Search results for "Innovation"

showing 10 items of 1927 documents

Adaptive and Generative Learning: Implications from Complexity Theories

2008

One of the most important classical typologies within the organizational learning literature is the distinction between adaptive and generative learning. However, the processes of these types of learning, particularly the latter, have not been widely analyzed and incorporated into the organizational learning process. This paper puts forward a new understanding of adaptive and generative learning within organizations, grounded in some ideas from complexity theories: mainly self-organization and implicate order. Adaptive learning involves any improvement or development of the explicate order through a process of self-organization. Self-organization is a self-referential process characterized …

Cognitive scienceCooperative learningbusiness.industryComputer scienceStrategy and ManagementAlgorithmic learning theoryGeneral Decision SciencesExperiential learningLearning sciencesGenerative modelManagement of Technology and InnovationOrganizational learningAdaptive learningbusinessAction learningInternational Journal of Management Reviews
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Instrument transfer as knowledge transfer in neurophysiology: François Magendie's (1783-1855) early attempts to measure cerebrospinal fluid pressure.

2007

Francois Magendie's (1783-1855) experimental model for measuring blood pressure in animals, which he developed in 1838, had a major impact on French physiology in the nineteenth century, especially upon Etienne-Jules Marey (1830-1904) in Paris. In due course it was also adopted by other European investigators, such as the Leipzig physiologist Carl Ludwig (1816-1895), and by clinicians who developed it into a major measuring tool. Historians of science, however, have paid hardly any attention to Magendie's further laboratory investigations conducted with the assistance of Jean-Louis Marie Poiseuille's (1799-1869) sphygmometre (blood pressure meter). After having used the apparatus to conduct…

Cognitive scienceExperimental modelbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceNeurophysiologyHistory 19th CenturyNeurophysiologyVentricular systemHistory 18th CenturyCsf flowKnowledgeHistory and Philosophy of ScienceCerebrospinal Fluid PressureMedicineHumansNeurology (clinical)Cerebrospinal fluid pressureDiffusion of InnovationbusinessNeuroscienceKnowledge transferBrain functionIntracranial pressureCerebrospinal FluidJournal of the history of the neurosciences
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Cloning and training collective intelligence with generative adversarial networks

2021

Industry 4.0 and highly automated critical infrastructure can be seen as cyber‐physical‐social systems controlled by the Collective Intelligence. Such systems are essential for the functioning of the society and economy. On one hand, they have flexible infrastructure of heterogeneous systems and assets. On the other hand, they are social systems, which include collaborating humans and artificial decision makers. Such (human plus machine) resources must be pre‐trained to perform their mission with high efficiency. Both human and machine learning approaches must be bridged to enable such training. The importance of these systems requires the anticipation of the potential and previously unknow…

Cognitive scienceTechnological innovations. AutomationCloning (programming)Computer scienceHD45-45.2Collective intelligenceManufacturestekoälyTraining (civil)Industrial and Manufacturing EngineeringTS1-2301Computer Science ApplicationsAdversarial systemkoneoppiminenArtificial IntelligenceHardware and Architectureautomaatiojärjestelmätihminen-konejärjestelmätälytekniikkaGenerative grammarIET Collaborative Intelligent Manufacturing
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Factors in the global assimilation of collaborative information technologies: an exploratory investigation in five regions

2008

The diffusion of innovation theory is deployed to investigate the global assimilation of collaborative information technologies (CITs). Based on the concepts of IT acquisition and utilization, an assimilation framework is presented to highlight four states (limited, focused, lagging, and pervasive) that capture the assimilation of conferencing and groupware CITs. Data collected from 538 organizations in the United States, Australia, Hong Kong, Norway, and Switzerland are aggregated and analyzed to explore assimilation patterns and the influence of decision-making pattern, functional integration, promotion of collaboration, organization size, and IT function size on the assimilation of CITs.…

Collaborative softwareInformation Systems and ManagementKnowledge managementDiffusion of innovation theory10009 Department of Informaticsbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectInformation technologyAssimilation (biology)1803 Management Science and Operations Research000 Computer science knowledge & systemsManagement Science and Operations ResearchComputer Science ApplicationsManagement Information Systems1404 Management Information SystemsPromotion (rank)Geography1706 Computer Science Applications1802 Information Systems and ManagementbusinessLaggingFunction (engineering)media_common
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Promotion of service industries by means of entry restriction: the case of operators in the slot machine industry

2009

This article examines the effects of government policy on entry restriction for firms within a specific market of the Spanish gambling industry. Spain is an ideal economic region for studying this topic, as it allows for the analysis of quasi-identical populations exposed to different regulatory regimes. In Spain, gaming legislation is determined at the autonomous community level (state level), where differences across states within a single country are of particular interest. This paper analyses the performance of slot machine operators in three autonomous communities, each with different policies with regard to entry restriction. Fifty-eight firms were analysed using multiple regression, …

