Poster Presentation
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Annual Report 2018 2019
ANNUAL REPORT 2018 2019 G 7-225 ANNUAL REPORT(英文)2002-2003 初校 7月28日 ANNUAL REPORT FY2018 - FY2019 ANNUAL REPORT FY2018 - FY2019 INDEX About IIR i I. Research Activities 01 1) Innovation Research Forum 02 2) Brown Bag Lunch Seminar 06 3) Conferences 08 II. Researchers 11 1) Full-time Researchers 12 2) International Visiting Researchers 36 III. Education 37 1) Courses Given by the IIR Faculty Members 38 2) Innovation Management and Policy Program 40 IV. Research Results / Publications 45 1) Hitotsubashi Business Review 46 2) Working Papers 54 3) Case Studies 58 About IIR ‘To become a world-class of excellence for research in social processes of innovation’ ― The Institute of Innovation Research (IIR) was established at Hitotsubashi University to achieve this aim in April 1997, as the result of the reorganization of the Institute of Business Research, whose main pursuit had been the theoretical and empirical analysis of business, society and management. It is indispensable for a populous country with poor natural resources like Japan to generate innovation. The importance of innovation has considerably increased since 1990s when growth by catching up with Western competitors was no longer possible. We have, however, insufficient understanding on how innovation is generated, which involves the long and social process for turning technological invention into industrial development. Innovation is a complex social phenomenon in which economic, political, organizational, historical and legislative factors are correlated with each other. In order to clarify this process, there needed to be places for interdisciplinary, systematic research where people from various fields of social science could work together utilizing the knowledge of natural science. -
El Colegio De México EL MERCADO DE IDOL VARONES EN JAPÓN
El Colegio de México EL MERCADO DE IDOL VARONES EN JAPÓN (1999 – 2008): CARACTERIZACIÓN DE LA OFERTA A TRAVÉS DEL ESTUDIO DE UN CASO REPRESENTATIVO Tesis presentada por YUNUEN YSELA MANDUJANO SALAZAR en conformidad con los requisitos establecidos para recibir el grado de MAESTRÍA EN ESTUDIOS DE ASIA Y ÁFRICA ESPECIALIDAD JAPÓN Centro de Estudios de Asia y África 2009 ÍNDICE INTRODUCCIÓN……………………………………………………………………. 3 I. FENÓMENO IDOL EN JAPÓN Y OBJETO DE ESTUDIO………………... 14 1. Desarrollo general de la industria idol……………………………………. 14 2. Definición de idol………………………………………………………… 18 3. La compañía Johnny’s Jimusho………………………………………….. 22 4. Arashi…………………………………………………………………….. 31 II. ESTRATEGIAS DE DESARROLLO DEL MERCADO IDOL…………….. 36 1. Primera etapa: Base junior, reclutamiento y formación…………………. 37 2. Segunda etapa: Lanzamiento y consolidación de mercado………………. 46 3. Tercera etapa: Diversificación y expansión de mercado…………………. 58 III. SITUACIÓN ACTUAL DEL MERCADO DE IDOL VARONES………….. 68 1. El dominio idol dentro de la industria musical en Japón…………………. 69 2. Fin del monopolio y cambio de estrategias en el mercado de idol varones en Japón……………………………………………………………………… 75 CONCLUSIONES……………………………………………………………………. 84 REFERENCIAS………………………………………………………………………. 88 ANEXOS……………………………………………………………………………… 98 1 NOTA SOBRE EL SISTEMA DE ROMANIZACIÓN UTILIZADO En el presente estudio se utilizará, para los términos generales y los nombres de ciudades, el sistema de romanización usado en el Kenkyusha’s New Japanese – English Dictionary (3ra y ediciones posteriores). En el caso de nombres propios de origen japonés, se presentará primero el nombre y luego el apellido y se utilizará la romanización utilizada en las fuentes originales. Asimismo, es común que los autores no utilicen el macron (¯ ) cuando existe una vocal larga en este tipo de denominaciones. -
