Academic literature on the topic 'Producer-producer interaction'

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Journal articles on the topic "Producer-producer interaction"

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Nahuis, Roel, Ellen H. M. Moors, and Ruud E. H. M. Smits. "User producer interaction in context." Technological Forecasting and Social Change 79, no. 6 (2012): 1121–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.techfore.2012.01.005.

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Heiskanen, Eva, and Raimo Lovio. "User−Producer Interaction in Housing Energy Innovations." Journal of Industrial Ecology 14, no. 1 (2010): 91–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1530-9290.2009.00196.x.

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Bower, D. Jane. "User-producer Interaction and the Case of Biomedical Innovation." Journal of Industry Studies 3, no. 1 (1996): 21–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13662719600000002.

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Dong, Hongmei, and Lili Huang. "A Study on the Co-Agglomeration of Manufacturing Industry and Producer Services in Heilongjiang Province." E3S Web of Conferences 292 (2021): 03005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202129203005.

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Manufacturing industry and producer services are two important categories of industrial development in Heilongjiang Province. The co-agglomeration development is conducive to improving the interaction level between them and promoting the development of regional industrial cluster. Based on the relevant data of manufacturing and producer services in Heilongjiang Province, this paper uses the location quotient model to estimate the co-agglomeration of manufacturing and producer services. Heilongjiang Province should promote the integrated development of producer services and manufacturing industry, so as to realize the transformation and upgrading of traditional manufacturing industry in the old industrial base.
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MOORS, E. H. M., W. P. C. BOON, R. NAHUIS, and R. L. J. VANDEBERG. "USER-PRODUCER INTERACTIONS IN EMERGING PHARMACEUTICAL AND FOOD INNOVATIONS." International Journal of Innovation Management 12, no. 03 (2008): 459–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s1363919608001984.

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In order to study user-producer interaction (UPI) in emerging pharmaceutical and food innovation processes, a classification of user involvement has been developed, including a contextualised view on UPIs. Case studies are performed on two types of UPI: demand articulation in intermediary organisations and interactive learning in consortia, in the pharmaceutical and food sector, respectively.Regarding demand articulation processes, articulation of problems, needs, demands and expectations through agenda-setting practices is important. Expression and evaluation of demands with other factors leads to moblization of creative potential of prospective users and facilitation of emerging innovation processes.Regarding interactive learning, geographical, organisational, regulatory and cognitive proximity conditions could facilitate structures for emerging technology development, and codes and networks for frequent interaction between complementary stakeholders. Demands, concerns and opportunities are articulated by shared visions. Organised UPIs via intermediary user organisations or consortia seem to be the important tools for demand articulation and interactive learning involving patient organisations, researchers and private and public organisations.
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Medvedev, Alexey, Ivan Kislyakov, Yevgheniya Prokopenko, Maria Semenkina, and Kristina Brester. "Automated Toolkit for Encouraging a Producer to Use Innovative Technologies in Environmentally Oriented Economic Development of Mining Regions." E3S Web of Conferences 105 (2019): 03020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/201910503020.

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The automated toolkit for assessing environmental and investment attractiveness of a mining region and the results of its application are discussed in the article. This toolkit includes the optimization mathematical model, the algorithms for the interaction between a regional control center and a producer within the territory, as well as the automated software package for their analysis. The use of the optimization mathematical model makes it possible to take into account the maximum economic potential of a producer, which determines, respectively, a mining region’s environment pollution potential. Accounting for environmental risks will allow the control center or other decision makers to identify not only the optimal pattern of eco-economic interaction in the region, but also reflect changes in the environmental and investment climate as a combination of economic potential and involved risks. The model and the algorithms of interaction between a regional control center and a producer, as well as the results of their numerical analysis given in this paper, allow considering this toolkit as an effective decision support tool aimed at improving environmental and investment attractiveness of a mining region by encouraging a producer to use the best available technologies and conserve the natural environment.
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Li, Bingqiang. "The interaction of clusters between manufacturing and producer services in China." Economic Research-Ekonomska Istraživanja 30, no. 1 (2017): 1427–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1331677x.2017.1355253.

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HASU, MERVI, and YRJÖ ENGESTRÖM. "Measurement in action: an activity-theoretical perspective on producer–user interaction." International Journal of Human-Computer Studies 53, no. 1 (2000): 61–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/ijhc.2000.0375.

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van Rijnsoever, Frank J., Jan Faber, Marnix L. J. Brinkman, and Marijn A. van Weele. "User-producer interaction in Web site development: Motives, modes, and misfits." Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 61, no. 3 (2010): 495–504. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/asi.21277.

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CHIVERS, W. J., W. GLADSTONE, and R. D. HERBERT. "SPATIAL EFFECTS IN AN INDIVIDUAL-BASED MODEL OF PRODUCER-HERBIVORE INTERACTION." Natural Resource Modeling 21, no. 1 (2008): 72–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1939-7445.2008.00013.x.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Producer-producer interaction"

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Light, Ann. "Interaction at the producer-user interface : an interdisciplinary analysis of communication and relationships through interactive components on websites for the purpose of improving design." Thesis, University of Sussex, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.341069.

