Post on 28-Jan-2021
2019
CBU INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE
BOOK OF ABSTRACTS 2019
INNOVATIONS IN
SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-22,
IN PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
CBURESEARCHINSTITUTE
Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an
institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.
Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 (CC BY 3.0) that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship
and initial publication in this journal.
Copyright Notice
2019
Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead
to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work.
CBU International Conference 2019
Innovations in Science and Education
March 20-22, 2019
Book of Abstracts
Editors: Petr Hájek, Ondřej Vít
Published byCBU Research Institute s.r.o.
Jáchymova 27/4110 00 Praha 1Czech Republic
ISBN 978-80-907722-2-9 (PDF)
For citing online articles please use E-ISSN (Online ISSN 1805-9961) with DOI.
Conference information and articles website
www.iseic.cz, www.journals.cz
CBURESEARCHINSTITUTE
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
CBU International Conference Book of Abstracts 2019:
Innovations in Science and Education
Editors:
Petr Hájek, Ondřej Vít
20-22 March 2019
Prague, Czech Republic
Organized by (hosting organizations):
CBU Research Institute
CBU Research Institute s.r.o., Prague, Czech Republic
ISE Research Institute
ISE Research Institute s.r.o., Prague, Czech Republic
Unicorn College
Unicorn College s.r.o., Prague, Czech Republic
Sponsored by (financially supported by):
CBU Research Institute
CBU Research Institute s.r.o., Prague, Czech Republic
ISE Research Institute
ISE Research Institute s.r.o., Prague, Czech Republic
Unicorn College
Unicorn College s.r.o., Prague, Czech Republic
Published by
CBU Research Institute s.r.o.
Jáchymova 27/4,
110 00 Praha 1
Czech Republic
September 29, 2019
When citing from this Book of Abstracts, use this
Author, A., A. & Author, B., B. (2019). TITLE OF PAPER. CBU International Conference Book
of Abstracts, 6: Article [Abstract] ISBN 978-80-907722-2-9
This Book of Abstracts is distributed online in PDF with ISBN 978-80-907722-2-9
Conference proceedings are published online on International Conference Website
www.journals.cz and www.iseic.cz (www.cbuic.cz)
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
Copyright information:
Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously
licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 (CC BY 3.0) that allows others to share
the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive
distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or
publish it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.
Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or
on their website) prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges,
as well as earlier and greater citation of published work.
The conference Keynote speakers:
David Hartman, Unicorn College, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Charles University,
Prague, Czech Republic
Peter Plavčan, Danubius University, Sládkovičovo, Slovakia
Mária Bohdalová, Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia
Libor Klimek, Faculty of Law, Matej Bel University, Banská Bystrica, Slovak Republic
Jaroslav Klátik, Faculty of Law, Matej Bel University, Banská Bystrica, Slovak Republic
Natalia Kamanina, Vavilov State Optical Institute, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Petr Hájek, CBU Research Institute, Unicorn College, Prague, Czech Republic
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
I
INTRODUCTION
We had the great honor of organizing the CBU International Conference 2019: Innovations in Science
and Education (ISEIC 2019) in Prague, Czech Republic. It was truly a great pleasure for us to greet a
lot of participants from many different countries attending ISEIC 2019 (in previous years known as
CBUIC)! We firmly believe that the conference will become an important international event in the field
of cross-industry discussion about innovations in Education and Science.
ISEIC 2019 was organized by ISE Research Institute, CBU Research Institute, and Unicorn College, all
located in Prague, Czech Republic. Proceedings were published by CBU Research Institute.
Three cooperating organizations supported the three-day conference. There were 158 papers accepted
and other 4 abstracts for presentation at ISEIC 2019, contributed by 401 authors from 22 countries. We
had plenary speeches and several well-known scientists and experts, to give invited talks at different
sessions.
The purpose of ISEIC 2019 was to provide a forum for the participants to report and review innovative
ideas, with up-to-date progress and developments, and discuss novel approaches to the application in
the field of their own research areas and discuss challenges of doing science and education.
We sincerely hope that the exchange of ideas on doing research, science and improving education will
help the participants, and international cooperation sharing the common interest will be enhanced.
On behalf the Organization Committee of ISEIC 2019, we would like to heartily thank our cooperating
organizations for all they have done for the conference. We would also like to thank the authors for their
contribution to the proceedings; the participants and friends of ISEIC 2019, for their interest and efforts
in helping us to make the conference possible; and the Editorial boards for their effective work and
valuable advice, especially the ISEIC 2019 secretariat and the staff, for their tireless efforts and
outstanding services in preparing the conference and publishing the Proceedings.