ESJ67 Program Web.Pdf
CONTENTS 㣐⠓傈玎嚊殛.FFUJOH4DIFEVMF 㣐⠓傈玎♧鋮邌 5JNFUBCMF 长周ⰻ٥岣䠐✲갪٥傈劤欰䡾㷕⠓㣐⠓鋉 (FOFSBMJOTUSVDUJPOT /PUJDFTGPSQBSUJDJQBOUT #ZMBXTGPSUIF"OOVBM.FFUJOHTPGUIF&DPMPHJDBM4PDJFUZPG+BQBO NBQTBOENBJOWFOVF 㜥周ⰻ"DDFTT⠓٥㖑㔳٥أإؙ، -FDUVSFTCZBXBSESFDJQJFOUT 颣鎸䙀闌怴"XBSEDFSFNPOZ」㷕⠓颣ぐ颣䱇颣䒭٥ Ⱅ闌怴⠓1VCMJDMFDUVSFT 欰䡾㷕闌䏟ו欰䡾㷕闌䏟պ٥ֿ،صُآךז٦涪邌⠓չةأه넝吤欰 1PTUFSQSFTFOUBUJPOTCZIJHITDIPPMTUVEFOUT &DPMPHZDPVSTFGPSIJHITDIPPMTUVEFOUT &DPMPHZDPVSTFGPSDIJMESFO 嚊銲4ZNQPTJVNTيؐآهٝء 荈歋꧊⠓嚊銲8PSLTIPQT 嚊銲'PSVNTيؿؓ٦ٓ 〡걧涪邌♧鋮 0SBMQSFTFOUBUJPOT ٦涪邌♧鋮ةأه 1PTUFSQSFTFOUBUJPOT ٦涪邌♧鋮ةأه넝吤欰 1PTUFSQSFTFOUBUJPOTCZIJHITDIPPMTUVEFOUT 歗罏♧鋮1SFTFOUFSTBOE0SHBOJ[FST*OEFY⟰涪邌罏٥ "EWFSUJTFNFOU 额♧鋮٥䎢デ4QPOTPST⼿ 周ⰻ׀ך痥㔐傈劤欰䡾㷕⠓㣐⠓䎃剢٥䀤㿊 *NGPSNBUJPOPGUIFUI"OOVBM.FFUJOHPG&4+ JO0LBZBNB ٥㣐⠓㹋遤㨻㆞⠓せ砢$PNNJUUFFT⠓㣐⠓⟰歗㨻㆞ ׅկת鋮ְֽ׀דآ٦لي٦م⠓㣐כ姻铎邌ךيؚٓٗف 5IFFSSBUBPGUIFQSPHSBNBSFEJTDMPTFEJOUIF&4+XFCTJUF 㷕⠓ꞿ⽑鿇㙹㣕龤 㣐⠓⠓ꞿ傈ꅿ鰛僇խ 㣐⠓㹋遤㨻㆞ꞿ堀劤㉔〷խ㣐⠓⟰歗㨻㆞ꞿⰻ嵲⤥➜ 宓宵宨家宬宧宨宱宷季孲季宍宲宷室宵宲季官宕宄宅守 宆宫室宬宵季宲宩季宒宵宪室宱宬宽宬宱宪季宆宲宰宰宬宷宷宨宨季孲季宗宨宵宸室宮宬季宋完宑宒 宖宨宦宵宨宷室宵宼季宊宨宱宨宵室宯季宲宩季宒宵宪室宱宬宽宬宱宪季宆宲宰宰宬宷宷宨宨季孲季宋宬宵宲家宫宬季宋宄宖宋完宐宒宗宒 宆宫室宬宵季宲宩季宄宱宱宸室宯季宐宨宨宷宬宱宪季宓宯室宱宬宱宪季宆宲宰宰宬宷宷宨宨季孲季宖宫宸宱家宸宮宨季官宗宖官宐完 㣐⠓傈玎嚊殛.FFUJOH4DIFEVMF Ӫぐ珏㨻㆞⠓$PNNJUUFFNFFUJOHT 宏8FE 㣐⠓⟰歗㨻㆞⠓3PPN) 㢩勻珏㉏겗嗚鎢⡲噟鿇⠓3PPN* 欰䡾禸盖椚㼔㨻㆞⠓3PPN+ 㼛勻鎘歗㼔㨻㆞⠓3PPN& 荈搫⥂隊㼔㨻㆞⠓3PPN' ⥂Ⰻ欰䡾㷕灇瑔ⴚ遤⼿陽⠓3PPN) ٍؗٔ،佄䴂㼔㨻㆞⠓3PPN* ꅿ㢩㸜Ⰻ盖椚㨻㆞⠓3PPN+ &DPMPHJDBM3FTFBSDIⴚ遤⼿陽⠓3PPN' 傈劤欰䡾㷕⠓钞ⴚ遤⼿陽⠓3PPN) 欰䡾㷕侄肪㼔㨻㆞⠓3PPN* 㣐鋉垷ꞿ劍欰䡾㷕㼔㨻㆞⠓3PPN+ ➿陽㆞⠓3PPN# Ӫ筨⠓䱇颣䒭「颣闌怴(FOFSBMNFFUJOH "XBSEDFSFNPOZ -FDUVSFTCZBXBSESFDJQJFOUT 㕼4BU Room A / ˊ 筨⠓(FOFSBMNFFUJOH FDUVSFTCZBXBSESFDJQJFOUT-颣鎸䙀闌怴"XBSEDFSFNPOZ٥」䱇颣䒭٥ ˊ &3锷俑颣薉铂〡걧涪邌颣⸆⸤颣㤺⸠ ꈿ加 颣 խխ ˊ 㣐䃊颣㹧㖑颣欰䡾㷕⠓颣 ♧菙闌怴ي٥ؿؓ٦ٓ⠓荈歋꧊يؐآهٝءӪ -
Room a Wednesday, September 11 Invited Lectures T. Hashimoto
Room A Wednesday, September 11 Invited Lectures T. Hashimoto, presiding 12:55 1A08IL Polymerization Induced Self-Assembly via Metal-Free Living Polymerization Shinji Sugihara ................................................................................. 2115 S. Osawa, presiding 13:45 1A10IL Multidisciplinary Approaches for Manipulation of Molecules, Cells and Tissues Takehisa Matsuda ............................................................................ 2118 T. Kobayashi, presiding 14:35 1A12IL Biomineralized Organic-Inorganic Hybrids Aiming For Smart Drug Delivery Jun Shi,Shaokui Cao ........................................................................ 2121 N. Kimura, presiding 15:25 1A14IL Automobile made of plant -A dream inspired by cellulose nanofibers- Hiroyuki Yano ................................................................................... 2124 T. Kobayashi, presiding 16:15 1A16IL Thai Silk Fibroin/Gelatin System for Tissue Engineering and Controlled Release Applications Siriporn Damrongsakkul,Sorada Kanokpanont,Juthamas Ratanavaraporn ................................................................................ 2127 K. Takenaka, presiding 17:05 1A18IL From Helix to 2D : Highly Selective Polymer Reaction of Helical Polymer Membranes Toshiki Aoki ...................................................................................... 2130 Thursday, September 12 Invited Lectures S. Okamoto, presiding 9:10 2A01IL Block Copolymer Healing of Lithographic Defects Han-hao Cheng,Imelda Keen,Anguang Yu,Ya-mi Chuang,Idriss -
