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                <text>Stimulants of online shopping behaviour among chinese millenials in china</text>
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                <text>Patrick Acheampong, Li Zhiwen, Ruhiya Abubakar, Henry Asante Antwi, Michael Owusu Akomeah</text>
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                <text>To survive and prosper in the China, online companies must design their operational platforms to organically adjust to changes in consumer shopping behavior. The study investigated the intrinsic and extrinsic factors that influence the online purchasing behavior of Chinese millennials. A cohort of university students from selected parts of the Jiangsu province provided the sample of study. Consistent with the extant literature, the research confirms that millenials are influenced by several external factors, demographic factors, personal characteristics, and vendor/service/product characteristics and websites qualities when buying online. The economic, socio-cultural, technological, and legal considerations where the main external factors that influences online shopping behavior of Chinese millenials, internet knowledge, concern for security, need specificity and disposition to trust were the main personal characteristics identified. The study also found significant association between vendor services such as real existence of the store, store reputation, store size, reliability, assurance (seals, warranties, news clips) and use of testimonials/reference have association with millennials’ purchasing intention. Similar characteristics were identified for product characteristics, service quality factors and website quality and each of these is statistically significant. Gender was determined to moderate the effect of all the factors on online shopping behavior</text>
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                <text>Human Resource Management Academic Research Society, International Journal of Academic Research in Business and Social Sciences</text>
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                <text>Trust and Continuance of Mobile Payment Use Intention: A Study Based on Structural Equation Modeling</text>
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                <text>Patrick Acheampong, Kofi Baah Boamah, Nana Agyeman-Prempeh, Frank Boateng, Isaac Asare Bediako, Ruhiya Abubakar</text>
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                <text>The interactive nature of the internet has created many opportunities for mobile payment usage. In certain age groups and geographies, mobile payments have already unseated traditional means of effecting payment. In this study, 1,351 mobile payment users in Ghana were sampled using a structured questionnaire to investigate their intention to continue to use mobile payments technologies. The results showed that vendor reputation, word-of-mouth, and structural assurance significantly contribute to imbuing trust in mobile payment technology customers. When high levels of trust become identified with a brand, high numbers of customers choose to continue to use their current choice of mobile payment technology.</text>
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                <text>Igi-global</text>
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                <text>2021</text>
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                <text>Evaluation of the robusticity of mutual fund performance in ghana using enhanced resilient backpropagation neural network (ERBPNN) and fast adaptive neural network classifier …</text>
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                <text>Yushen Kong, Micheal Owusu-Akomeah, Henry Asante Antwi, Xuhua Hu, Patrick Acheampong</text>
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                <text>Mutual fund investment continues to play a very important role in the world financial markets especially in developing economies where the capital market is not very matured and tolerant of small scale investors. The total mutual fund asset globally as at the end of 2016 was in excess of $40.4 trillion. Despite its success there are uncertainties as to whether mutual funds in Ghana obtain optimal performance relative to their counterparts in United States, Luxembourg, Ireland, France, Australia, United Kingdom, Japan, China and Brazil. We contribute to the extant literature on mutual fund performance evaluation using a collection of more sophisticated econometric models. We selected six continuous historical years that is 2010–2011, 2012–2013 and 2014–2015 to construct a mutual fund performance evaluation model utilizing the fast adaptive neural network classifier (FANNC), and to compare our results …</text>
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                <text>Springer Berlin Heidelberg</text>
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                <text>Determinants of behavioral intentions of ‘Generation-Y’adoption and use of computer-mediated communication tools in Ghana</text>
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                <text>Patrick Acheampong, Li Zhiwen, Frank Boateng, Adelaide Brenya Boadu, Anthony Akai Acheampong</text>
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                <text>The ubiquitous nature of information and communication technology can be a very reliable conduit that enables people to share and deliver messages even when they are geographically unbounded. Today, the unbounded nature of the internet has facilitated computer-mediated communication. The emergence of mediated communication tools such as QQ, Wechat, Whatsapp etc have eventually drifted the attention of a whole generation from making phone calls to text messaging. We sampled 1823 students from 15 tertiary institutions across the ten regions of Ghana to answer a question designed on the UTAUT 2 model. Our objective was to determine the distinctive factors influencing the adoption and use of these computermediated communication tools among this category of respondents and the presence of intervening mechanism with their identifiable effects. We noted that the odds ratio of 1.751 and a confidence interval of 95%, suggest that females were more likely to use computer mediated communication tools than their male counterparts at a confidence interval of 95%(Sig= 0.002). Similarly, the age group (18-25 years) were 0.726 more likely to use computer mediated communication tools than elderly ones and this was statistically significant at 95% confidence interval (p-value= 0.000). Similar significant values were recorded for all the items of UTAUT 2 and perceived convenience.</text>
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                <text>The effect of herd formation among healthcare investors on health sector growth in China</text>
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                <text>Zhou Lulin, Henry Asante Antwi, Wenxin Wang, Ethel Yiranbon, Emmanuel Opoku Marfo, Patrick Acheampong</text>
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                <text>Background&#13;
China has become the world‘s second largest healthcare market based on a recent report by the World Health Organization. Eventhough China achieved universal health insurance coverage in 2011, representing the largest expansion of insurance coverage in human history achieved; health inequality remains endemic in China. Lessons from the effect of market crisis on health equity in Europe and other places has reignited interest in exploring the potential healthcare market aberrations that can trigger distributive injustice in healthcare resource allocation among China’s provinces. Recently, many healthcare investors in China have become more concerned about capital preservation, and are responding by abandoning long term investments strategies in healthcare. This investment withdrawal en mass is perceived to be influenced by herding tendencies and can trigger or …</text>
