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This book advances our understanding of university spin-off
creation and development in environments outside the high-tech
clusters of the US. While there has been substantial university
spin-off activity internationally in recent years, a number of
major aspects are little understood. The authors argue that the
nature of universities is changing as reduced public funding
reflects a public debate on their role in society. An important
aspect of this international phenomenon is an increased emphasis on
the commercialization of university research and on academic
entrepreneurship. These new ventures therefore involve the
spinning-off of technology and knowledge generated by universities.
The authors adopt a multi-level approach in their examination of
university spin-offs. European case studies are specifically
selected to reflect the diversity of the institutional environment.
In particular, units of analysis involving universities, technology
transfer offices, spin-off firms, finance providers and individual
entrepreneurs and teams are extensively analysed in quantitative
and qualitative studies. To conclude, policy implications for the
future successful development of spin-offs are identified. This
fascinating book will appeal to a wide-ranging audience including
academics, policy makers, researchers and practitioners with an
interest in academic entrepreneurship and university spin-offs,
and, more generally, in business and management and
entrepreneurship.
The historical studies of this second volume provide an examination
of the economic and social history of Ptolemaic Egypt. The salt-tax
registers of P. Count not only throw light on key aspects of the
fiscal policy of the Greek pharaohs but also provide the best
information for family and household structure for the Western
world before the fifteenth century AD. The makeup of the population
is thoroughly analysed here in both demographic and occupational
terms. A constant theme running throughout is the impact of the
Greeks on the indigenous population of Egypt. This is traced in
cultural policies, in administrative geography, in the realm of
stock-rearing and in the changing religious affiliations traceable
through the names that parents gave their children. The extent to
which Egypt is typical of the Hellenistic world more widely is the
final topic addressed.
This highly accessible book brings together the insights of leading
academics and researchers to promote a better understanding of the
role of private equity providers in the development of
growth-oriented start-ups and the management of growth processes.
The book explores the domain of start-up and business venturing,
and within this realm, the perspectives of the entrepreneur, the
venture capitalist, the financial community and the role of
government in private equity are considered. Specifically, topics
discussed include: * the venture capital industry * investment in
venture capital funds in Europe * the Equity Gap * European private
equity funds * the role of private equity in the creation of
university spin-out companies * motivation of entrepreneurs towards
private equity operations. Providing theoretical frameworks
together with practical conclusions and implications, this book
will be warmly welcomed by academics and practitioners alike. It
will be of particular value to scholars with an interest in
business, management and entrepreneurship, to investment
professionals and policy advisors involved in stimulating
entrepreneurship, and, of course, to entrepreneurs themselves.
This highly accessible book brings together the insights of leading
academics and researchers to promote a better understanding of the
role of private equity providers in the development of
growth-oriented start-ups and the management of growth processes.
The book explores the domain of start-up and business venturing,
and within this realm, the perspectives of the entrepreneur, the
venture capitalist, the financial community and the role of
government in private equity are considered. Specifically, topics
discussed include: * the venture capital industry * investment in
venture capital funds in Europe * the Equity Gap * European private
equity funds * the role of private equity in the creation of
university spin-out companies * motivation of entrepreneurs towards
private equity operations. Providing theoretical frameworks
together with practical conclusions and implications, this book
will be warmly welcomed by academics and practitioners alike. It
will be of particular value to scholars with an interest in
business, management and entrepreneurship, to investment
professionals and policy advisors involved in stimulating
entrepreneurship, and, of course, to entrepreneurs themselves.
Biotechnology is referred to as one of the key enabling
technologies of the 21st century. It has the potential to offer
solutions for a number of health and resource-based problems the
world is facing, such as unmet medical needs and fossil fuel
dependency. Considerable effort and investment has been expended in
recent years to try and improve the outcomes of technology transfer
in order to fulfill this potential.This book presents seventeen
best-practice case studies on the topic of effective technology
transfer in biotechnology. The selected case studies focus on
technology transfer offices, funding models, incubators, education
and clusters. Each presents an overview of an initiative that was
deployed in Europe with the aim of supporting and stimulating the
transfer of biotechnology discoveries and technologies from
research laboratories to society. Readers are provided with a
critical assessment of each initiative and policy makers,
entrepreneurs, cluster managers and research institute managers
will find inspiring lessons they can draw on when developing and
implementing similar initiatives elsewhere.These cases are the
product of research undertaken as part of the ETTBio (Effective
Technology Transfer in Biotechnology) project, co-financed by the
European Union (ERDF - European Regional Development Fund) and made
possible by the INTERREG IVC Programme. ETTBio commenced in January
2012 and concluded in December 2014.