Oral Prpgram(PDF)
Room A Mon. Sep 6 Invited Lecture Masashi Kijima, presiding 10:25 1A04IL Paper-based electronics and sensor Toshiharu Enomae Yoshihiro Kikkawa, presiding 11:15 1A06IL ISO standardization for plastics related to environment Masao Kunioka Ikuyoshi Tomita, presiding 13:20 1A09IL Development of Functional Polymeric Materials by RAFT polymerization and Their Applications Hideharu Mori Hiroki Uehara, presiding 14:10 1A11IL Design of Metal Catalysts and Monomers Aiming for Synthesis of New Polyolefins Daisuke Takeuchi Koji Matsuoka, presiding 15:25 1A14IL The dynamic epitope theory-Vulnerability of proteins induced by posttranslational glycosylation Shin-ichiro Nishimura Jun-ichi Kadokawa, presiding 16:15 1A16IL Invention of Liquid-Crystalline Polymeric Systems and Their Applications Seiji Ujiie Ken Nakajima, presiding 17:05 1A18IL bio-inspired polymer electronic devices Naoki Asakawa Tue. Sep 7 Invited Lecture Atsushi Maruyama, presiding 9:35 2A02IL Development of polymers that control association and phase separation behavior of biomacromolecules and their application to biomaterials Akihiro Kishimura Koichiro Uto, presiding 10:25 2A04IL Development of functional polymers based on degradable aliphatic polycarbonates towards applications in biomaterials Kazuki Fukushima Akihiko Kikuchi, presiding 11:15 2A06IL Design and Application of Polymeric Materials that Exhibit Both High Degradability and Stability Nobuhiro Kihara Hideaki Yokoyama, presiding 13:20 2A09AL Analysis and functionalization of anisotropic changes in structure and properties -
Biden's Foreign Agenda
Asia’s struggle to vaccinate millions Xi’s priorities Muhyiddin’s gamble MCI(P) 053/04/2020 February 2021 BIDEN’S FOREIGN AGENDA A BIG SHIFT? WE BRING YOU SINGAPORE AND THE WORLD UP TO DATE IN THE KNOW News | Live blog | Mobile pushes Web specials | Newsletters | Microsites WhatsApp | SMS Special Features IN THE LOOP ON THE WATCH Facebook | Twitter | Instagram Videos | FB live | Live streams To subscribe to the free newsletters, go to str.sg/newsletters All newsletters connect you to stories on our straitstimes.com website. Data Digest Covid-19 vaccines: Types, routes & effectiveness WITH OVER 102 MILLION INFECTIONS Different routes to a Covid-19 vaccine and more than two million deaths How the leading contenders in the race to establish effective inoculation against the globally, much attention is now focused Sars-CoV-2 virus have approached the task on the vaccines in the works. Of the 237 vaccines in development, 64 are How vaccines work in various phases of clinical testing. 22 • Vaccines are all designed • There are four main • All methods rely • APC identifies • Immune cells will are currently in phase 3 of clinical trials, to safely trigger the body’s approaches towards on APC to initiate peptides, then be enabled to natural immune response developing a vaccine the immune snippets of recognise and with 18 still in phase 1, which include to Sars-CoV-2 against the virus response virus protein neutralise the virus testing the vaccine in a small number of healthy people. 1 Virus • Beijing Institute/Sinopharm* There are four main types of Covid-19 vaccines • Wuhan Institute/Sinopharm • Bharat Biotech/ ICMR vaccines in the works. -