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                <text>BioMed Central</text>
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                <text>Patrick Acheampong, Li Zhiwen, Kamal Kant Hiran, Obobisa Emma Serwaa, Frank Boateng, Isaac Asare Bediako</text>
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                <text>The internet is by far one of the novel technologies that has shaped and supported all human endeavors. The phenomenal growth of the internet has been the backbone to the development of other cutting-edge technologies of which mobile payment is not an exception. The emergence of wireless technology and smartphones has brought to consumers an extraordinary way of carrying out day-to-day activities. These mobile and smartphones technology have become the driving force of many businesses today. Mobile payment provides ubiquity and offers a very convenient way for consumers to conduct transactions anytime and anywhere over wireless telecommunications networks. The sole intention of this study was to examine the moderating effects of age and gender on electronic payment based on the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) theoretical model. Using a sample of 1098 respondents, we collected and analysed the data by employing regression. The results confirm that “performance expectancy”, effort expectancy for male respondents were higher than the mean for female respondents while the mean score of the variable for social influence for female is higher than the male respondents. On the other hand, the findings statistically concluded that the moderating effect of age was significant.</text>
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                <text>Hybridizing an extended technology readiness index with technology acceptance model (TAM) to predict e-payment adoption in Ghana</text>
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                <text>Patrick Acheampong, Li Zhiwen, Henry Asante Antwi, Anthony Akai Acheampong Otoo, William Gyasi Mensah, Patrick Boateng Sarpong</text>
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                <text>At the heart of electronic commerce is the ability of a customer to be able to pay for goods and services unrestricted by location. Electronic payment system offers customers the convenience and flexibility to digitally pay online. Our study extended the technology readiness index and evaluated its influence on the technology acceptance model to predict user acceptance and use of e-payment technology. An online version of a questionnaire was administered to the population aged 1500 users of e-banking and mobile money users in six cities in Ghana (Accra, Tema, Kumasi, Cape Coast, Sekondi-Takoradi and Tamale) on the social media. A printed version of the questionnaire was self administered to other respondents largely, users of mobile transfer services in Ghana who did not have access to reliable internet services or computer. The post-data integrity results was analysed using a robust version of feed forward Radial basis function neural network. We observed a non-inflated overall incorrect prediction score between below 25% in both cases. It decomposed into a positive and significant relationship between personal innovativeness, personal optimism, high perceived convenience and perceived usefulness and perceived ease of use which positively influences epayment adoption. The case of personal insecurity and personal discomfort returned negative effects and are consistent with the extant literature</text>
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                <text>Analysis and automation of cocoa pests and spread management and control</text>
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                <text>AN Chokhonelidze, F Lempogo, W Brownacquaye, GEY Okai</text>
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                <text>The paper analyses the process of complex application development that uses GIS-technologies to manage and control cocoa pest and disease spread in a West African country: Ghana. The complex program captures information about detected pests and diseases. This information can be examined by agricultural extension officers on farms, warehouses and plantations of different zones and districts. This information is also published on the web and can be accessed by stakeholders (Government Ministries and Agencies, non-governmental organization etc.) through an interactive web-based GIS interface (interactive map).</text>
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                <text>Closed Joint-Stock Company Research Institute 'Center for Program Systems</text>
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                <text>Analysis of cocoa processing systems and classifications of cocoa dryers</text>
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                <text>Chokhonelidze Alexander, Forgor Lempogo, William Brown-Acquaye, George Essah Yaw Okai</text>
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                <text>The processing of cocoa involves a couple of technological processes such as roasting and drying which consume lots of energy. The ever increasing cost of energy has created the need for continuous optimization of the technological processes to minimize their operational cost. The selection of the appropriate equipment for each process is the first step to optimize the entire process. In recent times, drying technologies have evolved and have become more diverse and complex. Also, there is the need to meet stricter quality specifications, higher production rates, higher energy costs and stringent environmental regulations. As a result, selecting the right dryer for the right product has become an increasingly difficult task. In this paper, we attempted to describe the technological stages of cocoa processing and classified the various types of dryers available for the various stages of cocoa processing. This is important because the engineers responsible for the selection of a drying system need to be informed on the available equipment on the market, what the key criteria are in the selection process and thus arrive at alternative possibilities before a choice is made.</text>
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                <text>Limited Liability Company 'Publishing Center' Naukovedenie</text>
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                <text>Analysis of Cement Production Technology and Review of Management Strategies and Methods.</text>
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                <text>Alexander Chokhonelidze, Forgor Lempogo, William Brown-Acquaye</text>
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                <text>To develop an effective control mechanism for any industrial process it is imperative to have a deep and wide ranging understanding of the process itself. This is especially true in the case of a cement grinding circuits, which is a very complex process with very complex dynamics and multivariable environment, where all the elements are interconnected. This article is aimed at providing an in-depth analysis of the cement production process in Ghana, which is mainly limited to grinding clinker into cement and its packaging and distributing. The main equipment of grinding circuits is described and the best configurations are discussed. The second part of the article discusses the most popular control methods in use for cement grinding circuits at cement plants all over the world and the ways to select the most effective control strategies for achieving higher production rates and more efficient energy use. The control …</text>
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