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Sugiura, Keishi. "The technological role of machinery users in economic development the case of the textile machinery industry in Japan and Korea /." Thesis, Online version, 1994. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?did=1&uin=uk.bl.ethos.387384.

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Blomberg, Victoria, and Julia Wolf. "Värna Vårda Visa! : Bevarandet av kulturarv och dess roll inom upplevelseturismen ur ett producentperspektiv." Thesis, Södertörns högskola, Turismvetenskap, 2016. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-31067.

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Vår uppsats handlar om hembygdsföreningeni rollen som turistisk aktör. Vi granskar vilka drivkrafter som aktören uppvisar samt hur dessa påverkar synen på modernisering och digitalisering inom den egna föreningen. Vi vill också lyfta fram hembygdsförening som en vagga i vårt kulturarv. Att låta dåtidens levnadssätt gå hand i hand med nutidens digitaliserade levnadssätt kan göra ett modernt historiskt-och kunskapsmässigt samarbete för kommande generationer. Vidare diskuteras hur medvetenheten om dessa drivkrafter är viktiga för att balansera den konventionella synen på turism ur ett management perspektiv, tillsammans med den ideella föreningens mer psykosociala identitetsskapande syn. Vårt syfte är att definiera hur en hembygd arbetar med turism och hur stor roll turismen har inom föreningen. Vihar sedan använt oss av frågeställningar och en problemformulering där vi tagit upp olika hjälpmedel och undersökt vilka drivkrafter som får aktörerna att ta tag i vissa projekt och användandet av digitalisering. Vårt angreppssätt i dennauppsats är att använda oss av teori som ett ramverk för de påståenden och argument som presenteras i vår empiri och metod-del. Med stöd av vårt teoretiska angreppssätt tillsammans med intervjuresultaten är det vår förhoppning att tydliggöra betydelsen av kulturarvsturismen.Genom kvalitativa intervjuer tar vi upp begreppet kulturarv och förklarar dess innebörd på ett konkret sett. Vi träffar äldre människor där många har minnen från förr och med egna ord kan återspegla historien. I vår uppsats har vi redogjort för Sveriges kulturarvshistoria inom hembygdsföreningar, där vi analyserar de drivkrafter som ligger bakom arbetet med att bevara Sveriges historia hos de enskilda aktörerna. Vår bakgrund inom medieteknik gör att vårt arbete präglas av en världsbild där tekniken är ett verktyg som underlättar utvecklingen av produkter inom turism. Genom insamlat resultat ser vi att aktörerna är överens om att vår historia om hembygdsföreningar och kulturarv behöver bevaras för att människan ska kunna känna en gemenskap och trygghet till sin hembygd. Kulturarvet kan också användas som ett verktyg för att framföra kunskap till olika generationer och vidare kan den digitala utvecklingen av kulturarvsattraktioner nå ut till fler människor i framtiden på ett mer interaktivt sätt. I vår uppsats har vi också kommit fram till att kulturarvsattraktioner spelar en viktig roll inom upplevelseturism på många olika plan genom att studera drivkrafter hos de eldsjälar som erbjuder omgivningen något varaktigt och minnesvärt, som räcker långt framöver.<br>Our essay revolves around the local history associations and the actors within it as part of the tourism sector. We have researched the driving-forces that these actors possess, their view on modernization and digitalization within the association. With this paper we also want to highlight that local history associations works as a cradle for our cultural heritage. These actors want the life of past times to go hand-in-hand with the digital lifestyle of modern times, which will contribute with historical knowledge for future generations.Furthermore,we discuss how these driving-forces are an important part of the balance between the conventional view on tourism from a management perspective, and the non-profit association’s psycho-social view. Our purpose is to define how local history works within tourism and how big of a role it has within the associations. We discuss different tools at hand and explore what driving-forces that get the actors to use digitalization in certain projects. The method of our essay is to use a theory as a framework for thestatements and arguments that are introduced in our empirical data. With the support of our theory and the results of the interviews, it is our hope to clarify the meaning of cultural heritage site tourism and how the actors work within it.We have used qualitative interviews to discuss the concept of heritage sites and to explain its meaning in a concrete way. We have met with elderly people and made it possible for them to share their memories from past times while also exploring their role within heritage site tourism. In this essay we described the heritage site through local history associations, where we analyze the underlying driving-forces behind the work of individual actors as they attempt to preserve the history of Sweden. This essay also presents the concept of interactive digital storytelling where technology functions as a tool that simplify development of the tourism product . As a conclusion our results show that the actors agreed upon that our history in terms of local history associations and heritage sites needs to be preserved, so that future generations do not lose the feeling of safety and a sense of belonging that comes from being part of a community in their local home environment. The cultural heritage site can be used as a tool to present knowledge to different generations through the means of digital development, the heritage sites can reach a wider audience in the future by presenting interactive modern day solutions.In our essay, we have also found that cultural heritage sites plays an important role in leisure tourism on many different levels through driving-forces of the individuals that offer their surrounding something memorable that will last for eternity.
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Mattos, Maria Lídia Pereira. "Encontros no caminho: espaços de (in)formação e aprendizagem na educação à distância." reponame:Repositório Institucional da UFBA, 2008. http://www.repositorio.ufba.br/ri/handle/ri/10994.

