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Institution

Edinburgh Napier University

EducationEdinburgh, United Kingdom
About: Edinburgh Napier University is a education organization based out in Edinburgh, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 2665 authors who have published 6859 publications receiving 175272 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore managers' views on the challenges and opportunities around the talent management pipeline in a range of hospitality and tourism organisations, and suggest practical actions arising from these.
Abstract: Purpose – This paper aims to explore managers' views on the challenges and opportunities around the talent management (TM) pipeline in a range of hospitality and tourism organisations. The paper seeks to focus on drawing out key issues and suggesting practical actions arising from these.Design/methodology/approach – The paper draws primarily on a number of in‐depth interviews with senior managers representing a wide range of sectors in the industry. Managers’ views are summarised and quotes used to illustrate key themes.Findings – Each stage of the TM pipeline is explored and the findings reveal a number of contextual, strategic and operational concerns around the implementation of TM policy and processes. Findings indicated clear commitment towards the value of TM, but revealed that some policy areas were felt to be underdeveloped. Approaches to TM were organisation specific, and driven by internal expertise and available resources. Organisations would fit and tailor their TM approach to their own contex...

80 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that ZnO particles and NP do not have a classical proinflammatory effect on THP1 cells, although they may induce a modest increase in the adhesion molecule CD11b.

80 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
07 May 2016
TL;DR: Results from a qualitative study suggest that a general audience is quickly able to understand complex temporal changes through graph comics, provided with minimal textual annotations and no training.
Abstract: In this paper, we explore graph comics as a medium to communicate changes in dynamic networks. While previous re- search has focused on visualizing dynamic networks for data exploration, we want to see if we can take advantage of the visual expressiveness and familiarity of comics to present and explain temporal changes in networks to an audience. To understand the potential of comics as a storytelling medium, we first created a variety of comics during a 3 month structured design process, involving domain experts from public education and neuroscience. This process led to the definition of 8 design factors for creating graph comics and propose design solutions for each. Results from a qualitative study suggest that a general audience is quickly able understand complex temporal changes through graph comics, provided with minimal textual annotations and no training.

80 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed three issues: the nature of older people's interaction with the transport system by gender; older people’s attitude to travel; and the involvement of older persons as road traffic casualties.

80 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper surveys the state of the art in evolutionary algorithm visualization and describes a new tool called GAVEL, a means to examine in a genetic algorithm how crossover and mutation operations assembled the final result, where each of the alleles came from, and a way to trace the history of user-selected sets of alleles.
Abstract: This paper surveys the state of the art in evolutionary algorithm visualization and describes a new tool called GAVEL. It provides a means to examine in a genetic algorithm (GA) how crossover and mutation operations assembled the final result, where each of the alleles came from, and a way to trace the history of user-selected sets of alleles. A visualization tool of this kind can be very useful in choosing operators and parameters and in analyzing how and, indeed, whether or not a GA works. We describe the new tool and illustrate some of the benefits that can be gained from using it with reference to three different problems: a timetabling problem, a job-shop scheduling problem, and Goldberg and Horn's long-path problem. We also compare the tool to other available visualization tools, pointing out those features which are novel and identifying complementary features in other tools.

80 citations


Authors

Showing all 2727 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
William MacNee12347258989
Richard J. Simpson11385059378
Ken Donaldson10938547072
John Campbell107115056067
Muhammad Imran94305351728
Barbara Rothen-Rutishauser7033917348
Vicki Stone6920425002
Sharon K. Parker6823821089
Matt Nicholl6622415208
John H. Adams6635416169
Darren J. Kelly6525213007
Neil B. McKeown6528119371
Jane K. Hill6214720733
Min Du6132611328
Xiaodong Liu6047414980
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202328
202299
2021687
2020591
2019552
2018393