Petr Hájek, ISE and CBU Research Institute
David Hartman, Unicorn College
Conference chairs
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
II
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction .............................................................................................................................................. I
Table of contents ..................................................................................................................................... II
ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS ............................................................................................................ II
SOCIAL SCIENCES .............................................................................................................................. V
MEDICINE AND PHARMACY .......................................................................................................... IX
NATURAL SCIENCES AND ICT ....................................................................................................... XI
Conference chairs ............................................................................................................................... XIII
Editorial committees ........................................................................................................................... XIII
ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS
DETERMINANTS OF TRANSPORT COMPANY VALUE AND THE SELECTION OF
VALUATION METHODS
1
Eva Adámiková, Tatiana Čorejová, Lenka Môcová
STRUCTURAL DEFORMATION OF THE RUSSIAN ECONOMY IN THE CONTEXT OF
GLOBAL CHALLENGES
2
Viktor Barkhatov, Iuner Kapkaev, Daria Benz, Pavel Kadyrov
THE INTERRELATION AND INTERACTION OF FINANCIAL MARKETS WITH
FINANCIAL CYCLES OF THE NATIONAL ECONOMY OF RUSSIA
3
Viktor Barkhatov, Ekaterina Lymar, Ivan Koptelov
PROJECT MANAGEMENT AND ITS STRATEGIES IN GLOBAL ORGANISATION: CASE
STUDY
4
Kateřina Bočková, Miroslav Škoda, Tomáš Lengyelfalusy
PRICE–VOLUME DEPENDENCE OF BITCOIN AND ITS FRACTAL ANALYSIS 5
Mária Bohdalová, Michal Greguš
KNOWLEDGE SHARING IN BUSINESS NETWORKS FROM THE BUILDING INDUSTRY 6
Alina Czapla
ENHANCING THE DESTINATION IMAGE THROUGH PROMOTING POPULAR RIVER
CRUISE DESTINATIONS
7
Maksym Dimitrov, Mariya Zlatkova Stankova
MONETARY DISCRETION BY FISCAL MEANS: THE CASE OF BULGARIA 8
Preslav Dimitrov, Ivan Todorov, Stoyan Tanchev, Petar Yurukov
OPTIMIZATION OF THE LOGISTICS NETWORK OF THE SELECTED ONLINE STORE 9
Mykhailo Dobroselskyi, Radovan Madleňák
DETERMINANTS AND DIRECTIONS OF THE TRANSITION FROM TRADITIONAL TO
SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE: THE BULGARIAN CASE
10
Julia Doitchinova, Albena Miteva, Darina Zaimova
INNOVATIVE APPROACHES AND INNOVATIONS IN RURAL DEVELOPMENT IN
BULGARIA
11
Julia Doitchinova, Zornitsa Stoyanova, Hristina Harizanova-Bartos
SKILLS FOR THE BANKING SECTOR. A PERSPECTIVE FROM ROMANIAN GRADUATE
STUDENTS
12
Ovidiu Folcut, Victoria Folea
PERCEPTIONS AND INTENTIONS OF ADOPTING THE INTERNET OF THINGS BY
GENERATION Z
13
Silvana Costa Gonçalves, Belem Barbosa, Anabela Rocha
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
III
ANALYSIS OF THE IMPACT OF INFRUSTRUCTURE ON THE DEVELOPMENT LEVEL
OF RUSSIAN REGIONS
14
Rogneda Groznykh, Elena Ignatieva, Oleg Mariev, Alla Serkova
THE IMPACT OF INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS ON FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
