Search for dissertations about: "idea generation"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 114 swedish dissertations containing the words idea generation.
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1. A toolbox for idea generation and evaluation : Machine learning, data-driven, and contest-driven approaches to support idea generation
Abstract : Ideas are sources of creativity and innovation, and there is an increasing demand for innovation. For example, the start-up ecosystem has grown in both number and global spread. As a result, established companies need to monitor more start-ups than before and therefore need to find new ways to identify, screen, and collaborate with start-ups. READ MORE
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2. The human side of idea screening
Abstract : In extant research, idea screening has been viewed as a gate where ideas for innovations are evaluated and selected for further development. Given that organizations have limited resources, and cannot implement all of the ideas, idea screening acts as a bottleneck during the innovation process. READ MORE
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3. Idea development in online internal crowdsourcing : The role of peer contributions
Abstract : This thesis focuses on idea development in online internal crowdsourcing. Online crowdsourcing for ideas has seen a substantial uptake in practice and has attracted a leading wave of researchers in the academic field. READ MORE
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4. Accelerating column generation schemes : applications to routing problems
Abstract : Many integer optimization problems of great practical importance are today attacked with column generation. Merits of column generation is that it enables the use of compact and flexible formulations of many complex optimization problems, and that it often gives rise to good (strong) formulations. READ MORE
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5. OPENING THE BOX : Exploring the presumptions about the 'Net Generation'
Abstract : There are many names or labels which refer to the generation growing up with digital media and these include labels such as ‘Net Generation’ (Tapscott, 1998), ‘digital natives’ (Prensky, 2001), ‘cyberkids’ (Holloway, 2003) and ‘MySpacegeneration’ (Rosen, 2008). The core idea behind these labels is that young people who have grown up surrounded by digital technology are very different to previous generations in their way of using and even thinking about the new digital technology. READ MORE