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Submitted by Edileide Reis (leyde-landy@hotmail.com) on 2013-05-08T14:31:32Z No. of bitstreams: 9 Maria Lidia Mattos parte 9.pdf: 6347763 bytes, checksum: badcb80379a5204d3b5ff4bba941a2f1 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 8.pdf: 5592957 bytes, checksum: ee4275c6cb391aa589f25383e58f4b8e (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 7.pdf: 4174952 bytes, checksum: 559ec37a781860f159971e8876ea97f4 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 6.pdf: 4768764 bytes, checksum: 62273f59654fc45c1899548a91dfd857 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 5.pdf: 3610053 bytes, checksum: b96fd29708013e5277c27341e465fa15 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 4.pdf: 5535691 bytes, checksum: d6615e5c0b0a5a32e86076243c76fd82 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 3.pdf: 2969381 bytes, checksum: 328d9c21481e101b9ee839a47bfdb21a (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 2.pdf: 5631116 bytes, checksum: 10f9f1fbfca074362d0dfd36cdb54d8c (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 1.pdf: 4146618 bytes, checksum: 89df828cf4c7f6aeacb72c0fad7b3dd0 (MD5)<br>Approved for entry into archive by Maria Auxiliadora Lopes(silopes@ufba.br) on 2013-05-16T17:41:22Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 9 Maria Lidia Mattos parte 9.pdf: 6347763 bytes, checksum: badcb80379a5204d3b5ff4bba941a2f1 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 8.pdf: 5592957 bytes, checksum: ee4275c6cb391aa589f25383e58f4b8e (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 7.pdf: 4174952 bytes, checksum: 559ec37a781860f159971e8876ea97f4 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 6.pdf: 4768764 bytes, checksum: 62273f59654fc45c1899548a91dfd857 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 5.pdf: 3610053 bytes, checksum: b96fd29708013e5277c27341e465fa15 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 4.pdf: 5535691 bytes, checksum: d6615e5c0b0a5a32e86076243c76fd82 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 3.pdf: 2969381 bytes, checksum: 328d9c21481e101b9ee839a47bfdb21a (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 2.pdf: 5631116 bytes, checksum: 10f9f1fbfca074362d0dfd36cdb54d8c (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 1.pdf: 4146618 bytes, checksum: 89df828cf4c7f6aeacb72c0fad7b3dd0 (MD5)<br>Made available in DSpace on 2013-05-16T17:41:22Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 9 Maria Lidia Mattos parte 9.pdf: 6347763 bytes, checksum: badcb80379a5204d3b5ff4bba941a2f1 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 8.pdf: 5592957 bytes, checksum: ee4275c6cb391aa589f25383e58f4b8e (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 7.pdf: 4174952 bytes, checksum: 559ec37a781860f159971e8876ea97f4 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 6.pdf: 4768764 bytes, checksum: 62273f59654fc45c1899548a91dfd857 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 5.pdf: 3610053 bytes, checksum: b96fd29708013e5277c27341e465fa15 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 4.pdf: 5535691 bytes, checksum: d6615e5c0b0a5a32e86076243c76fd82 (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 3.pdf: 2969381 bytes, checksum: 328d9c21481e101b9ee839a47bfdb21a (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 2.pdf: 5631116 bytes, checksum: 10f9f1fbfca074362d0dfd36cdb54d8c (MD5) Maria Lidia Mattos parte 1.pdf: 4146618 bytes, checksum: 89df828cf4c7f6aeacb72c0fad7b3dd0 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2008<br>Os professores em suas formações básicas são capazes de produção para a educação à distância, porém torna-se necessário a (in)formação para isso. Na expectativa de analisar os espaços e processos de (in)formação e aprendizagem de professor-produtor na área de educação à distância, especialmente aqueles relacionados aos diferentes modos de organização e produção de conhecimento, organizou-se este trabalho para estudar os encontros numa caminhada. Nessa jornada encontramos sujeitos teóricos, sujeitos que se tornaram autores e atores desse processo, encontramos obstáculos, pedras, mas também perspectivas para a análise. A compreensão da crase na expressão - educação à distância - constituiu-se de fundamental importância para a definição das categorias estudadas e assim entendeu-se que não é a distância que determina a educação, mas a educação que determina a distância. O entendimento da crase torna-se relevante para a definição da educação à distância. O caminho escolhido foi da análise contrastiva das falas dos sujeitos da pesquisa. Para dar seqüência à caminhada planejada, foi necessário o estabelecimento de outros passos, já que a análise supracitada só é possível com: compreensão da (in)formação dos professores em suas atribuições pedagógicas na produção de material em diferentes suportes tecnológicos – analógicos e digitais, assim compreendido como histórias de vida tecnológica; identificação dos processos de (in)formação e aprendizagem do professor-produtor de educação à distância relacionados aos aspectos de produção de material didático apropriadas à interação em ambientes informacionais de base digital; verificação, através de análise de entrevistas, de que modo os professores-produtores estão utilizando ferramentas de comunicação nas produções que realizam; compreensão de distância como espaço de (in)formação e aprendizagem entre os sujeitos que trabalham com a educação à distância. A interação é estudada e analisada como espaço de (in)formação e aprendizagem entre os sujeitos, assim como as diversas semânticas da distância em suas bases de significação. Conclui-se a respeito da distância e da interação como espaços de (in)formação e aprendizagem desses professores-produtores, além da construção das histórias de vida tecnológicas dos sujeitos da pesquisa, como também aponta-se para a possibilidade de (in)formação do professor-produtor, quando produz para educação à distância.<br>Salvador
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Hegde, Srinivas V. "DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF INTERACTIVE ENERGY MODELS USING CYBER INFRASTRUCTURE FOR ANALYZING CONSUMER AND PRODUCER BEHAVIOR." The Ohio State University, 2011. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1313581394.