The 56Th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Child Neurology
Brain & Development 36 (2014) 414–461 www.elsevier.com/locate/braindev The 56th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Child Neurology May 28–May 31, 2014 ACT CITY Hamamatsu / Okura Act City Hotel Hamamatsu PROGRAM http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.braindev.2014.03.014 The 56th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Child Neurology / Brain & Development 36 (2014) 414–461 415 Presidential Lecture Study of Glycogen metabolism --from muscle to brain Hideo Sugie (Japan) Department of Pediatrics, Jichi Medical University, Tochigi, Japan Special Lecture (Epi)genetic factors for the development of human imprinting disorders Tsutomu Ogata (Japan) Department of Pediatrics, Hamamatsu University School of Medicine, Hamamatsu,Japan Invited Lecture 1 How should we diagnose metabolic myopathy? John Vissing (Denmark) Neuromuscular Research Unit, Department of Neurology, Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark Invited Lecture 2 (Segawa Program) Tourette Syndrome: Update Mark Hallett (USA) Human Motor Control Section, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, USA Keynote Lecture Muscle pathology makes a close friendship with patients Ikuya Nonaka (Japan) Department of Child Neurology, National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry, Tokyo, Japan Special Educational Lecture Sequence of Synaptogenesis in Developing Human Brain Harvey B. Sarnat (Canada) Department of Paediatrics, University of Calgary and Alberta Children’s Hospital, Calgary, Alberta, Canada / Department of Pathology (Neuropathology) , University -
Poster Presentation
Room P Poster Presentation Booth No. 001 002 003 004 005 …… 115 116 Date Time 9:50~10:00 10:00~10:20 24 1P 10:20~11:00 a Wed. 11:00~11:40 b 11:40~11:50 12:50~13:00 13:00~13:20 25 2P 13:20~14:00 c Thu. 14:00~14:40 d 14:40~14:50 14:50~15:00 15:00~15:20 26 3P 15:20~16:00 e Fri. 16:00~16:40 f 16:40~16:50 Presentation Time Mounting Time Display Time Removing Time Wed. Sep 24 Presentation Time <a = 10:20~11:00> <b = 11:00~11:40> A. POLYMER CHEMISTRY: SYNTHESIS AND REACTIONS 1Pa001 Synthesis of Cyclic Carbon-Dioxide-Derived Poly(propylene carbonate) Satoshi Honda,Takami Shimamura,Hiroshi Sugimoto ··················································· 4172 1Pb002 Controlled Copolymerization by Metal Complex [69] Syntheses of Star-Shaped Poly(Propylene Carbonate)s From Carbon Dioxide and Investigation of Their Thermophysical Properties. Rumi Yamada,Yoshihisa Manabe,Asato Yoshida,Yukihito Takahashi,Satoshi Honda,Hiroshi Sugimoto ········································································································· 4174 1Pa003 Rare Earth Catalyzed Heterotactic Polymerization of Methyl Methacrylate Tomoyuki Toda,Masayoshi Nishiura,Zhaomin Hou ························································· 4176 1Pb004 Polymerization of 1,4-bis[(trimethylsilyl)ethynil]benzene with group 11 transition metal compounds associated with the elimination of trimethylsilyl groups Tetsuya Minagawa,Tokio Hagiwara ······················································································ 4178 1Pa005 Development of Industrial based Synthesis -
Weekly News Digest 産経オンライン英会話 ニュースディスカッション教材