Community levelbusiness.industryStrategy and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subjectPublic policyLegislationMarket regulationPromotion (rank)Slot machineState (polity)Management of Technology and InnovationEconomicsMarketingbusinessTertiary sector of the economyIndustrial organizationmedia_commonThe Service Industries Journal
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Taking historical embeddedness seriously : Three historical approaches to advance strategy process and practice research

2016

International audience; Despite the proliferation of strategy process and practice research, we lack understanding of the historical embeddedness of strategic processes and practices. In this paper, we present three historical approaches with the potential to remedy this deficiency. First, realist history can contribute to a better understanding of the historical embeddedness of strategic processes; in particular, comparative historical analysis can explicate the historical conditions, mechanisms, and causality in strategic processes. Second, interpretative history can add to our knowledge of the historical embeddedness of strategic practices, and microhistory can specifically help to under…

Comparative historyEmbeddednessProcess (engineering)Strategy and ManagementAgency (philosophy)Microhistorystrategy processPractice research060104 historyPower (social and political)discourse theorycomparative historystrategy implementationpractise theoryManagement of Technology and Innovation0502 economics and business0601 history and archaeologyta615processSociologySocial sciencegenealogymicrohistory[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Financeta51205 social sciences06 humanities and the arts[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceGeneral Business Management and AccountingCausalitypracticestrategy-as-practiceEpistemologyembeddedness[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administrationdiscoursestrategy[SHS.GESTION] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration050203 business & management
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THE SURVIVAL OF DIFFERENTIATED PRODUCTS: AN APPLICATION TO THE UK AUTOMOBILE MARKET, 1971-2002*

2009

We investigate how competition affected the survival of products in the UK automobile market between 1971 and 2002. We find, after using a host of controls to account for product characteristics and changes in market structure, that (i) within and between firm spatial competition significantly reduces the life of a model, (ii) initial product differentiation and variant proliferation obviate competition, and (iii) product innovation significantly extends model survival.

Competition (economics)Economics and EconometricsMarket structureProduct innovationAutomobile marketEconomicsProduct differentiationProduct characteristicsIndustrial organizationThe Manchester School
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Patents, Competition, and Firms’ Innovation Incentives

2014

This paper presents fresh evidence on the interaction between industrial property rights (patents) and competition, and their joint effect on firms’ innovation. We use panel data of Spanish manufacturing firms for 1990–2006, as well as external information on European Patent Office and US Patent Office patent counts. We construct a new synthetic measure of competition and estimate the impact of patents on this measure at the industry level. Then, the effect of industry-wide competition and patenting on firms’ innovation is estimated at the firm level. Our results suggest that patents reduce the level of competition in the industry, whereas the effect of competition on innovation varies with…

Competition (economics)IncentivePatent officeManagement of Technology and InnovationEconomicsIndustrial propertyManufacturing firmsEuropean patent officeGeneral Business Management and AccountingIndustrial organizationPanel dataIndustry and Innovation
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Spatial Competition in Quality

2011

We develop a model of vertical innovation in which firms incur a market entry cost and position themselves in the quality space. Once established, firms compete monopolistically, selling to consumers with heterogeneous tastes for quality. We establish the general existence and conditional uniqueness of the pricing game in such vertically differentiated markets with a potentially large number of active firms. Turning to firms’ entry decisions, exogenously growing productivities induce firms to enter the market sequentially at the top end of the quality spectrum. We spell out the conditions under which the entry problem is replicated over time so that each new entrant improves incumbent quali…

Competition (economics)MicroeconomicsEntry costCommerceQuality spacemedia_common.quotation_subjectEconomicsPosition (finance)Quality (business)UniquenessVertical innovationmedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Institutional Path Dependence in Competitive Dynamics: The Case of Paper Industries in Finland and the USA

2016

Prior research on competitive dynamics has failed to offer tools to understand distorted patterns of competition that emerge from distinct institutional and historical contexts. Our analysis suggests that a joint effect of institutional rules, governance structures, and shared cognition plays a pivotal role in firm-level competitive behavior and capability development. We show how globally significant market positions can result from specific institutional arrangements between firms and governments, especially if coupled with interfirm contractual commitments. Our results call for more attention to these interfirm commitments that are built on formal rules and governmental support, but whos…

Competitive dynamicsStrategy and ManagementCorporate governance05 social sciencesManagement Science and Operations ResearchCompetition (economics)Competitive behaviorManagement of Technology and Innovation0502 economics and businessJoint (building)Business050207 economicsBusiness and International ManagementEconomic systemShared cognition050203 business & managementPath dependenceManagerial and Decision Economics
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