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Smolla, Marco. "Environmental effects on social learning and its feedback on individual and group level interactions." Thesis, University of Manchester, 2017. https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/environmental-effects-on-social-learning-and-its-feedback-on-individual-and-group-level-interactions(4dd1791c-06cb-4c42-a1c5-7bc393e14ac6).html.

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Through social learning, animals acquire information from others, such as skills and knowledge about the environment. High fidelity transmission of locally adaptive information can lead to population-specific traits, or cultural traits, which are fundamental to the emergence of culture. Despite social learning being widespread in the animal kingdom, culture is rare in nature. This thesis investigates the evolution, ecology, and dynamics of social learning, to increase our understanding why species differ in their ability to generate and accumulate cultural traits, and ultimately how complex human culture emerged. Chapter 2 introduces a novel computational model that explicitly incorporates competition into the social learning context. The model predicts that social learning is most adaptive where resources are unevenly distributed and stable through time, even if individuals compete for limited resources. The model provides an explanation for reports of animals disregarding social information, even if it is available. Testing these predictions Chapter 3 presents a bumblebee foraging experiment. The results support the theoretical predictions, showing that foragers use social information to find rewarding flowers, even if social cues indicate competition. Chapter 4 further examines the trade-off between access to social information and competition. Individuals that are central in a learning network have more opportunities to acquire information from others, but also face an increased likelihood to engage in competition. The results of this model suggest that across different learning contexts centrality is only beneficial for dominant individuals because dominance can mitigate the effect of competition. This also shows that individual phenotypic differences affect the utility of social information. Chapter 5 uses a dynamic network model approach to tests whether these differences modulate the structure of learning networks and by extension of the population. The model shows that this is the case and that where social learning is favoured by the environment networks are more structured. Chapter 6, studies the drivers behind individual differences in social learning. The chapter focusses on reports of sex differences in social information use and finds that they can be explained by differences in risk taking behaviour. The results highlight the importance of the feedback between learning individuals, and how this shapes social learning dynamics on an individual as well as on a population level.
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Lin, Chia Tseng, and 林佳錚. "A Study on the Interaction between the Producer Service Industry Development and the Knowledge Manufacturing Industry Development." Thesis, 2003. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/15135996376047644277.

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碩士<br>中華大學<br>建築與都市計畫學系碩士班<br>91<br>Since the Hsin-chu Science-Based Industrial Park(HCSP)has been established over two decades, the evolution of the vicinity of HCSP has created a close networking which includes production, research and development. The creation, introduction and operation of these functions all rely on the supporting of producer services industries with specialization function. Besides the producer services play a crucial interface between supporting space and technological infrastructure around the HCSP. This study focus on the interaction, spatial evolution and distribution between firms in park and producer services firms around the vicinity, and the coordination with research institutes.
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Laochamroonvorap, Rapheephan. "Advances in the development and application of a capacitance-resistance model." 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/22372.

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Much effort of reservoir engineers is devoted to the time-consuming process of history matching in a simulator to understand the reservoir complexity. Its accuracy is debatable because only a few inputs are known. Several analytical tools have been developed to investigate reservoir heterogeneity. The reciprocal productivity index (RPI) is a tool to measure the pressure support observed at a producer. The log (water-oil ratio or WOR) plot can be used to indicate the presence of a channel. A capacitance-resistance model (CRM) is a simple tool to estimate the connectivity between a producer-injector pair from the production/injection and pressure data. Generally field operators implement an improved recovery plan such as water-alternating-gas (WAG) flood to improve displacement efficiency. However, the existence of heterogeneity compromises its performance. The first objective of this study is to improve the assessment of tertiary flood performance by integrating the CRM with other analytical tools. The integrated method was applied to a miscible flood field in West Texas. The results suggest strong interwell connectivity found more frequently in the NE-SW direction and the different preferential flow paths of injected CO2 and water. Overall, the results provide insights into the current flood status. The operating conditions of a producer dynamically change because of well/field constraints. These changes can induce significant interference in other wells, which cannot be captured by CRM. The second objective of this study is to develop a capacitance-resistance model with producer-producer interaction (CRMP-P). The CRMP-P, derived from the continuity and Darcy’s equations, accounts for producer-producer interactions. The CRMP-P was applied to data from three different reservoir models. The results suggest that the CRMP-P could fit the data with higher precision than CRM. Consequently, the CRMP-P estimates of reservoir properties are more accurate. Moreover, the estimated transmissibility between producers is in agreement with the reservoir models. The CRMP-P was also applied to Omani field data. The transmissibility results are consistent with previous study and the drilling information. The more accurate information on producer-producer interactions and reservoir properties can assist in history-matching, locating infill wells, and reservoir management planning.<br>text
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Carolyn, Hatch. "Competitiveness by Design: An Institutionalist Perspective on the Resurgence of a 'Mature' Industry in a High Wage Economy." Thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1807/35839.

