Institution
City University London
Education•London, United Kingdom•
About: City University London is a education organization based out in London, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 5735 authors who have published 17285 publications receiving 453290 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors track the recent history of personalization at national news websites in the United Kingdom and United States, allowing an analysis to be made of the reasons for and implications of the adoption of this form of adaptive interactivity.
Abstract: This paper tracks the recent history of personalization at national news websites in the United Kingdom and United States, allowing an analysis to be made of the reasons for and implications of the adoption of this form of adaptive interactivity. Using three content surveys conducted over three and a half years, the study records—at an unprecedented level of detail—the range of personalization features offered by contemporary news websites, and demonstrates how news organizations increasingly rely on software algorithms to predict readers’ content preferences. The results also detail how news organizations’ deployment of personalization on mobile devices, and in conjunction with social networking platforms, is still at an early stage. In addressing the under-researched but important—and increasingly prevalent—phenomenon of personalization, this paper contributes to debates on journalism's future funding, transparency, and societal benefits.
167 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the analytic properties of the AdS 5 / CFT 4 Y functions and showed that the TBA equations, including the dressing factor, can be obtained from the Y-system with some additional information on the square-root discontinuities across semi-infinite segments in the complex plane.
167 citations
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TL;DR: It is found that TMT polychronicity has a positive effect on firm performance in the context of dynamic unanalyzable environments and this effect is partially mediated by strategic decision speed and comprehensiveness.
Abstract: This study focuses on polychronicity as a cultural dimension of top management teams (TMTs). TMT polychronicity is the extent to which team members mutually prefer and tend to engage in multiple tasks simultaneously or intermittently instead of one at a time and believe that this is the best way of doing things. We explore the impact of TMT polychronicity on strategic decision speed and comprehensiveness and, subsequently, its effect on new venture financial performance. Contrary to popular time-management principles advocating task prioritization and focused sequential execution, we found that TMT polychronicity has a positive effect on firm performance in the context of dynamic unanalyzable environments. This effect is partially mediated by strategic decision speed and comprehensiveness. Our study contributes to research on strategic leadership by focusing on a novel value-based characteristic of the TMT (polychronicity) and by untangling the decision-making processes that relate TMT characteristics and firm performance. It also contributes to the attention-based view of the firm by positioning polychronicity as a new type of attention structure.
166 citations
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TL;DR: Theoretical and methodological approaches for exploring and analyzing large datasets with spatial and temporal components were presented, discussed and developed at the meeting in Girona, Catalunya which was held on 5 May 2008 one day before AGILE's 11th International Conference on Geographic Information Science.
Abstract: The work presented here represents a selection of the contributions made to a workshop coordinated by the International Cartographic Association (ICA) Commission on Geovisualization and the Association of Geographic Information Laboratories in Europe (AGILE) on the Geovisualization of Dynamics, Movement and Change. Theoretical and methodological approaches for exploring and analyzing large datasets with spatial and temporal components were presented, discussed and developed at the meeting in Girona, Catalunya which was held on 5 May 2008 one day before AGILE’s 11th International Conference on Geographic Information Science.
166 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine whether interorganizational factors influence German biotech firms' propensity to internationalize by forming international research alliances, including dimensions of a firm's embeddedness within its local cluster and within its national research network.
166 citations
Authors
Showing all 5822 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Andrew M. Jones | 103 | 764 | 37253 |
F. Rauscher | 100 | 605 | 36066 |
Thorsten Beck | 99 | 373 | 62708 |
Richard J. K. Taylor | 91 | 1543 | 43893 |
Christopher N. Bowman | 90 | 639 | 38457 |
G. David Batty | 88 | 451 | 23826 |
Xin Zhang | 87 | 1714 | 40102 |
Richard J. Cook | 84 | 571 | 28943 |
Hugh Willmott | 82 | 310 | 26758 |
Scott Reeves | 82 | 441 | 27470 |
Sarah-Jayne Blakemore | 81 | 211 | 29660 |
Mats Alvesson | 78 | 267 | 38248 |
W. John Edmunds | 75 | 252 | 24018 |
Sheng Chen | 71 | 688 | 27847 |
Christopher J. Taylor | 71 | 415 | 30948 |