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Taylor Taylorism

All of the studies reviewed here except Danielson et al. (1993), Morrison et al. (1994), and Pike et al. (1994) use some version of the aggregate economic model known as AGSIM (Techsim, AGSIM-1, AGSIM-2) developed by C. Robert Taylor (Taylor, 1993) at Auburn University. This is a 10-region, econometric-simulation model of the supply and demand for major field crops and livestock products in the United States (Taylor, 1993) and has been used to assess many pesticide cancellation scenarios and other national policies that affect agricultural production and demand. [Pg.157]

Since there is limited information available as to how found fossil organisms lived or how they reproduced in the past, their true affinities may never be known. In addition, most fungi are not very well preserved in the fossil record, so it has been difficult to interpret the fossil record of fungi, leaving open the possibility of an earlier, unrecorded history (Gray Shear, 1992 Taylor Taylor, 1993 Taylor et al., 1994 Hibbett et al., 1995). [Pg.383]

Wayne A. Taylor Taylor Enterprises, Inc., Libertyville, Illinois, U.S.A. [Pg.273]

About one century later, Lord Kelvin studied the charging between water dripping from two different liquid nozzles, which leads to electrospray phenomena at the nozzles themselves (Smith, 2000). In the last century, a series of systematic studies on electrospray were carried out by Zeleny (Zeleny, 1917) and Taylor (Taylor, 1964a and b) allowing a detailed description of the phenomenon. In the middle of the century, electrospray started to be used on the industrial scale, in the application of paints and coatings to metal surfaces. The fine spray results in very smooth even films, with the paint actually attracted to... [Pg.13]

Time studies of Fredrick Winslow Taylor [Taylor, 1911]... [Pg.1324]

There are several published results of real world forecasting. We discuss briefly a few of the forecasting applications in practice. For more details and additional applications, the reader is referred to the text by Taylor (Taylor, 2007). [Pg.61]

Airplane engine (Charles E. Taylor) Taylor begins building engines for the Wright brothers airplanes. [Pg.2050]

The approach taken in this book is largely a continuation of the Boudart school of kinetics . The academic geneology of this school is quite interesting and worthy of mention. Michel Boudart s advising professor at Princeton University was Sir Hugh Taylor. Taylor, in turn, worked with Basset in Liverpool, Arrhenius in Stockholm, and Bodenstein in Hannover to obtain his Ph.D. Arrhenius worked with Ostwald, Kohlrausch, Boltzmann and van t Hoff after receiving his doctorate, while Bodenstein also conducted postdoctoral research with Ostwald [2]. Clearly, a solid foundation in thermodynamics, kinetics and catalysis was established by this research lineage. [Pg.2]

An extensive discussion of the stress relaxation function in vulcanized mbber completes this chapter. The work was performed by another emerging leader in polymer science Arthur V. Tobolsky (1919-1972). He received his Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1944 and worked with Henry Eyring and Hugh S. Taylor. Taylor was proud to present the Bingham Medal of the Society of Rheology to Tobolsky in 1956. Tobolsky also collaborated with Herman Mark on the Second Edition of his monograph [3], published in 1950. He was so successful at Princeton that he was appointed there immediately. He found himself at Brooklyn Poly as Professor of Chemistry in 1950, but returned to Princeton where he spent the rest of his life. One of the first students to graduate under the direction of Arthur Tobolsky was Richard S. Stein (1925-) in 1948. [Pg.45]

Theory The release under shear of an active molecule that is initially encapsulated in the aqueous phase of a W/OAV multiple emulsion is a very promising phenomenon for applications in cosmetics or pharmaceuticals. Taylor (Taylor, 1932, 1934) was first to study the deformation of molecules under shear and their bursting in a simple, dilute emulsion. He considered that breakup occurred when shear stress exceeds cohesion stress. He defined this breakup by way of a capillary number, Ca ... [Pg.213]


See other pages where Taylor Taylorism is mentioned: [Pg.56]    [Pg.384]    [Pg.444]    [Pg.786]    [Pg.874]    [Pg.1322]    [Pg.127]    [Pg.349]    [Pg.350]    [Pg.358]    [Pg.1853]    [Pg.1419]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.311]    [Pg.1387]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.59 , Pg.87 ]




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