Institution
Aalto University
Education•Espoo, Finland•
About: Aalto University is a education organization based out in Espoo, Finland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Computer science & Context (language use). The organization has 9969 authors who have published 32648 publications receiving 829626 citations. The organization is also known as: TKK & Aalto-korkeakoulu.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the main routes to prepare spherical lignin particles, highlighting aspects associated to their shape and topology as well as performance, are described, and the state of the particles is furthermore compared in terms of their applicability in dry and wet forms.
186 citations
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TL;DR: It is argued that the emoticons in authentic workplace e-mails do not primarily indicate writers' emotions, and it is shown that emoticons function as contextualization cues, which serve to organize interpersonal relations in written interaction.
Abstract: CMC research presents emoticons as visual representations of writers' emotions. We argue that the emoticons in authentic workplace e-mails do not primarily indicate writers' emotions. Rather, they provide information about how an utterance is supposed to be interpreted. We show that emoticons function as contextualization cues, which serve to organize interpersonal relations in written interaction. They serve 3 communicative functions. First, when following signatures, emoticons function as markers of a positive attitude. Second, when following utterances that are intended to be interpreted as humorous, they are joke/irony markers. Third, they are hedges: when following expressive speech acts such as thanks, greetings, etc. they function as strengtheners and when following directives such as requests, corrections, etc. they function as softeners.
186 citations
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23 Jul 2020TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on practical issues such as sample size and missing data and a wide range of goals and techniques, using regression to solve real problems of comparison, estimation, prediction, and causal inference.
Abstract: Most textbooks on regression focus on theory and the simplest of examples. Real statistical problems, however, are complex and subtle. This is not a book about the theory of regression. It is about using regression to solve real problems of comparison, estimation, prediction, and causal inference. Unlike other books, it focuses on practical issues such as sample size and missing data and a wide range of goals and techniques. It jumps right in to methods and computer code you can use immediately. Real examples, real stories from the authors' experience demonstrate what regression can do and its limitations, with practical advice for understanding assumptions and implementing methods for experiments and observational studies. They make a smooth transition to logistic regression and GLM. The emphasis is on computation in R and Stan rather than derivations, with code available online. Graphics and presentation aid understanding of the models and model fitting.
186 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine publications on the internationalization of emerging market firms in fourteen top international management journals in the period of 2000-2010 and use the inductive approach and the qualitative content analysis methodology.
Abstract: During the last decade emerging market firms (EMFs) have increasingly attracted scholarly attention. Yet, the conclusions concerning the nature and the theoretical foundations of EMFs’ international expansion vary greatly thus calling for a critical assessment of the existing theorizing in this field.
We examine publications on the internationalization of EMFs in fourteen top international management (IM) journals in the period of 2000–2010 and use the inductive approach and the qualitative content analysis methodology.
Our analysis shows that the published research can be classified into two groups: macro- and micro-level studies. The former predominantly employ macro-level institutional factors to examine the overall patterns of EMFs’ international expansion, while the latter build on a wider range of approaches, including the resource-based view, network and strategy perspectives to investigate various aspects of EMFs’ internationalization.
The paper identifies a number of theoretical inconsistencies in the existing research that arguably cause ambiguity in findings and suggests future research directions to address these inconsistencies. By doing so the analysis contributes to the central debate in literature concerning whether conventional theories suffice to explain the EMFs’ internationalization or new theoretical approaches are needed.
The analysis illustrates that the research on EMFs’ internationalization can be improved through refined application of a broader range of methodologies such as longitudinal and mixed-method studies. The geographic focus of studies needs to be widened as well. Currently it is clearly biased towards China, while other emerging markets remain under-researched.
185 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine project governance literature and contrast it to general governance literature published outside the domain of project research, and argue that there exists considerable potential for bridging project governance and general governance further.
185 citations
Authors
Showing all 10135 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
John B. Goodenough | 151 | 1064 | 113741 |
Ashok Kumar | 151 | 5654 | 164086 |
Anne Lähteenmäki | 116 | 485 | 81977 |
Kalyanmoy Deb | 112 | 713 | 122802 |
Riitta Hari | 111 | 491 | 43873 |
Robin I. M. Dunbar | 111 | 586 | 47498 |
Andreas Richter | 110 | 769 | 48262 |
Mika Sillanpää | 96 | 1019 | 44260 |
Muhammad Farooq | 92 | 1341 | 37533 |
Ivo Babuška | 90 | 376 | 41465 |
Merja Penttilä | 87 | 303 | 22351 |
Andries Meijerink | 87 | 426 | 29335 |
T. Poutanen | 86 | 120 | 33158 |
Sajal K. Das | 85 | 1124 | 29785 |
Kalle Lyytinen | 84 | 426 | 27708 |