The historical studies of this second volume provide an examination
of the economic and social history of Ptolemaic Egypt. The salt-tax
registers of P. Count not only throw light on key aspects of the
fiscal policy of the Greek pharaohs but also provide the best
information for family and household structure for the Western
world before the fifteenth century AD. The makeup of the population
is thoroughly analysed here in both demographic and occupational
terms. A constant theme running throughout is the impact of the
Greeks on the indigenous population of Egypt. This is traced in
cultural policies, in administrative geography, in the realm of
stock-rearing and in the changing religious affiliations traceable
through the names that parents gave their children. The extent to
which Egypt is typical of the Hellenistic world more widely is the
final topic addressed.
This volume publishes fifty-four Ptolemaic papyri from the Fayum
and Middle Egypt, with English translations and extensive
commentaries. The texts, dating from c. 250-150 BC and written in
either Greek or Egyptian demotic, record lists of adults, ordered
by village, occupation and social group, and by household, together
with the taxes paid on their persons, their livestock and trades.
Some are more than twenty columns long. All texts have been studied
on the originals by an international team of scholars. Many are
published here for the first time; the others have been extensively
revised with numerous new joins between fragments. Lists of
tax-payers and their payments provide a wealth of information on
population and family structure, administrative practice, social
and professional groups and naming practices. Providing the
documentary basis for the historical studies of Volume II, P. Count
is essential for any serious evaluation of that account.
This volume publishes fifty-four Ptolemaic papyri from the Fayum
and Middle Egypt, with English translations and extensive
commentaries. The texts, dating from c. 250-150 BC and written in
either Greek or Egyptian demotic, record lists of adults, ordered
by village, occupation and social group, and by household, together
with the taxes paid on their persons, their livestock and trades.
Some are more than twenty columns long. All texts have been studied
on the originals by an international team of scholars. Many are
published here for the first time; the others have been extensively
revised with numerous new joins between fragments. Lists of
tax-payers and their payments provide a wealth of information on
population and family structure, administrative practice, social
and professional groups and naming practices. Providing the
documentary basis for the historical studies of Volume II, P. Count
is essential for any serious evaluation of that account.
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Functional Imaging and Modeling of the Heart - 12th International Conference, FIMH 2023, Lyon, France, June 19–22, 2023, Proceedings (1st ed. 2023)
Olivier Bernard, Patrick Clarysse, Nicolas Duchateau, Jacques Ohayon, Magalie Viallon
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R2,747
Discovery Miles 27 470
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 12th
International Conference on Functional Imaging and Modeling of the
Heart, held in Lyon, France, in June 2023.The 72 full papers were
carefully reviewed and selected from 80 submissions. The focus of
the papers is on following topics: increased imaging resolutions,
data explosion, sophistication of computational models and advent
of AI frameworks, while new imaging modalities have emerged (e.g.
combined PET-MRI, Spectral CT).
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Functional Imaging and Modeling of the Heart - Second International Workshop, FIMH 2003, Lyon, France, June 5-6, 2003, Proceedings (Paperback, 2003 ed.)
Isabelle E. Magnin, Johan Montagnat, Patrick Clarysse, Jukka Nenonen, Toivo Katila
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R1,578
Discovery Miles 15 780
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The refereed proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Functional Imaging and Modeling of the Heart, FIMH 2003, held in Lyon, France in June 2003. The 29 revised full papers presented together with 2 invited papers were carefully reviewed and selected for presentation. The papers are organized in topical sections on anatomy extraction and description, modeling of the cardiac mechanics and functions, electro-physiology and electro- and magnetography, motion estimation, image registration and image analysis, and data acquisition and experimental and modeling issues.
