CREATING AN ENVIRONMENT CONDUCIVE FOR DEVELOPING CUSTOMER COMMITMENT: DOES SHOCK INTENSITY MAKE A DIFFERENCE?

Author(s):  
Edwin Theron
2008 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 21-24
Author(s):  
Pete Hammett
Keyword(s):  

1982 ◽  
Vol 34 (3b) ◽  
pp. 163-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. M. Cotton ◽  
Glyn Goodall ◽  
N. J. Mackintosh

Five experiments, all employing conditioned suppression in rats, studied inhibitory conditioning to a stimulus signalling a reduction in shock intensity. Experimental subjects were conditioned to a tone signalling a 1·0 mA shock and to a tone-light compound signalling a 0·4 mA shock. On a summation test in which it alleviated the suppression maintained by a third stimulus also associated with the 1·0 mA shock, the light was established as a conditioned inhibitor. Retardation tests gave ambiguous results: the light was relatively slow to condition when paired, either alone or in conjunction with another stimulus, with the 0·4 mA shock, but the difference from a novel stimulus control group was not significant. Two final experiments found no evidence at all of inhibition on a summation test in which the light was presented in conjunction with a stimulus that had itself been associated with the 0·4 mA shock. The results of these experiments have implications for the question of what animals learn during the course of inhibitory conditioning.


1969 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.R. Pagano ◽  
D.F. Bush ◽  
G. Martin ◽  
E.B. Hunt

2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nasiatul Aisyah Salim

ABSTRACTBackground: The competitive and dynamic market conditions in hospitals need to understand market structure and develop a relationship with various actors. Without trust, a relationship will not last in the long term. An important foundation in a relationship is trust. In addition, high levels of trust and commitment can maintain customer and organizational profitability. Objective: To know the influence of trust on customer commitment on skin care service of PKU Muhammadiyah Hospital Yogyakarta Methods: Type of analytic research with cross sectional analytic design. Research subjects were 100 respondents. The data were collected by questionnaire. Data were analyzed by simple linear regression.Result: indicates that there is an influence between trust on commitment due to significant value  (p) 0,000 < 0.05. The value of R 2 of 0.421 which means that the commitment can be explained by the confidence variable of 42.1%. While the remaining 57.9 % is explained by other variables. Conclusion: Trust has a significant effect on customer commitment. So that the higher the customer's trust will be the higher the customer commitment on skin care service at RS PKU Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-51
Author(s):  
Yingjie Zhang ◽  
Xingen Lu ◽  
Yanfeng Zhang ◽  
Ziqing Zhang ◽  
Xu Dong ◽  
...  

Abstract This paper describes the stall mechanism in an ultra-high-pressure-ratio centrifugal compressor. A model comprising all impeller and diffuser blade passages is used to conduct unsteady simulations that trace the onset of instability in the compressor. Backward-traveling rotating stall waves appear at the inlet of the radial diffuser when the compressor is throttled. Six stall cells propagate circumferentially at approximately 0.7% of the impeller rotation speed. The detached shock of the radial diffuser leading edge and the number of stall cells determine the direction of stall propagation, which is opposite to the impeller rotation direction. Dynamic mode decomposition is applied to instantaneous flow fields to extract the flow structure related to the stall mode. This shows that intensive pressure fluctuations concentrate in the diffuser throat as a result of changes in the detached shock intensity. The diffuser passage stall and stall recovery are accompanied by changes in incidence angle and shock wave intensity. When the diffuser passage stalls, the shock-induced boundary-layer separation region near the diffuser vane suction surface gradually expands, increasing the incidence angle and decreasing the shock intensity. The shock is pushed from the diffuser throat toward the diffuser leading edge. When the diffuser passage recovers from stall, the shock wave gradually returns to the diffuser throat, with the incidence angle decreasing and the shock intensity increasing. Once the shock intensity reaches its maximum, the diffuser passage suffers severe shock-induced boundary-layer separation and stalls again.


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