can be made from open-hardware components by most geoscientists?. We feel this question is relevant and timely as more low-cost open-hardware devices are promoted, but in practice applicability is often restricted to the "tinkering engineer". We argue that because of the plug-and-play nature of the components geoscientists should be able to construct these type of devices. However, to get such devices to operate at low power levels that fieldwork often demands requires detailed (micro)electrical expertise. Water Resource