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This thesis examines the learning dynamics underpinning the resurgence of Canada's office furniture manufacturing sector, which underwent dramatic growth following its near collapse in the wake of the North American trade liberalization beginning in the late 1980s. It investigates the role that design and quality have played in prompting a move up-market and enhancing the sector's competitiveness. It also focuses on other leaning processes that drive economic growth, looking at attempts to transfer workplace practices from Continental Europe to Canada, as well as the institutional obstacles that shape and constrain these processes. Finally, it examines how furniture firms learn from their customers, and the key role played by market intermediaries such as sales agents, dealers, interior designers, and architects in linking producers with consumers as well as influencing the final furniture product. The learned behaviour hypothesis that is central to this thesis suggests that globally competitive firms operating in a Canadian institutional context prosper by learning how to produce (i.e. industrial practices and processes) and what to produce (i.e. design-intensive, high quality products) from the above sources that are both internal and external to the manufacturing firm. The scope of research considers the social and organizational practices through which manufacturing knowledge is integrated into innovation processes, as well as their dynamics, spatiality and temporality, the institutional forces that shape the skills, training, tenure and design dimensions of a high performance workplace, and the mechanisms and conditions that mediate the transfer of manufacturing knowledge at a distance. The empirical analysis entails a mixed-methods approach including a survey questionnaire and in-depth interviews with industry experts. The analysis contributes to core debates in economic geography and the social sciences concerning the role of proximity and distance in innovative production, and the structure / agency debate. In summary, it finds that economic growth in the office furniture sector in Canada is dependent upon not only local knowledge networks and flows but also global sources of innovation and competitive advantage. It also advances an agency-centered institutionalist economic geography by showing that institutions interact in complex ways with the decision-making of economic actors to shape local labour dynamics and the behaviour of firms.
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Books on the topic "Producer-producer interaction"

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Product innovation and user-producer interaction. Aalborg University Press, 1985.

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Poole, Curtis. The digital producer: Getting it done with computer-based tools. Focal Press, 2000.

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Boozer, Jack. The Intratextuality of Film Adaptation. Edited by Thomas Leitch. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199331000.013.11.

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By observing the authorial intentions on the part of the novelist and the adapted film’s producer, screenwriter, director, and cast, Chapter 11 examines the intratextual process at work in the transformation of Philip Roth’s novella The Dying Animal to the big screen as Elegy. The notion of serial authorship can capture the creative interaction of intentions characteristic of the multi-source nature of film adaptation, whose products serve two texts: the source literary work and the screenplay derived from it. The essay considers the hints of Roth’s personal views and autobiography implied through his narrator, David Kepesh, and this character’s relationships with women, as well as through the implied author’s own position as a writer—a self-conscious status the film does not engage.
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Poole, Curtis, and Ellen Feldman. The Digital Producer: Getting It Done with Computer-Based Tools (Book & CD-ROM). Focal Press, 1999.

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Duffy, Brooke Erin. Inviting Audiences In. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037962.003.0006.

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This chapter examines the shifting dynamics of the magazine producer–consumer relationship within two different industrial contexts. First, it considers how media producers are making their offerings for audiences more interactive by integrating commentary, advice, photos, and more. It situates this trend in historical perspective by recalling women's magazines' tradition of “inviting readers in.” Second, it looks at an external force encroaching on magazine production: the rise of fashion blogging. It also describes the labor politics of user-generated content and goes on to discuss how various industry insiders conceptualize fashion blogging, along with industrial and organizational trends that seem to respond to this cultural movement. The chapter shows that media producers are “inviting audiences in” to numerous spaces that they have carved out within magazine-branded properties. Community chat rooms, virtual programs, and user-generated contests engage interactive consumers while supplanting the work of professional content producers. Although editors of women's magazines maintain control over these initiatives, they have unequivocally less power over fashion bloggers.
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Light, Ann. In teraction at the producer-user interface: An interdisciplinary analysis of communication and relationships through interactive components on websites for the purpose of improving design. 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Producer-producer interaction"

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Czegledy, T., R. V. Fedorenko, and N. A. Zaichikova. "Modelling of Software Producer and Customer Interaction: Nash Equilibrium." In Lecture Notes in Networks and Systems. Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-27015-5_36.

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Zhang, Jiemei. "A Research on Interaction and Merging between Modern Manufacturing and Producer Services." In Service Science and Knowledge Innovation. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-55355-4_18.

