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Logistic Lexicons

Introduction

Vivek Astvansh seeks dictionaries on orientations toward (1) supply chain/suppliers, (2) production/manufacturing/quality, and (3) logistics

INTEREST CATEGORY: RETAIL AND PRICING
POSTING TYPE: Dialog

Posted by: Vivek Astvansh


Vivek Astvansh () is looking for dictionaries (also known as wordlists or lexicons) on a firm’s or its CEO’s orientations toward (1) supply chain/suppliers, (2) production/manufacturing/quality, and (3) logistics. He is also looking for dictionaries or vectorized/transformer models to measure a firm’s product-related announcement into (1) whether the announcement relates to new​ product, and if yes, (2) whether the product is incrementally new or radically new.

If you are aware of any such dictionaries or models, please consider emailing vivek.astvansh@mcgill.ca.

Vivek had earlier asked ELMAR subscribers for dictionaries of customer orientation. He has found the following four articles that report the dictionaries of a firm’s or its CEO’s (depending upon your source of text; e.g., Form 10-K or CEO’s presentation in an earnings call versus CEO’s answers to questions in an earnings calls; CEO’s media interviews):

  1. Zachary et al.’s () Table 1 (p. 240) lists 22 unlemmatized unigrams for customer orientation.
  2. Saboo and Grewal (2013) in their  (pp. 1-2) list unlemmatized bigrams and trigrams they used to measure customer orientation.
  3. Homburg, Theel, and Hohenberg’s (2020)  W9  (p. 19)lists unlemmatized unigrams and bigrams for customer orientation.
  4. Yadav, Prabhu, and Chandy’s () appendix (p. 99) lists 11 unlemmatized unigrams for customer focus.