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Coopetition and Complexity : Exploring a Coopetitive Relationship with ComplexityWennberg, Andreas, Persson, Emil January 2011 (has links)
Cooperation have in previous research been seen as a negative impact on competition and vice versa. This thesis is building on a concept called coopetition in which cooperation and competition is studied simultaneously. Coopetition have been studied in terms of the level of cooperation and competition. However, we found a possible link between coopetition and complexity in previous literature. Thus, the purpose of this study is to explore whether complexity can develop an understanding for what organizations within a company group cooperate and compete about as well what they want to cooperate and compete about. The four main cornerstones in the theoretical frame of reference is cooperation, competition, coopetition and complexity. We begin by defining these concepts, describing previous research and discuss various factors of the concepts. Finally, we further develop the possible link between coopetition and complexity. For reaching our purpose we study a company group in the travel industry. We are conducting unstructured interviews with people at leading positions in the company group. Our analysis is done by thematic network analysis in six steps. The empirical data is coded, basic themes are found and a condensed version of the interviews is presented together with a short presentation about the company group. In the analysis we present two global themes, cooperation and competition. These are both derived from the basic themes and organizing themes. The factors of complexity are the organizing themes. Our conclusion is that complexity can categorize wanted and actual cooperation in the company group in the sense that complexity has to be lowered for cooperation to exist. Regarding competition, we did not draw any conclusion to our purpose due to lack of data. However, we find that competition is mainly seen as negative in the coopetitive situation studied. The implications of this thesis is that complexity can further refine the concept of coopetition but the causality have to be further tested. In a managerial perspective, leaders should focus on decreasing the factors of complexity if cooperation is wanted. We also suggest that it is important to understand if people in organizations are positive towards cooperation and negative to competition or the other way around.
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Kernelization and Enumeration: New Approaches to Solving Hard ProblemsMeng, Jie 2010 May 1900 (has links)
NP-Hardness is a well-known theory to identify the hardness of computational problems.
It is believed that NP-Hard problems are unlikely to admit polynomial-time algorithms.
However since many NP-Hard problems are of practical significance, different approaches
are proposed to solve them: Approximation algorithms, randomized algorithms and heuristic
algorithms. None of the approaches meet the practical needs. Recently parameterized
computation and complexity has attracted a lot of attention and been a fruitful branch of
the study of efficient algorithms. By taking advantage of the moderate value of parameters
in many practical instances, we can design efficient algorithms for the NP-Hard problems in
practice.
In this dissertation, we discuss a new approach to design efficient parameterized algorithms,
kernelization. The motivation is that instances of small size are easier to solve.
Roughly speaking, kernelization is a preprocess on the input instances and is able to significantly reduce their sizes.
We present a 2k kernel for the cluster editing problem, which improves the previous
best kernel of size 4k; We also present a linear kernel of size 7k 2d for the d-cluster
editing problem, which is the first linear kernel for the problem. The kernelization algorithm
is simple and easy to implement.
We propose a quadratic kernel for the pseudo-achromatic number problem. This
implies that the problem is tractable in term of parameterized complexity. We also study
the general problem, the vertex grouping problem and prove it is intractable in term of
parameterized complexity.
In practice, many problems seek a set of good solutions instead of a good solution.
Motivated by this, we present the framework to study enumerability in term of parameterized
complexity. We study three popular techniques for the design of parameterized algorithms,
and show that combining with effective enumeration techniques, they could be transferred
to design efficient enumeration algorithms.
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A simple cell scheduling mechanishm for ATM networksLee, Ming-Chi 02 September 2000 (has links)
In this thesis, we propose a cell scheduling mechanism to overcome some drawback of Carry-Over Round Robin (CORR) algorithm. Compare with CORR, the modified scheme reduces complexity of implementation and allocates bandwidth more fairly. In general, it simplifies CORR algorithm, which applies some design to maintain the maximum frame size. We prove that the maximum frame size is not necessary for deriving end-to-end delay. We also show that it results in fair distribution of bandwidth.
As long as the schedulers and traffic shapers work independently, significant underutilization is expected. In order to solve this problem, we borrow the concept of CORR which divides each allocation cycle into two subcycles¡Xa major cycle and a minor cycle. By designing some information feedback to shapers, schedulers can transmit more cells in minor cycles. Hence we can improve bandwidth utilization successfully.
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Towards a proportional sampling strategy according to path complexity a simulation study /Yip, Wang. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (M. Phil.)--University of Hong Kong, 2001. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 55-56).
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Average-case complexity theory and polynomial-time reductionsPavan, A. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--State University of New York at Buffalo, 2001. / "August 2001." Includes bibliographical references (p. 80-87). Also available in print.
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Efficient evolution of neural networks through complexificationStanley, Kenneth Owen 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Techniques for analyzing the computational power of constant-depth circuits and space-bounded computationTrifonov, Vladimir Traianov 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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The effectiveness of partition testingChan, Fun-ting., 陳訓廷. January 1998 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Computer Science / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Lower bounds for natural functions in restricted boolean circuitsSengupta, Rimli January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Product tactics in a complex and turbulent environment viewed through a complexity lensMason, Roger Bruce January 2012 (has links)
This paper is based on the proposition that the choice of different product tactics is influenced by the nature of the firm’s external environment. It illustrates the type of product activities suggested for a complex and turbulent environment, when viewing the environment through a chaos and complexity theory lens. A qualitative, case method, using depth interviews,investigated the product activities in two companies to identify the product activities adopted in a more successful, versus a less successful, firm in a complex/turbulent environment. The results showed that the more successful company uses some destabilizing product activities but also partially uses stabilizing product activities. These findings are of benefit to marketers as they emphasize a new way to consider future product activities in their firms. Since businesses and markets are complex adaptive systems, using complexity theory to understand how to cope in complex, turbulent environments is necessary, but has not been widely researched, with even less emphasis on individual components of the marketing mix.
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