Institution
Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Education•Hong Kong, China•
About: Hong Kong Polytechnic University is a education organization based out in Hong Kong, China. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Tourism & Population. The organization has 29633 authors who have published 72136 publications receiving 1956312 citations. The organization is also known as: HKPU & PolyU.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Experts have reached a consensus on the admission of patients with severe mental illness during the CO VID-19 outbreak in mental health institutions, and the rapid transmission of the COVID-19 has emerged to mount a serious challenge to the mental health service in China.
Abstract: The novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has been rapidly transmitted in China, Macau, Hong Kong, and other Asian and European counterparts. This COVID-19 epidemic has aroused increasing attention nationwide. Patients, health professionals, and the general public are under insurmountable psychological pressure which may lead to various psychological problems, such as anxiety, fear, depression, and insomnia. Psychological crisis intervention plays a pivotal role in the overall deployment of the disease control. The National Health Commission of China has summoned a call for emergency psychological crisis intervention and thus, various mental health associations and organizations have established expert teams to compile guidelines and public health educational articles/videos for mental health professionals and the general public alongside with online mental health services. In addition, mental health professionals and expert groups are stationed in designated isolation hospitals to provide on-site services. Experts have reached a consensus on the admission of patients with severe mental illness during the COVID-19 outbreak in mental health institutions. Nevertheless, the rapid transmission of the COVID-19 has emerged to mount a serious challenge to the mental health service in China.
771 citations
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TL;DR: Li et al. as discussed by the authors investigated whether government intervention, as another form of friction, distorts firms' investment behavior and leads to investment inefficiency and found that political connections significantly reduce investment efficiency in SOEs.
768 citations
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TL;DR: The results show that IS service quality is the most influential variable in this model (followed by information quality and system quality, thus highlighting the importance of IS servicequality for organizational performance), and the structural equation model exhibits a good fit with the observed data.
Abstract: Increased organizational dependence on information systems drives management attention towards improving information systems' quality. A recent survey shows that ''Improve IT quality'' is one of the top concerns facing IT executives. As IT quality is a multidimensional measure, it is important to determine what aspects of IT quality are critical to organizations to help Chief Information Officers (CIOs) to devise effective IT quality improvement strategies. In this research, we model the relationship between information systems' (IS) quality and organizational impact. We hypothesize greater organizational impact in situations in which system quality, information quality and service quality are high. We also hypothesize a positive relationship between system quality and information quality. We test our hypotheses using survey data. Our structural equation model exhibits a good fit with the observed data. Our results show that IS service quality is the most influential variable in this model (followed by information quality and system quality), thus highlighting the importance of IS service quality for organizational performance. This paper contributes theoretically to IS success models through the system quality-to-information quality and IS quality-to-organizational impact links. Implications of our results for practice and research are discussed.
767 citations
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TL;DR: The negative abnormal capital investment/return relation is stronger for firms that have greater investment discretion, i.e., firms with higher cash flows and lower debt ratios, and is significant only in time periods when hostile takeovers were less prevalent as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: Firms that substantially increase capital investments subsequently achieve negative benchmark-adjusted returns. The negative abnormal capital investment/return relation is shown to be stronger for firms that have greater investment discretion, i.e., firms with higher cash flows and lower debt ratios, and is shown to be significant only in time periods when hostile takeovers were less prevalent. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that investors tend to underreact to the empire building implications of increased investment expenditures. Although firms that increase capital investments tend to have high past returns and often issue equity, the negative abnormal capital investment/return relation is independent of the previously documented long-term return reversal and secondary equity issue anomalies.
761 citations
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TL;DR: A novel probabilistic retrieval model forms a basis to interpret the TF-IDF term weights as making relevance decisions, and it is shown that the term-frequency factor of the ranking formula can be rendered into different term- frequency factors of existing retrieval systems.
Abstract: A novel probabilistic retrieval model is presented It forms a basis to interpret the TF-IDF term weights as making relevance decisions It simulates the local relevance decision-making for every location of a document, and combines all of these “local” relevance decisions as the “document-wide” relevance decision for the document The significance of interpreting TF-IDF in this way is the potential to: (1) establish a unifying perspective about information retrieval as relevance decision-making; and (2) develop advanced TF-IDF-related term weights for future elaborate retrieval models Our novel retrieval model is simplified to a basic ranking formula that directly corresponds to the TF-IDF term weights In general, we show that the term-frequency factor of the ranking formula can be rendered into different term-frequency factors of existing retrieval systems In the basic ranking formula, the remaining quantity - log p(r¯|t ∈ d) is interpreted as the probability of randomly picking a nonrelevant usage (denoted by r¯) of term t Mathematically, we show that this quantity can be approximated by the inverse document-frequency (IDF) Empirically, we show that this quantity is related to IDF, using four reference TREC ad hoc retrieval data collections
752 citations
Authors
Showing all 30115 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Jing Wang | 184 | 4046 | 202769 |
Xiang Zhang | 154 | 1733 | 117576 |
Wei Zheng | 151 | 1929 | 120209 |
Rui Zhang | 151 | 2625 | 107917 |
Jian Yang | 142 | 1818 | 111166 |
Joseph Lau | 140 | 1048 | 99305 |
Yu Huang | 136 | 1492 | 89209 |
Dacheng Tao | 133 | 1362 | 68263 |
Chuan He | 130 | 584 | 66438 |
Lei Zhang | 130 | 2312 | 86950 |
Ming-Hsuan Yang | 127 | 635 | 75091 |
Chao Zhang | 127 | 3119 | 84711 |
Yuri S. Kivshar | 126 | 1845 | 79415 |
Bin Wang | 126 | 2226 | 74364 |
Chi-Ming Che | 121 | 1305 | 62800 |