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Journal ArticleDOI

Business Cycles: A Theoretical, Historical, and Statistical Analysis of the Capitalist Process.

Oskar Morgenstern, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1940 - 
- Vol. 35, Iss: 210, pp 423
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This article is published in Journal of the American Statistical Association.The article was published on 1940-06-01. It has received 1302 citations till now.

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The voyage of the beagle in innovation systems land : explorations on sectors, innovation, heterogeneity and selection

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used exploratory factor analysis on micro data from the third Community Innovation Survey in 13 countries, identifying four factors that can be interpreted as research, user, external and production ingredients of innovation.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Internet of Things and Co-creation of Value

TL;DR: It is proposed that value creation occurs in different layers that take advantage of the development of the Internet of Things, and the three parts are based on manufacturing, supporting and co-creative behavior of things.
Journal ArticleDOI

Digital technologies, innovation, and skills: emerging trajectories and challenges

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a new set of stylized facts to better map the main future trajectories of digital technologies, their adoption, use, and recombination in organizations, to improve our understanding of their impact on productivity, employment and inequality.

Tourism capitalism and island urbanization: tourist accommodation diffusion in the Balearics, 1936-2010.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyze the diffusion of tourist accommodations as the main vehicle for urbanization in the Balearic Islands since the 1950s and find that the tourism production of space has gone in parallel to economic cycles with particular urban expressions related to the different regimes of accumulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Localized Competition and the Aggregation of Plant-Level Increasing Returns: Blast Furnaces, 1929-1935

TL;DR: The authors found that plant-level relationships do aggregate in Depression-era blast furnace operations despite the presence of very substantial interplant heterogeneity, the most common economic cause of nonaggregability.
References
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The dynamics of innovation: from National Systems and

TL;DR: In this paper, the Triple Helix of university-industry-government relations is compared with alternative models for explaining the current research system in its social contexts, where the institutional layer can be considered as the retention mechanism of a developing system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Causation and Effectuation: Toward a Theoretical Shift from Economic Inevitability to Entrepreneurial Contingency

TL;DR: In economics and management theories, scholars have traditionally assumed the existence of artifacts such as firms/organizations and markets as mentioned in this paper, and they argue that an explanation for the creation of such artifacts requires the notion of effectuation.
Journal ArticleDOI

A critical look at technological innovation typology and innovativeness terminology: a literature review

TL;DR: A review of the literature from the marketing, engineering, and new product development disciplines attempts to put some clarity and continuity to the use of these terms as mentioned in this paper, showing that it is important to consider both a marketing and technological perspective as well as a macro-level and micro-level perspective when identifying innovations.
BookDOI

Innovation: A Guide to the Literature

TL;DR: Innovation is not a new phenomenon as discussed by the authors, it is as old as mankind itself and it is argued that no single discipline deals with all aspects of innovation, and that in order to get a comprehensive overview of the role played by innovation in social and economic change, a cross-disciplinary perspective is a must.
Posted Content

The Adaptive Markets Hypothesis: Market Efficiency from an Evolutionary Perspective

TL;DR: The Adaptive Markets Hypothesis as discussed by the authors proposes a new framework that reconciles market efficiency with behavioral alternatives by applying the principles of evolution - competition, adaptation, and natural selection - to financial interactions.