scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Indian Institute of Management Calcutta

EducationKolkata, India
About: Indian Institute of Management Calcutta is a education organization based out in Kolkata, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Supply chain & Emerging markets. The organization has 415 authors who have published 1354 publications receiving 21725 citations. The organization is also known as: IIMC & IIM Calcutta.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the adjusted likelihood ratio (ALR) test is shown to have the same power properties as the conditional likelihood ratio test up to the third order of comparison, and an optimum property of the ALR test in terms of second-order local maximinity follows.
Abstract: SUMMARY Under contiguous alternatives the adjusted likelihood ratio (ALR) test is seen to have the same power properties as the conditional likelihood ratio test up to the third order of comparison. In particular, an optimum property of the ALR test in terms of second-order local maximinity follows. It is also seen that the ALR statistic admits a Bartlett-type adjustment.

11 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
04 Jan 2016
TL;DR: This paper proposes a knowledge sharing based approach for dynamic assessment of post disaster resource needs using a smart-phone based delay tolerant network (DTN) to bridging the gap in perception about actual resource needs.
Abstract: In a post disaster scenario, assessment of resource needs is indeed challenging because needs are constantly changing and supplies trickle in at an uncertain rate. Moreover, information about resource needs of far-flung areas get rarely permeated owing to the disruption of cellular and other communication infrastructure, leading to a huge gap in perception about the actual needs in those areas. Therefore, a dynamic need assessment mechanism is essential to stay abreast of the actual situation. Movements of volunteers and relief workers are governed by two dominant characteristics of human mobility - spatial locality and spatial regularity. In this paper, we make use of such mobility characteristics to propose a knowledge sharing based approach for dynamic assessment of post disaster resource needs using a smart-phone based delay tolerant network (DTN). The proposed technique caters to the objective of bridging the gap in perception about actual resource needs.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The literature on decision biases in the newsvendor model assumes classical version of the problem where the distribution of random demand is known, and this context is decision-making under risk.
Abstract: The literature on decision biases in the newsvendor model assumes classical version of the problem where the distribution of random demand is known. This context is decision-making under risk. In m...

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the implications of introducing nontraded intermediate inputs into the standard Swedish-Samuelson framework and study the modifications, if any, that will be necessary for the modifications.
Abstract: Since Bhagwati 1 pointed to the exclusion of intermediate goods as the major limitation of conventional trade theory, a large body of literature has developed to trace out the implications of introducing intermediate goods. However, by looking into the existing literature, one will find that intermediate inputs have always been introduced in either of two ways, both of which preserve the essential features of a two-commodity production model. Some (e.g., Jones 2) have just added a domestically nonproduced imported input to the usual two(tradeable) -product-two-factor model, whereas others (e.g., Kemp 3 and Vanek 4) have introduced intermediate inputs by permitting interindustry flows between the two traded-good industries. But no writer so far seems to have studied the implications of the existence of nontraded intermediate goods for the conventional trade theory results. Although, in recent years, the validity (and necessary modifications) of some of these results in the presence of a nontraded sector has been investigated by some writers (e.g., Komiya 5 and Kemp,6) they have always assumed the nontradeable to be a "pure" final commodity. The major purpose of the present paper is to investigate the implications of introducing nontraded intermediate inputs into the standard Swedish-Samuelson framework. To be more specific, we shall study the modifications, if any, that will be necessary for the

11 citations


Authors

Showing all 426 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Russell W. Belk7635139909
Vishal Gupta473879974
Sankaran Venkataraman327519911
Subrata Mitra322193332
Eiji Oki325885995
Indranil Bose30973629
Pradip K. Srimani302682889
Rahul Mukerjee302063507
Ruby Roy Dholakia291025158
Per Skålén25572763
Somprakash Bandyopadhyay231111764
Debashis Saha221812615
Haritha Saranga19421523
Janat Shah19521767
Rohit Varman18461387
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Copenhagen Business School
9.6K papers, 341.8K citations

84% related

Vienna University of Economics and Business
6.6K papers, 176.4K citations

84% related

University of Mannheim
12.9K papers, 446.5K citations

83% related

Athens University of Economics and Business
6.9K papers, 177.8K citations

83% related

Singapore Management University
8.3K papers, 239.6K citations

82% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20233
202216
202189
202080
201998
201873