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Han, MingHua. "Empirical Study for the Development of Producer Services and Upgrading of Manufacturing from the Perspective of Industrial Interaction." In Advances in Computer Science, Intelligent System and Environment. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-23753-9_40.

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Завьялова, Я. А. "Producer-consumer interaction in Instagram." In Incomes, expenditures and savings of the Russian population: trends and prospects. ФНИСЦ РАН, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19181/konf.978-5-4465-3137-0.2021.15.

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Kohle, Friedrich H. "The Social Media “Information Explosion” Spectacle." In Social Media and the Transformation of Interaction in Society. IGI Global, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-8556-7.ch009.

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The semantic web, social media and the amount of user-generated content continues to grow at a staggering rate. Social Media significantly contributed to the information flow during the Arab Spring, the Occupy and Wall Street movement continue to maintain a global online presence using social media technology. But is the social media information explosion really a unique event in media history? How did story telling evolve into social media? In order to place social media in its historical context and anticipate digital native expectations, we explore the origins of narrative and storytelling from the perspective of a documentary producer. How did past media technologies prepare the way for social media? How do digital natives perceive the world via social media and what do they expect from today's documentary producer? What are the viewing habits of digital natives? What do previous ‘information explosions' have in common with social and digital media? These are essential questions for media and documentary producers navigating their way through the vast maze of social media technology and the semantic web, in addition to traditional media.
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Anthony, Brendan. "The Tracker Producer and Top-Liner Collaborative Music Production Project (Advanced)." In The Music Technology Cookbook. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197523889.003.0046.

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This project engages students with the collaborative realities of modern popular music production via an amalgamation of the music programmer, producer, and songwriter roles. Students engage in face-to-face and remote/online communication, composition, and production to manifest an original popular music output that is generated primarily within the DAW. Student learning is encapsulated within the autonomous interaction and workflows associated with the task, and reflected upon within a journal that informs a written assessment item. This activity is designed as a profession-based engagement that bridges student interaction to the realities of the modern music industry. This is intended to promote notions of professional ability within students upon completion.
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Farmer, Lesley. "Information as a Human Right." In Professional Development and Workplace Learning. IGI Global, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-8632-8.ch007.

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Information lies at the core of freedom of expression since it empowers citizens to understand the functions of media and other information providers, to access and critically evaluate their content, and to make informed decisions as users and producer of information and media content. Information and related technologies have become increasingly essential to education, employment, social interaction, and civic participation. Resultantly, greater focus has been placed on the idea that information is a necessary human right. While physical access to technology is now imperative to survive and contribute in today's Information Society, intellectual access is also required, particularly with the Internet's interactive socially collaborative mode. In addition, organizations need to provide the infrastructure and other preconditions to insure equitable access and use of information.
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Ogilvie, Sheilagh. "Guilds and Growth." In The European Guilds. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691137544.003.0009.

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This chapter discusses different measures of guild strength, in terms of guild numbers, producer—merchant relations, guilds' internal cohesiveness, their relationship with the state, characteristics of towns, interaction with the countryside, and the role of guild-free enclaves. It also examines how guild strength and weakness were associated with economic performance across pre-industrial Europe. First, European societies with relatively weak guilds saw comparatively rapid economic growth from the late medieval period onwards. Second, economic performance differed more modestly between societies with intermediate guilds and those with strong ones. Third, strong guilds were not associated with high per capita GDP or rapid economic growth at any point between 1300 and 1850. This casts doubt on the notion that guilds generated net benefits for European economies, even in their medieval inception.
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Benna, Abubakar U. "Collaborative Consumption as a Tool for Agricultural Expansion in Developing Countries." In Crowdsourcing. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-8362-2.ch035.

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Collaborative consumption is a broader term encompassing emerging areas, such as crowdfunding and the sharing economy, which enhance consumer enablement through direct interaction. This chapter addresses opportunities and challenges of how to support small- and medium-scale farmers in developing countries. Traditional agriculture, as well as urban agriculture, is rising with the significant urbanization that is occurring in developing economies. There is currently limited research on the value of collaborative consumption as a catalyst for agricultural development. Consequently, the aim of this chapter is to provide an overview of how collaborative consumption in agriculture can be supported. The study is conducted based on the review of literature and case studies related to both agriculture and collaborative consumption. A few key observations are provided in order to assist with the formulation of strategies that increase producer and customer satisfaction, value addition, and engagement.
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Benna, Abubakar U. "Collaborative Consumption as a Tool for Agricultural Expansion in Developing Countries." In Crowdfunding and Sustainable Urban Development in Emerging Economies. IGI Global, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-3952-0.ch003.