This book advances our understanding of university spin-off
creation and development in environments outside the high-tech
clusters of the US. While there has been substantial university
spin-off activity internationally in recent years, a number of
major aspects are little understood. The authors argue that the
nature of universities is changing as reduced public funding
reflects a public debate on their role in society. An important
aspect of this international phenomenon is an increased emphasis on
the commercialization of university research and on academic
entrepreneurship. These new ventures therefore involve the
spinning-off of technology and knowledge generated by universities.
The authors adopt a multi-level approach in their examination of
university spin-offs. European case studies are specifically
selected to reflect the diversity of the institutional environment.
In particular, units of analysis involving universities, technology
transfer offices, spin-off firms, finance providers and individual
entrepreneurs and teams are extensively analysed in quantitative
and qualitative studies. To conclude, policy implications for the
future successful development of spin-offs are identified. This
fascinating book will appeal to a wide-ranging audience including
academics, policy makers, researchers and practitioners with an
interest in academic entrepreneurship and university spin-offs,
and, more generally, in business and management and
entrepreneurship.
The imaging of moving organs such as the heart, in particular, is a
real challenge because of its movement. This book presents current
and emerging methods developed for the acquisition of images of
moving organs in the five main medical imaging modalities:
conventional X-rays, computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI), nuclear imaging and ultrasound. The availability of
dynamic image sequences allows for the qualitative and quantitative
assessment of an organ s dynamics, which is often linked to
pathologies.
Student Entrepreneurship aims to provide a systematic literature
review on the topic, to discuss and suggest a workable definition,
and to explore opportunities for further research on student
entrepreneurship as a phenomenon and as a basis for theorizing. As
is to be expected in an emerging phenomenon of interest, most
studies are atheoretical and try to understand the phenomenon in
and of itself. The more recent papers on the phenomenon have moved
towards using a theoretical approach which could be challenged,
changed, or extended in the relevant student population. This
review of the literature shows that most studies describe the
phenomenon and try to understand the motivations and/or
characteristics of student entrepreneurs, while some make causal
relations between those motivations and entrepreneurial behavior.
The authors start by discussing the method used to systematically
list the different contributions to the emerging literature of
student entrepreneurship. Next, they describe the different
contributions to the phenomenon of student entrepreneurship to the
theory of entrepreneurship. Finally, they discuss how the
uniqueness of the phenomenon can create unique opportunities for
theoretical research.
Er zijn de afgelopen jaren veel tentoonstellingen over het Romeinse
Egypte geweest. Daarbij ging de aandacht vooral uit naar funeraire
objecten zoals dodenmaskers, en in wijdere zin naar "kunst". De
opzet van deze nieuwe tentoonstelling is heel anders. Het is de
bedoeling, een beeld te scheppen van het leven in Romeins Egypte,
zoals dat uit papyri en ostraca, uit nederzettingsopgravingen en
uit tempels naar voren komt. Hoe leefden de Egyptenaren? Hoe
verdienden ze hun geld en aan wat voor belastingen raakten ze het
voor een deel weer kwijt? Hoe kleedden ze zich en met wat voor
voorwerpen omringden ze zich in hun huizen? Welke invloed hadden de
Grieken en Romeinen op de traditionele Egyptische cultuur? Hoe
probeerde men de toekomst te voorspellen, en wat voor rol speelden
de tempels in de steden? Zulke vragen stonden centraal bij het
voorbereiden van de tentoonstelling en het schrijven van de
catalogus. Het gaat, met andere woorden, om het leven van alledag
in de steden en op het platteland. Deze catalogus omvat twee delen.
Het eerste geeft een algemeen overzicht van de geschiedenis, het
bestuur, de economie, de alledaagse leefomstandigheden en de
religie van het Romeinse Egypte. In het tweede deel volgt de
eigenlijke tentoonstellingscatalogus, met uitvoerige besprekingen
van alle getoonde voorwerpen, waarbij dezelfde themata aan bod
komen, in een licht gewijzigde orde. Na elke objectbeschrijving
volgt een bibliografie, waarin eerst wordt verwezen naar oudere
publicaties over hetzelfde onderwerp, en vervolgens naar
achtergrondliteratuur over de objectsoort.
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