default search action
AI & Society, Volume 17, 2003
Volume 17, Number 1, May 2003
- David Smith:
Convergence, the university of the future and the future of the university. 1-11 - Gillian Allard:
Brokers and bricoleurs: entrepreneurship in Wales' online music scene. 12-24 - Stuart Nolan:
Box Clever: The Intelligence of Television. 25-36 - Colin Mercer:
Culture in the Age of Convergence: The Need for a New Policy Stance and Platform for Europe. 37-44 - Fred Manske, Yonggap Moon:
Cultural signature of interorganisational information systems? The development of EDI systems in the korean automotive industry. 45-61 - Richard Ennals:
Book Review. 62-63 - Richard Ennals:
Book Review. 64-
Volume 17, Number 2, July 2003
- Jörgen Eklund, Bo Bergman:
Developing work and quality improvement strategies: an introduction. 65-70
- Yoshio Kondo:
Quality in the present and future decades. 71-77 - Colin G. Drury:
Service, quality and human factors. 78-96 - Pascale Carayon, Marla C. Haims:
Balanced work system and participation in quality management: applications in the community. 97-113 - John R. Wilson:
Support of opportunities for shopfloor involvement through information and communication technologies. 114-133 - Daniël Vloeberghs, Erik Faes:
The role of human resource management in implementing a 'new agreement' between employers and employees. 134-149
- Su Mi Park Dahlgaard, Jens J. Dahlgaard:
Towards a holistic understanding of human motivation: core values--the entrance to people's commitment? 150-180 - Bo Edvardsson:
A commentary on developing work and quality improvement strategies I. 181-183 - Xavier Tort-Martorell:
A commentary on developing work and quality improvement strategies II. 184-186 - Tito Conti:
Commentary on developing work and quality improvement strategies III. 187-191 - Enda Fallon:
A commentary on developing work and quality improvement strategies IV. 192-195 - Paul Hyland:
A commentary on developing work and quality improvement strategies V. 196-199 - Rick L. Edgeman:
Synergy for the human heart: excellence and sustainability at the crossroads. 200-202
Volume 17, Numbers 3-4, November 2003
- Klaus Ruth:
Guest editorial--industrial cultures and advanced innovation modes. 203-206
- Parthasarathi Banerjee:
Narration, discourse and dialogue: issues in the management of inter-cultural innovation. 207-224 - Klaus Ruth:
Industrial culture and the innovation of innovation: enginology or socioneering? 225-240 - Leonard H. Lynn:
Culture and engineering in the USA and Japan. 241-255 - Tohru Ihara, Jie Zhu:
The general idea and usage of manufacturing knowledge data-contained differences of production culture. 256-265 - Felix Rauner, Djavad Salari:
Cultural determinants of technology transfer - a case study in human resources planning for steel production. 266-277 - Shin'ichi Warisawa, Chikao Inaba, Yoshimi Ito:
The application of manufacturing culture to the design of Asian region oriented machine tools. 278-290 - Masatsugu Tsuji:
Technological innovation and the formation of Japanese technology: the case of the machine tool industry. 291-306 - Lauge Baungaard Rasmussen:
The facilitation of groups and networks: capabilities to shape creative cooperation. 307-321 - Satinder P. Gill, Jan O. Borchers:
Knowledge in co-action: social intelligence in collaborative design activity. 322-339 - Sean Zdenek:
Artificial intelligence as a discursive practice: the case of embodied software agent systems. 340-363
- Carlos Acosta, Alejandro López:
Global manufacturing in the Mexican culture perspective: a case study. 364-374 - Amita Dev, Shyam S. Agrawal, D. Roy Choudhury:
Categorization of Hindi phonemes by neural networks. 375-382 - John Durkin:
Man & machine: I wonder if we can coexist. 383-390
- Richard Ennals:
Will Hutton: The world we're in: Little, Brown, London, 2002, 409 pp (ISBN 0-316-86081-6). 391-392 - Ernesto Burattini:
Roberto Cordeschi: The discovery of the artificial. Behaviour, mind and machines before and beyond cybernetics.: Kluwer, Dordrecht, 2002. 393-395
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.