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This open access book provides a broad range of insights on market
engineering and information management. It covers topics like
auctions, stock markets, electricity markets, the sharing economy,
information and emotions in markets, smart decision-making in
cities and other systems, and methodological approaches to
conceptual modeling and taxonomy development. Overall, this book is
a source of inspiration for everybody working on the vision of
advancing the science of engineering markets and managing
information for contributing to a bright, sustainable, digital
world. Markets are powerful and extremely efficient mechanisms for
coordinating individuals' and organizations' behavior in a complex,
networked economy. Thus, designing, monitoring, and regulating
markets is an essential task of today's society. This task does not
only derive from a purely economic point of view. Leveraging market
forces can also help to tackle pressing social and environmental
challenges. Moreover, markets process, generate, and reveal
information. This information is a production factor and a valuable
economic asset. In an increasingly digital world, it is more
essential than ever to understand the life cycle of information
from its creation and distribution to its use. Both markets and the
flow of information should not arbitrarily emerge and develop based
on individual, profit-driven actors. Instead, they should be
engineered to serve best the whole society's goals. This motivation
drives the research fields of market engineering and information
management. With this book, the editors and authors honor Professor
Dr. Christof Weinhardt for his enormous and ongoing contribution to
market engineering and information management research and
practice. It was presented to him on the occasion of his sixtieth
birthday in April 2021. Thank you very much, Christof, for so many
years of cooperation, support, inspiration, and friendship.
The Evolution of Matter explains how all matter in the Universe
developed following the Big Bang and through subsequent stellar
processes. It describes the evolution of interstellar matter and
its differentiation during the accretion of the planets and the
history of the Earth. Unlike many books on geochemistry, this
volume follows the chemical history of matter from the very
beginning to the present, demonstrating connections in space and
time. It provides also solid links from cosmochemistry to the
geochemistry of Earth. The book presents comprehensive descriptions
of the various isotope systematics and fractionation processes
occurring naturally in the Universe, using simple equations and
helpful tables of data. With a glossary of terms and over 900
references, this volume is a valuable reference for researchers and
advanced students studying the chemical evolution of the Earth, the
Solar System and the wider Universe.
This open access book provides a broad range of insights on market
engineering and information management. It covers topics like
auctions, stock markets, electricity markets, the sharing economy,
information and emotions in markets, smart decision-making in
cities and other systems, and methodological approaches to
conceptual modeling and taxonomy development. Overall, this book is
a source of inspiration for everybody working on the vision of
advancing the science of engineering markets and managing
information for contributing to a bright, sustainable, digital
world. Markets are powerful and extremely efficient mechanisms for
coordinating individuals' and organizations' behavior in a complex,
networked economy. Thus, designing, monitoring, and regulating
markets is an essential task of today's society. This task does not
only derive from a purely economic point of view. Leveraging market
forces can also help to tackle pressing social and environmental
challenges. Moreover, markets process, generate, and reveal
information. This information is a production factor and a valuable
economic asset. In an increasingly digital world, it is more
essential than ever to understand the life cycle of information
from its creation and distribution to its use. Both markets and the
flow of information should not arbitrarily emerge and develop based
on individual, profit-driven actors. Instead, they should be
engineered to serve best the whole society's goals. This motivation
drives the research fields of market engineering and information
management. With this book, the editors and authors honor Professor
Dr. Christof Weinhardt for his enormous and ongoing contribution to
market engineering and information management research and
practice. It was presented to him on the occasion of his sixtieth
birthday in April 2021. Thank you very much, Christof, for so many
years of cooperation, support, inspiration, and friendship.
The Evolution of Matter explains how all matter in the Universe
developed following the Big Bang and through subsequent stellar
processes. It describes the evolution of interstellar matter and
its differentiation during the accretion of the planets and the
history of the Earth. Unlike many books on geochemistry, this
volume follows the chemical history of matter from the very
beginning to the present, demonstrating connections in space and
time. It provides also solid links from cosmochemistry to the
geochemistry of Earth. The book presents comprehensive descriptions
of the various isotope systematics and fractionation processes
occurring naturally in the Universe, using simple equations and
helpful tables of data. With a glossary of terms and over 900
references, this volume is a valuable reference for researchers and
advanced students studying the chemical evolution of the Earth, the
Solar System and the wider Universe.
This book studies exact solution procedures for the so-called
Conference Scheduling Problem (CSP), which seeks to minimize the
duration of a conference, where some of the activities cannot be
held concurrently. The CSP corresponds to non-preemptive scheduling
of independent activities with dedicated resources and constitutes
a special case within the more general Resource Constraint Project
Scheduling Problem (RCPSP) as well as the machine scheduling
framework, and as such it is NP-hard. The core characteristics of
CSP are commonly encountered in problems of different domains and
therefore the problem is of high practical relevance. The book
focuses on the analysis and comparison of graph-based solution
procedures, which operate on a constrained graph that is derived
from the confliciting acitivies to be scheduled. In particular
Interval Coloring and Comparability Graph Augmentation are
considered. An emphasis is put on the investigation of variations
of the latter procedure, which exploits the structure of the
constraint graph and is therefore robust to variations in the
activity durations.
The principle of Network Neutrality prescribes that all data
packets that are being sent through the Internet must be treated
equally with respect to their origin, destination, and content. It
has recently received much attention by policymakers in the US and
Europe and is debated controversially. This book advances the
debate by providing a scientific and unbiased view on Network
Neutrality, and the related issue of Open Access as policy
instruments to counteract the anticipated scarcity of
telecommunications infrastructure. The book contains articles by
leading international legal and economic scholars, as well as by
policymakers on the possible effects of Network Neutrality and Open
Access regulation, and thus offers a holistic and interdisciplinary
viewpoint on these issues.
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