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