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Collaborative consumption is a broader term encompassing emerging areas, such as crowdfunding and the sharing economy, which enhance consumer enablement through direct interaction. This chapter addresses opportunities and challenges of how to support small- and medium-scale farmers in developing countries. Traditional agriculture, as well as urban agriculture, is rising with the significant urbanization that is occurring in developing economies. There is currently limited research on the value of collaborative consumption as a catalyst for agricultural development. Consequently, the aim of this chapter is to provide an overview of how collaborative consumption in agriculture can be supported. The study is conducted based on the review of literature and case studies related to both agriculture and collaborative consumption. A few key observations are provided in order to assist with the formulation of strategies that increase producer and customer satisfaction, value addition, and engagement.
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Conference papers on the topic "Producer-producer interaction"

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Baig, Muhammad Nadeem, Muhammad Noman, and Nasir Hayat. "Fixed Area Nozzle With Free Power Turbine: What Makes the Match?" In ASME Turbo Expo 2018: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2018-75108.

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The matching of free power turbine with gas producer/generator turbine in a twin shaft industrial gas turbine configuration is a complex fluid interaction with the fact that maximum output must be achieved at fully choked nozzle segments while fixing the compressor and gas producer turbine pressure ratios. The paper presents characteristics of different turbo-machines with power turbine chiefly the matching of fixed area nozzle with low Wobbe Index Fuels. It also addresses the peculiar behavior of bleed valve, control limits, power as well as correlation of low Wobbe Index fuels. Mechanically, the gas producer/generator turbine and power turbine are independent in twin shaft gas turbines for oil and gas applications; i.e., the speed of free power turbine is controlled by driven equipment like pump or compressor similar to single shaft gas turbine generator set applications. The only contact remains between them is burnt gases generated by Gas producer Turbine. The full/optimum power will be obtained with correct aerodynamic matching of free power turbine at different match temperatures. The paper describes how turbine rotor inlet temperature ‘TRIT’ can be controlled by fixing discharge pressure of axial flow compressor, gas producer speed, flow through first power turbine nozzle etc. Important fluid phenomenon, the high TRIT in fully choked nozzle and bleed valve closing delay at high ambient match will be discussed in more detail. Last but not least, a correction factor is introduced by mathematical correlation of fixing the exit area of nozzles with complex calculations performed for low Wobbe index fuels keeping in view the match temperature.
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Taylor, Jennyfer Lawrence, Duncan Stevenson, and Tom Gedeon. "Domain Exploration of ICT Use in Consumer-to-Producer Feedback Loops within the Fair Trade System." In OzCHI '15: The Annual Meeting of the Australian Special Interest Group for Computer Human Interaction. ACM, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2838739.2838754.

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Moura, F. A. M., J. R. Camacho, M. L. R. Chaves, and G. C. Guimaraes. "The dynamic interaction of independent power producer synchronous machines connected to a distribution network in ATP-EMTP." In 2010 XIX International Conference on Electrical Machines (ICEM). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icelmach.2010.5607674.

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Schmidt, Tobias R. H., Anuhar O. Nesme, Judith K. Forstner, Kamen N. Beronov, Rainer M. Benning, and Antonio R. Delgado. "Detection of Foreign Bodies in Closed Food Containers Supported With Fluid-Solid-Interaction Analysis." In ASME 2009 Pressure Vessels and Piping Conference. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/pvp2009-77387.

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The unwanted inclusions in food and beverages pose a threat to both consumer health and the business, including producer image and liability. Detection of such inclusions, in particular metal and glass particles of millimetre size, is an important element of quality control in such industries. Specific solutions usually are limited in their detection range or are investment and space intensive. The presented project investigates a principally new detection method for foreign particles in fluid media of different densities and transparencies. Proof of concept is provided for the important case of glass containers, but the method is applicable to other materials.
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Xu, Hui, Hui-min Zou, and Feng-ling Shan. "Research on the Influencing Factors of Foreign Investment on Producer Services in China: From Industrial Interaction and Systematic Perspectives." In 2009 International Conference on Management and Service Science (MASS). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icmss.2009.5300971.

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Saffari Pour, M., N. Å. I. Andersson, M. Ersson, et al. "The Behavior of Impurities During Producer Gas Implementation as Alternative Fuel in Steel Reheating Furnaces: A CFD and Thermo-Chemical Study." In ASME 2016 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2016-67168.

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The use of available and cheap industrial producer gases as alternative fuels for the steel reheating furnaces is an attractive topic for steel industry. The application of producer gases for such furnaces introduces not only the complicated combustion system of Low Calorific Value (LCV) gases, but also several impurities that could be problematic for the quality of final steel products. The quality of steel can be highly affected by the interaction of impurities with iron-oxides at hot slab surfaces. In this research, the combustion of producer gases and the behavior of impurities at the steel slab surface are studied by aid of a novel coupled computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and thermodynamics approach. The impurities are introduced as mineral ash particles with the particle size distributions of 15–100 μm. The CFD predicted data regarding the accumulation of ash particles are extracted from an interface layer at the flaring gas media around the steel slab surface. Later on, these predicted data are used for the thermo-chemical calculations regarding the formation of sticky solutions and stable phases at the steel slab surface. The results show that the particles are more likely follow the flow due to the high injection velocity of fuel (70 m/s) and the dominant inertial forces. More than 90 percent of particles have been evacuated through the exhaust pipes. The only 10 percent of remaining particles due to the high recirculation zones at the middle of furnace and the impinging effect of front walls tend to stick to the side wall of slab in the heating zone more than the soaking zone.
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Talbot, Paul W., Abhinav Gairola, Konor Frick, and Cristian Rabiti. "HERON As a Tool for Light Water Reactor Market Interaction in a Deregulated Market." In ASME 2020 Power Conference collocated with the 2020 International Conference on Nuclear Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/power2020-16916.

