SELECTION OF SUPPLIERS CONSIDERING THE LEARNING EFFECT AND TECHNOLOGY IMPROVEMENT

Author(s):  
WANZHEN HUANG ◽  
SHANLING LI ◽  
DEVANATH TIRUPATI

In this paper, we develop a model-based approach to examine the trade-offs between short- and long-term supplier contracts. Specifically, we consider learning and technology breakthroughs leading to cost improvements and develop cost models to characterize these effects. A deterministic environment is first considered in which demand can be constant or dynamic and learning effects and technology breakthroughs are dynamic. Then uncertainty in market prices is considered. Interesting managerial insights and strategies in selecting suppliers are discussed based on the analytical results of the models.

2021 ◽  
pp. 452-468
Author(s):  
Mitch Brown ◽  
Donald F. Sacco ◽  
Kaitlyn Boykin ◽  
Kelsey Drea ◽  
Alicia Macchione

This chapter explains that within the corpus of research showing the extent to which cues to physical attractiveness connote individuals’ specific value as a mate, findings have begun to recognize how these cues specifically apply to inferring parental abilities. Namely, this research suggests some physical features that were likely selected due to their connotations of heritable fitness may dually implicate a person as an especially effective parent. Such work additionally demonstrates the instances in which features not selected for their connotation of what we typically consider heritable fitness (i.e., adiposity) become desirable while providing additional evidence for the trade-offs in selecting short- and long-term mates. This selection of adiposity further clarified what is actually meant when researchers discuss selecting for good genes. That is, individuals could be inferring parental abilities through adiposity, thus leading individuals to select mates with higher levels for a long-term context given that connotation.


2012 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 44-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Kernaghan ◽  
A C Duncan ◽  
G A McKay

Hypertensive disorders in pregnancy are common and can occur as a result of pre-existing hypertension or as new onset hypertension usually in the second half of pregnancy. In either situation there is potential for considerable perinatal and maternal morbidity and mortality. This review article aims to compare therapeutic options outlined in a selection of national guidelines and to look in more detail at the most commonly prescribed drugs – labetalol, methyldopa and nifedipine – with respect to their pharmacology and the evidence for their use in pregnancy. We will also consider the rationale for identifying and treating hypertension in pregnancy and the effect this can have on short- and long-term maternal and neonatal outcomes.


Author(s):  
Wytze Sloterdijk ◽  
Martin Hommes ◽  
Roelof Coster ◽  
Troy Rovella ◽  
Sarah Herbison

As part of Pacific Gas and Electric Company’s (PG&E) on-going commitment to public safety, the company has begun a comprehensive engineering validation of its gas transmission facilities that will ultimately support the reconfirmation of maximum allowable operating pressure (MAOP) for these assets. In addition to 6,750 miles of line pipe, PG&E’s gas transmission system contains over 500 station facilities. Since this set of facilities is not only large but diverse, and the validation effort for these facilities is expected to be an extensive, multi-year process, a methodology for the prioritization of the facilities needed to be developed to facilitate planning of the process for the efficient mitigation of risk. As a result, DNV GL was retained to develop and implement a risk-based prioritization methodology to prioritize PG&E’s gas transmission facilities for the engineering validation and MAOP reconfirmation effort. Ultimately, a weighted multiple criteria decision analysis (MCDA) approach was selected and implemented to generate the prioritization. This MCDA approach consisted of the selection of relevant criteria (threats) and the weighting of these criteria according to their relative significance to PG&E’s facilities. Relevant criteria selected for inclusion in the analysis include factors that are important in order to assess both the short- and long-term integrity of the facility as a whole as well as the integrity of features for which design records cannot be located. The criteria selected encompass stable threats, time-dependent threats, as well as environmental impact. Enormous amounts of data related to design, operations, maintenance history and meteorological and seismic activity in addition to other environmental data were evaluated with this newly developed methodology to assess the relative risks of the facilities. Pilot field visits were performed to validate the selection of the various criteria and to confirm the outcome of the analysis. The novelty of this approach lies in the prioritization of facilities in a coherent risk-based manner. The described approach can be used by operators of oil and gas facilities, either upstream, midstream or downstream.


2010 ◽  
Vol 338 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 159-169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberta Gentile ◽  
Bernard Vanlauwe ◽  
Pauline Chivenge ◽  
Johan Six

2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Claesson

AbstractMaritime cultural heritage is made up of finite and nonrenewable cultural resources including coastal or submerged prehistoric and indigenous archaeological sites and landscapes, historic waterfront structures, the remnants of seagoing vessels, and the maritime traditions and lifeways of the past and present. To date, evaluative tools used to assess the social and economic “value” of this heritage are extremely limited, the lack of which often results in the loss of maritime cultural resources and unrealized socioeconomic opportunities. Market and nonmarket valuations, derived from ecological economics and ecosystem assessments, are viable techniques that may be integrated into existing U.S. environmental and historic preservation regulatory procedures to support resource significance determinations. In doing so, decision-making regarding maritime cultural heritage can include assessments of the short- and long-term trade-offs of human actions, and can examine the socioeconomic costs and benefits of heritage conservation projects.