Weekly News Digest 産経オンライン英会話 ニュースディスカッション教材 ‘Let's End With A Smile’: J-Pop Idol Group Arashi Bows Out The male idol group perhaps most associated with Japan — Arashi — is to be no more. The five members of the popular boy band held a press conference on Sunday January 27, where 38-year-old leader Satoshi Ohno announced that the group is planning to suspend activities by the end of 2020. Ohno added that he is planning to take a break from the entertainment industry. Wearing colorful jackets, the five members of the group — half-laughing and half-crying — held an hour-long press conference, responding to questions from the press and discussing their reasons for taking this decision. “It’s not that I was tired of the group, but I thought it was time to get some distance, stop for a second, and reexamine myself,” explained Ohno. Showing how united the five members are, group member Sho Sakurai, 37, repeatedly stressed, “If it’s not all of us, it’s not Arashi.” Ohno explained how the decision was reached: “We exchanged thoughts and expressed what we felt about the situation. And when the other members told me, ‘Let’s end with a smile,’ that was really hard,” said the group leader, as he choked back tears. When asked whether the decision of the leader led to a fight among other members, the other four assertively denied the statement. The other members said, smiling: “But people wrote about it, didn’t they?” “We should have just lied about it.” “We really didn’t fight about it though.” The press conference, more than anything, seemed to reveal that these five men, who have spent the better part of their career of 20 years together, have a very strong bond. -
Unbinding the Japanese Novel in English Translation
Department of Modern Languages Faculty of Arts University of Helsinki UNBINDING THE JAPANESE NOVEL IN ENGLISH TRANSLATION The Alfred A. Knopf Program, 1955 – 1977 Larry Walker ACADEMIC DISSERTATION To be presented, with the permission of the Faculty of Arts of the University of Helsinki, for public examination in Auditorium XII University Main Building, on the 25th of September at 12 noon. Helsinki 2015 ISBN 978-951-51-1472-3 (paperback) ISBN 978-951-51-1473-0 (PDF) Unigrafia Helsinki 2015 ABSTRACT Japanese literature in English translation has a history of 165 years, but it was not until after the hostilities of World War II ceased that any single publisher outside Japan put out a sustained series of novel-length translations. The New York house of Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. published thirty-four titles of Japanese literature in English translation in hardcover between the years 1955 to 1977. This “Program,” as it came to be called, was carried out under the leadership of Editor-in-Chief Harold Strauss (1907-1975), who endeavored to bring the then-active modern writers of Japan to the stage of world literature. Strauss and most of the translators who made this Program possible were trained in military language schools during World War II. The aim of this dissertation is to investigate the publisher’s policies and publishing criteria in the selection of texts, the actors involved in the mediation process and the preparation of the texts for market, the reception of the texts and their impact on the resulting translation profile of Japanese literature in America, England and elsewhere. -
Marketing K-Pop and J-Pop in the 21St Century Sarah Brand Dickinson College