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Abstract This paper reports the development of HERON (Holistic Energy Resource Optimization Network), a newly-developed RAVEN (Risk Analysis Virtual ENvironment) plugin for grid and capacity optimization, to technoeconomic analysis in a deregulated market. A short description of the HERON plugin is provided, and the release process is described. HERON as a plugin enables RAVEN to perform stochastic technoeconomic analysis of grid-energy systems in a generic approach. The primary function of HERON is to generate the complex RAVEN workflows necessary to optimize component capacities under stochastic systems. HERON is capable of analyzing systems with complex components transferring a variety of commodities, including production components and varied markets. HERON is capable of optimizing high-resolution dispatch for such systems and guiding stochastic optimization algorithms in RAVEN for finding optimal component capacities. In particular, this document demonstrates the application of HERON to systems with deregulated markets. A system including a hyrdogen market, an electricity market, hydrogen storage, a hydrogen producer, and a nuclear power plant is considered. Stochastic histories for electricity prices at the electricity market are employed to perform stochastic analysis for ideal sizing of the hydrogen production facility and hydrogen storage unit. The impact of hydrogen market price and volatility of electricity price are also shown.
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McSpadden, Albert R., Ruggero Trevisan, Stig Arne Stene, and Anita Vonheim. "Large-Scale Field Validation and Practical Application of a Multi-Well Thermal Interaction Model for Temperature Simulation." In SPE/IADC International Drilling Conference and Exhibition. SPE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/204104-ms.

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Abstract The wellbore and formation temperature environment around a system of multiple wells in close proximity is complex. Temperature simulation and prediction for a single isolated well is simplified by axisymmetric assumptions. Realistic multi-well environments do not have obvious symmetry and are interactive given different operating states including possibly a mix of producer versus injector wells. A simulation model of thermal interaction between closely spaced wells has been developed in a collaborative project. A large-scale validation of the model is presented here. An important field application is presented for a subsea well template where movement tolerances must be tightly controlled. Large-scale validation was conducted for an offshore platform development where more than 30 wells were drilled and brought onto production over a period of 4-5 years. As each well was drilled and completed, temperature logs where recorded which thereby gave a digital signature of the complex thermal environment below mudline as it evolved over time. The simulation model temperature for each well was corroborated against well temperature logs. A simultaneous boundary-condition of flowing wellhead temperatures and pressures for each well was compared against the model predictions. Also, a detailed predictive case study is presented for a 6 well subsea template. Model temperatures were used to assess the impact of cement height on wellhead movement within the template structure which featured lockdowns and tight tolerances on allowable movement within the housing profile. Predicted temperatures from the multi-well model agree closely with logs and correlate closely with characteristic temperature excursions from geothermal below the mudline down to the well path kick-off zone. Since the logs occur over time and account for a changing well population, the model is shown to accurately capture the time evolution of the complex temperature environment. The model explains unusual temperature log signatures as the result of sidetracks and the radial extent of heat affected zones from the parent wellbore. The subsea case study highlights the importance of predicting the complex multi-well temperature environment by demonstrating its impact on the wellhead movement given the uncertainty of cement tops for deeper shoes of combined conductor/surface casings. This learning informs subsea template design and selection with port options for cement grout and top-up jobs. Although the multi-well temperature model has been presented previously along with some field data validation, the large-scale study presented provides further and significant model validation. Extensive data over time and corroboration with unusual temperature log phenomena demonstrate model accuracy. The utilization of the model in the design and specification of a subsea template development provides a real-world example and demonstrates practical application as well as its usefulness.
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Hoffenson, Steven, and Rikard Söderberg. "Policy and Demand as Drivers for Product Quality and Sustainability: A Market Systems Approach." In ASME 2014 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2014-34368.

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The market is a complex system with many different stakeholders and interactions. A number of decisions within this system affect the design of new products, not only from design teams but also from consumers, producers, and policy-makers. Market systems studies have shown how profit-optimal producer decisions regarding product design and pricing can influence a number of different factors including the quality, environmental impact, production costs, and ultimately consumer demand for the product. This study models the ways that policies and consumer demand combine in a market systems framework to influence optimal product design and, in particular, product quality and environmental sustainability. Implementing this model for the design of a mobile phone case shows how different environmental impact assessment methods, levels of taxation, and factors introduced to the consumer decision-making process will influence producer profits and overall environmental impacts. This demonstrates how different types of policies might be evaluated for their effectiveness in achieving economic success for the producer and reduced environmental impacts for society, and a “win-win” scenario was uncovered in the case of the mobile phone.
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Zhu, Xin, and Kun Zhu. "Empirical Study of the Interactive Relationship between Producer Services and Manufacturing in Guangxi." In 2015 International Conference on Education Reform and Modern Management. Atlantis Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/ermm-15.2015.91.

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