Results 201 to 210 of about 1,056 (247)
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Improving the performance of a Publish-Subscribe message broker

2019 IEEE 22nd International Symposium on Real-Time Distributed Computing (ISORC), 2019
The Arrowhead Framework, a SOA-based framework for IoT applications, provides the Event Handler system: a publish/subscribe broker implemented with REST/HTTP(S). However, the existing implementation of the Event Handler suffers from message latency problems that are not acceptable for industrial applications.
Rafael Rocha   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

A performance support systems approach to digital publishing in libraries

Proceedings of the 6th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries, 2006
Electronic performance support tools are used in many workplaces, but digital libraries have not evaluated their potential usefulness. In a pilot project, the Florida State University Libraries developed inexpensive performance support tools for three types of in-house digital publishing. This strategy improved productivity and quality control.
Chuck Thomas, Robert H. McDonald
openaire   +2 more sources

Adapting the influences of publishers to perform news event detection

Journal of Information Science, 2021
Online news outlets have the power to influence public policy issues. To understand the opinions of the people, many government departments check online news outlets to manually detect events that interest people. This process is time-consuming. To promptly respond to public expectations, this research proposes a framework for detecting news events ...
Chun Chieh Chen, Hei-Chia Wang
openaire   +1 more source

Performance Testing of Semantic Publish/Subscribe Systems

2010
Publish/subscribe mechanisms support clients in observing knowledge represented in semantic repositories and responding to knowledge changes. Currently available implementations of semantic publish/subscribe systems differ significantly with respect to performance and functionality.
Martin Murth   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Publishing performance in industrial organization: A reply

Review of Industrial Organization, 1990
We are honored to have such a well-respected economist as William G. Shepherd comment on our work and are grateful to have the opportunity to respond to his concerns. Shepherd has three main points. First, he argues that citations are a more reliable index of research performance than are page counts.
Victor J. Tremblay   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Publish or Procreate: The Effect of Motherhood on Research Performance

We find that graduate mothers suffer penalties of 25 percentage points on their annual output of scientific publications compared to fathers in the first seven years after childbirth. Estimated motherhood penalties are even greater, at 40 percentage points, for researchers who are active in publishing prior to childbirth.
Cairo, Sofie, Tartari, Valentina
openaire   +1 more source

Publishing performance in industrial organization: A comment

Review of Industrial Organization, 1990
In their recent paper, "The Publishing Performance of U.S. Economics Departments in Industrial Organization," Victor J. Tremblay, Carol Horton Tremblay and Byunglak Lee (1989) seek to assess "faculty strength in industrial economics" by analyzing a set of information about "publishing performance." To do this, they tabulate the page totals for authors ...
openaire   +1 more source

Publishing Performance Information: An Illusion of Control?

2008
We live in the age of quantified performance. It is no longer sufficient to believe that a public sector organization does its job well, in general terms; or that the professionals within that organization can be relied upon. We want data that will allow us to judge and compare the behavior of service providers.
Steven Van de Walle, Alasdair Roberts
openaire   +1 more source

The performance of published Dutch stock recommendations

Journal of Banking & Finance, 1990
Abstract The three most widely read Dutch sources of stock recommendations are published weekly. In this paper these weekly recommendations are studied for the period January 1978 until December 1983. Abnormal returns are calculated using the market model as a benchmark.
openaire   +1 more source

Recapturing the musical performance data in Seashore’s published performance scores

Musicae Scientiae, 2015
In the first half of the 20th century, Carl Seashore and colleagues undertook extensive work in performance analysis of a variety of instruments. Their data were embodied in so-called performance scores, which still exist as illustrations of laborious work undertaken by the early pioneers of music performance research and, in their original form, offer
openaire   +1 more source

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