Dickinson College Dickinson Scholar Student Honors Theses By Year Student Honors Theses 5-21-2017 Marketing K-Pop and J-Pop in the 21st Century Sarah Brand Dickinson College Follow this and additional works at: http://scholar.dickinson.edu/student_honors Part of the Asian Studies Commons, Digital Humanities Commons, Japanese Studies Commons, Korean Studies Commons, Music Commons, and the Other Film and Media Studies Commons Recommended Citation Brand, Sarah, "Marketing K-Pop and J-Pop in the 21st Century" (2017). Dickinson College Honors Theses. Paper 266. This Honors Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Dickinson Scholar. It has been accepted for inclusion by an authorized administrator. For more information, please contact [email protected]. MARKETING K-POP AND J-POP IN THE 21ST CENTURY Sarah Brand Senior Thesis Department of East Asian Studies Dickinson College May 10, 2017 Brand 2017 Music is an important part of daily life and, as a result, an integral part of culture. The way in which individuals are exposed to different genres and types of music helps illustrate the extent to which globalization has had an impact on the world. Before the invention of the internet, music was only available for purchase to consumers who went to record stores and physically purchased goods. Now, countless unique songs and genres are readily available with just a single search. Due to how easily consumers can access new music, digital distribution has completely overtaken the profit from selling physical copies of albums. In 2006, record labels still made $9.4 billion from CD sales in the United States, despite the fact that digital distribution entities, such as Napster and iTunes, provided digital copies of the same songs. -
Arashi Digitalian Live Tour Download
Arashi digitalian live tour download CLICK TO DOWNLOAD Arashi The Digitalian Live Tour - Disc 3; The Making [English subs] // announcement We can say this is pretty much my farewell gift and sign of apologies. Next week I will be going back to university for my degree in architecture. If I got to choose, between Arashi's concert DVDs and ayu's, judging from packaging point of view, of course I would leap for Arashi's immediately! Anyway, I forgot to mention Nino's solo. It was just perfection. Well, it was great because they had this tour near around Christmas and it was nice seeing Nino all renuzap.podarokideal.ru: Sakura Storm. Arashi - Dream-A-Live Album Download. Hello guys! I'm back sharing an old Song Album of Arashi. This one is one of my personal favorite. DREAM-A-LIVE ALBUM DISC 1 MB dl Aozora no Shita, Kimi no Tonari Performance in Music Station (HQ) Download from . 【周 邊】arashi live tour the digitalian グッズ詳細. Akhirnya, aku berkesempatan menonton konser Arashi Live Tour The Digitalian. Video konser ini sebenarnya sudah dirilis akhir Juli lalu, dan para fans udah pada ribut membicarakannya. Meski begitu, aku masih belum bisa nonton dengan alasan simple: link . Arashi Digitalian Tour Download Link!!! ARASHI HAYRANLARI BURAYA! Arashi Digitalian konserinin linkini buldum☆ Bu konser gerçekten harika! Konser arkasınını da göstermiş bunlaa. Arashi Live Tour "The Digitalian" Concert Report for Friday, Dec. 19th. It's the start of 5 days at Tokyo Dome! I'll be going to 3 of them. Since my previous reports already have the details on the set list and the stage set-up, I'll be skipping them and focusing on the fun things that have changed.