Multiproduct firms often diversify into technologically related activities to exploit efficiencies of joint production; however, unrelated products in the company's portfolio provide access to distinct markets and can help to avoid industry-specific shocks. Yet, the underlying mechanisms of related and unrelated diversification are still poorly understood. Here we investigate diversification decisions of firms in periods when corporations' markets are hit by a demand shocks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn addition to economic and infrastructural factors, social connections of people also influence migration patterns. This influence can be attributed to the resources that are made available by social contacts: social capital, which can also be utilized in the process of migration. Based on previous literature, we identify three different aspects of social capital and test their relationship with domestic migration simultaneously.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDo labor mobility and co-worker networks contribute to convergence or divergence between regions? Based on the previous literature, labor mobility contributes to knowledge transfer between firms. Therefore, mobility may contribute to decreasing productivity differences, while limited mobility sustains higher differences. The effect of co-worker networks, however, can be two-fold in this process; they transmit information about potential jobs, which may enhance the mobility of workers-even between regions-and this enhanced mobility may contribute to levelling of differences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGait dysfunction is common in patients with multiple sclerosis (PwMS). Treatment with prolonged-release fampridine (PR-fampridine) improves walking ability in some PwMS. Associated fampridine-induced changes in the walking pattern are still poorly understood but may provide a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying the beneficial drug effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Walking dysfunction is common in people with multiple sclerosis (MS). Besides walking speed or endurance, one crucial feature of ambulatory function is the ability to adjust the gait pattern according to walking speed which relies on the integrity of spinal motor centres, their reciprocal connections to supraspinal networks and peripheral sensory input.
Objective: To investigate the capacity of people with MS to modify their gait pattern in response to changes in walking speed.