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: Population & Carbon nanotube. The organization has 9969 authors who have published 32648 publications receiving 829626 citations. The organization is also known as: TKK & Aalto-korkeakoulu.
Topics: Population, Carbon nanotube, Cellulose, Graphene, Thin film
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors extended the different conceptualizations of corporate responsibility and elaborated both the financial and the societal outcomes of different types of CR, and pointed out that while the majority of CR research conducted within business studies concentrates on the financial outcomes for the firm, the societal outcome of CR are left largely unexplored.
Abstract: This article argues that previous research on the outcomes of corporate responsibility should be refined in two ways. First, although there is abundant research that addresses the link between corporate responsibility (CR) and financial performance, hardly any studies scrutinize whether the type of corporate responsibility makes a difference to this link. Second, while the majority of CR research conducted within business studies concentrates on the financial outcomes for the firm, the societal outcomes of CR are left largely unexplored. To tackle these two deficiencies, this article extends the different conceptualizations of corporate responsibility and elaborates both the financial and the societal outcomes of different types of CR.
305 citations
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TL;DR: The authors examined the complex power implications of language policy decisions by looking at three levels of analysis: episodic social interaction, identity/subjectivity construction, and reconstruction of structures of domination.
Abstract: We argue in this paper that corporate language policies have significant power implications that are easily overlooked. By drawing on previous work on power in organizations (Clegg, 1989), we examine the complex power implications of language policy decisions by looking at three levels of analysis: episodic social interaction, identity/subjectivity construction, and reconstruction of structures of domination. In our empirical analysis, we focus on the power implications of the choice of Swedish as the corporate language in the case of the recent banking sector merger between the Finnish Merita and the Swedish Nordbanken. Our findings show how language skills become empowering or disempowering resources in organizational communication, how these skills are associated with professional competence, and how this leads to the creation of new social networks. The case also illustrates how language skills are an essential element in the construction of international confrontation, lead to a construction of superiority and inferiority, and also reproduce post-colonial identities in the merging bank. Finally, we also point out how such policies ultimately lead to the reification of post-colonial and neo-colonial structures of domination in multinational corporations.
304 citations
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TL;DR: It is demonstrated that mixed MoS2/MoSe 2/MoTe2 compounds are thermodynamically stable at room temperature, so that such materials can be manufactured using chemical-vapor deposition technique or exfoliated from the bulk mixed materials.
Abstract: Using density-functional theory calculations, we study the stability and electronic properties of single layers of mixed transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), such as MoS2xSe2(1–x), which can be referred to as two-dimensional (2D) random alloys. We demonstrate that mixed MoS2/MoSe2/MoTe2 compounds are thermodynamically stable at room temperature, so that such materials can be manufactured using chemical-vapor deposition technique or exfoliated from the bulk mixed materials. By applying the effective band structure approach, we further study the electronic structure of the mixed 2D compounds and show that general features of the band structures are similar to those of their binary constituents. The direct gap in these materials can continuously be tuned, pointing toward possible applications of 2D TMD alloys in photonics.
304 citations
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TL;DR: It is demonstrated that species-specific vocalizations in rhesus monkeys activate preferentially the auditory ventral stream, and in particular areas of the antero-lateral belt and parabelt.
Abstract: Using functional magnetic resonance imaging in awake behaving monkeys we investigated how species-specific vocalizations are represented in auditory and auditory-related regions of the macaque brain. We found clusters of active voxels along the ascending auditory pathway that responded to various types of complex sounds: inferior colliculus (IC), medial geniculate nucleus (MGN), auditory core, belt, and parabelt cortex, and other parts of the superior temporal gyrus (STG) and sulcus (STS). Regions sensitive to monkey calls were most prevalent in the anterior STG, but some clusters were also found in frontal and parietal cortex on the basis of comparisons between responses to calls and environmental sounds. Surprisingly, we found that spectrotemporal control sounds derived from the monkey calls (“scrambled calls”) also activated the parietal and frontal regions. Taken together, our results demonstrate that species-specific vocalizations in rhesus monkeys activate preferentially the auditory ventral stream, and in particular areas of the antero-lateral belt and parabelt.
304 citations
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TL;DR: A new paradigm for the design of perfect reflectors based on energy surface channeling is introduced, offering a versatile design method applicable to other scenarios, such as focusing reflectors, surface wave manipulations, or metasurface holograms, extendable to other frequencies.
Abstract: The use of the generalized Snell's law opens wide possibilities for the manipulation of transmitted and reflected wavefronts. However, known structures designed to shape reflection wavefronts suffer from significant parasitic reflections in undesired directions. We explore the limitations of the existing solutions for the design of passive planar reflectors and demonstrate that strongly nonlocal response is required for perfect performance. A new paradigm for the design of perfect reflectors based on energy surface channeling is introduced. We realize and experimentally verify a perfect design of an anomalously reflective surface using an array of rectangular metal patches backed by a metallic plate. This conceptually new mechanism for wavefront manipulation allows the design of thin perfect reflectors, offering a versatile design method applicable to other scenarios, such as focusing reflectors, surface wave manipulations, or metasurface holograms, extendable to other frequencies.
303 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 |