Institution
University of Vaasa
Education•Vaasa, Finland•
About: University of Vaasa is a education organization based out in Vaasa, Finland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Supply chain & Stock market. The organization has 784 authors who have published 3186 publications receiving 64626 citations. The organization is also known as: Vaasan yliopisto & Vasa universitet.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: An overview of the recent surgical intraoperational applications of indocyanine green fluorescence imaging methods, the basics of the technology, and instrumentation used is given.
Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to give an overview of the recent surgical intraoperational applications of indocyanine green fluorescence imaging methods, the basics of the technology, and instrumentation used. Well over 200 papers describing this technique in clinical setting are reviewed. In addition to the surgical applications, other recent medical applications of ICG are briefly examined.
1,000 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors comprehensively analyse the diversity within and between the three concepts of Circular Economy, Green Economy and Bioeconomy, and find that, for what concerns environmental sustainability, Green economy acts as an ‘umbrella’ concept, including elements from Circular economy and bioeconomy concepts, as well as additional ideas, e.g. nature-based solutions.
614 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a systematic literature review is conducted related to understanding implementation of Product-Service Systems business models and five sets of tactical practices, including contracts, marketing, networks, product and service design, and sustainability operational practices.
613 citations
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TL;DR: This paper found that cultural distance between the home base of the investor and the target country (or perhaps political risk) exerts a powerful influence on ownership of subsidiaries, but cultural characteristics of the home-base do not.
Abstract: This paper tests the proposition that national origin affects the strategies of multinational enterprises by looking at the determinants of the choice they make between entering the United States through partially versus wholly owned subsidiaries. We pool entries into the United States made by firms based in two countries, Japan and Finland, which differ both in their cultural characteristics and in their cultural distance to the United States. After carefully controlling for the known firm and industry-level determinants of subsidiary ownership strategies, we find that cultural distance between the home base of the investor and the target country (or perhaps political risk) exerts a powerful influence on ownership of subsidiaries, but cultural characteristics of the home base do not.
568 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present new information on this largely unstudied group, drawn from graduate engineers from Finland, identifying similarities with the more traditional expatriate forms and some important differences.
543 citations
Authors
Showing all 809 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Angappa Gunasekaran | 101 | 586 | 40633 |
Joao P. S. Catalao | 68 | 1039 | 19348 |
Klaus G. Grunert | 68 | 352 | 19911 |
Chris Brewster | 65 | 356 | 13944 |
Markus Jakobsson | 63 | 208 | 14871 |
Sascha Kraus | 58 | 317 | 10428 |
Juan M. Corchado | 57 | 665 | 12250 |
Pervez N. Ghauri | 48 | 227 | 13083 |
Marcelo Godoy Simões | 47 | 197 | 8494 |
Miadreza Shafie-khah | 47 | 450 | 8086 |
Martin Meyer | 42 | 156 | 7289 |
Nureddin Ashammakhi | 42 | 235 | 6862 |
Joakim Wincent | 39 | 179 | 5523 |
Kristian Möller | 39 | 122 | 7764 |
Heikki Karjaluoto | 39 | 163 | 8527 |