1981 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Terry F. Lehnhoff ◽  
K. Thirumalai ◽  
Alan D. Krug

The Columbia River basalts, which underlie a large portion of the Pacific Northwest of the United States of America, are being investigated as one of the candidate media for a nuclear waste repository. The Basalt Waste Isolation Project (BWIP) of Rockwell Hanford Operations (Rockwell) is conducting these investigations for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). Since the inception of the program in 1976, a number of studies have led to the selection of a reference repository location and the start of construction of an exploratory shaft.1-3


in education ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie Rainer Dangel

This review of research (1990 to 2009) on constructivist teacher education synthesizes a growing but fragmented body of research and links it to practice in teacher education; it provides a guide for future research, program development, and policy and practice development which is consistent with empirical evidence.  It includes a selection of 27 studies on preservice efforts; efforts which include programs, courses, and field experiences.  First, an analysis of the research suggests a variety of effects from both short- and long-term experiences.  Effects are identified in two categories: (a) conceptual understandings (with three subcategories: understanding of content, pedagogy, and the self as learner) and (b) classroom practice.  Then, based on the findings, six mediatory experiences are suggested that facilitate preservice teachers’ growth.  Finally, the studies are assessed using a framework (Darling Hammond, 2006) to determine gaps in the research. Keywords: constructivism; Teacher Education; preservice teachers


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kelly Zach ◽  
Julio A. Gonzalez-Sotomayor

Inadequate management of acute postoperative pain increases morbidity and mortality. Poorly controlled pain results in delayed hospital discharge and may lead to the development of chronic pain. Current evidence supports the implementation of a multimodal analgesic regimen, where different pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic interventions are used. The selection of the different components of this multimodal analgesic approach should consider their potential benefits and limitations, as well as the unique patient characteristics and the surgical procedure. It is the responsibility of the perioperative health care provider to formulate an optimal pain management strategy to ultimately enhance patient satisfaction and improve short- and long-term outcomes.


CNS Spectrums ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 14 (S12) ◽  
pp. 8-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence D. Ginsberg

AbstractDespite significant progress in the development of antidepressant therapies, tolerability remains an important factor associated with the selection of appropriate antidepressant treatment. Side effects commonly reported by depressed patients taking antidepressants include weight gain, sexual dysfunction, and gastrointestinal effects. Tolerability issues associated with antidepressants can negatively impact treatment outcomes for patients with major depressive disorder. In addition, a drug's tolerability profile substantially influences a physician's choice of specific antidepressant therapy. Despite the availability of many antidepressants, empirical clinical evidence to guide physicians in making the best choice is limited and not always clear. Thus, it is key for clinicians to understand the short- and long-term outcomes and side effect profiles of the available antidepressants.


2017 ◽  
Vol 123 (4) ◽  
pp. 942-950 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sabine L. Laguë

High altitude is physiologically challenging for vertebrate life for many reasons, including hypoxia (low environmental oxygen); yet, many birds thrive at altitude. Compared with mammals, birds have additional enhancements to their oxygen transport cascade, the conceptual series of steps responsible for acquiring oxygen from the environment and transporting it to the mitochondria. These adaptations have allowed them to inhabit a number of high-altitude regions. Waterfowl are a taxon prolific at altitude. This minireview explores the physiological responses of high-altitude waterfowl (geese and ducks), comparing the strategies of lifelong high-altitude residents to those of transient high-altitude performers, providing insight into how birds champion high-altitude life. In particular, this review highlights and contrasts the physiological hypoxia responses of bar-headed geese ( Anser indicus), birds that migrate biannually through the Himalayas (4,500–6,500 m), and Andean geese ( Chloephaga melanoptera), lifelong residents of the Andes (4,000–5,500 m). These two species exhibit markedly different ventilatory and cardiovascular strategies for coping with hypoxia: bar-headed geese robustly increase convective oxygen transport elements (i.e., heart rate and total ventilation) whereas Andean geese rely predominantly on enhancements that are likely morphological in origin (i.e., increases in lung oxygen diffusion and cardiac stroke volume). The minireview compares the short- and long-term cardiovascular and ventilatory trade-offs of these different physiological strategies and offers hypotheses surrounding their origins. It also draws parallels to high-altitude human physiology and research, and identifies a number of areas of further research. The field of high-altitude avian physiology offers a unique and broadly applicable insight into physiological enhancements in hypoxia.


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