INFLOWS: CROSS-COUNTRY ANALYSIS
15
Rogneda Groznykh, Igor Drapkin, Oleg Mariev
COOPERATION BETWEEN HUMAN AND AGENTS IN HOLONIC MANUFACTURING
SYSTEMS
16
Patrik Grznár, Martin Krajčovič, Štefan Mozol, Marek Schickerle, Gabriela Gabajová, Monika
Bučková
COMPARISON OF THE CONDITIONS OF TAXATION ON LABOR IN HUNGARY AND
THE SLOVAK REPUBLIC
17
Norbert Gyurián, Ádám Szobi, Nikoleta Nagyová
INCOME TAXATION REGIMES FOR PRIVATE ENTREPRENEURS IN HUNGARY AND
THE SLOVAK REPUBLIC
18
Norbert Gyurián, Ádám Szobi, Angelika Kútna, Dániel Halasi
WHY PEOPLE JOIN VIRTUAL WORLDS OF COMPUTER GAMES? QUALITATIVE
RESEARCH AMONGST POLISH USERS
19
Magdalena Hofman-Kohlmeyer
THE MECHANISM OF ECONOMIC MANAGEMENT IN THE REGIONS OF
KAZAKHSTAN TO ENSURE ENVIRONMENTAL SAFETY
20
Laura Igaliyeva, Saule Yegemberdiyeva
HOTEL RESERVATIONS VIA ONLINE TRAVEL AGENCY BOOKING.COM. EU
DIMENSIONS OF THE “BEST PRICE” CLAUSE
21
Ivaylo Ivanov, Irina Atanasova
SMART CITY CONCEPT WITHIN SELECTED COUNTRIES 22
Simona Jaculjaková, Katarína Repková Štofková, Dominik Laitkep
FINANCE MANAGEMENT IN ARTS ORGANIZATIONS IN BULGARIA 23
Vesela Kazashka
JUSTIFICATION OF SCENARIOS OF STATE REGULATORY POLICY OF UKRAINE 24
Irina Kolupaieva, Olena Shevchenko
DIFFERENCES IN ASSESSING SELLERS' BEHAVIOUR BY THE CUSTOMERS OF BABY
BOOM, X, Y AND Z GENERATIONS
25
Jana Kovaľová, Zuzana Birknerová, Miroslav Frankovský, Eva Benková
STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF THE EUROPEAN UNION COUNTRIES USING THE
METHOD OF STANDARD VARIABLE
26
Dominika Krasňanská, Ľubica Hurbánková
ORGANIZATIONAL MATURITY MODELS - REVIEW AND CLASSIFICATION 27
Aneta Kucińska-Landwójtowicz
TAX LICENCE OF A LEGAL ENTITY – PROS AND CONS 28
Angelika Kútna, Imrich Antalík, Norbert Gyurián, Zoltán Šeben
ATTITUDE OF SLOVAK SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES TOWARDS RISK
MANAGEMENT – INVESTIGATION OF THE REGIONAL DIFFERENCES
29
Matej Masár, Mária Hudáková
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
IV
THE CURRENT STATE OF PROJECT RISK ASSESSMENT AND EDUCATION NEEDS IN
PROJECT RISK MANAGEMENT
30
Matej Masár, Mária Hudáková
THE SLOVAK CITIZEN’S AND UNIVERSITY STUDENT’S PERSPECTIVE ON THE
BENEFITS OF ROBOTIZATION
31
Tomáš Mišík, Jana Štofková
THE EFFECTIVENESS OF FACEBOOK PROMOTING THE BRANDS OF SLOVAK
WELLNESS HOTELS BASED ON THE DEA METHODOLOGY
32
Dominika Moravcikova, Anna Krizanova
EFFICIENCY ANALYSIS OF THE BULGARIAN FORESTRY AND FOREST-BASED
INDUSTRY: A DEA APPROACH
33
Nikolay Neykov, Emil Kitchoukov, Petar Antov, Viktor Savov
ADMINISTRATIVE BARRIERS AND THEIR IMPACT ON THE EFFICIENCY OF
ORGANIZATIONS IN HOUSING CONSTRUCTION: THE CASE OF ST. PETERSBURG
34
Sergey Oparin, Marina Yudenko, Nadezhda Polovnikova, Svetlana Nikolikhina
TRANSFORMATION OF SOCIAL CAPITAL INTO ECONOMIC CAPITAL THROUGH
EDUCATION (BY THE EXAMPLE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION AND BULGARIA)
35
Petar Lyudmilov Parvanov, Nadezhda Emilova Petkova
PUBLIC SERVICE MOTIVATION OF STUDENTS: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS FROM
UNIVERSITIES OF RUSSIA AND SOUTH AFRICA
36
Ivan Pivovarov, Hendri Kroukamp, Victoria Nekrasova
INNOVATION DEVELOPMENT OF THE FURNITURE INDUSTRY IN BULGARIA 37
Radostina Popova
REDEFINING THE MANAGEMENT OF PERFORMANCE ORIENTATION IN THE
ROMANIAN HIGHER EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM
38
Andy Pușcă, Ionel Sergiu Pîrju
PROJECT MANAGEMENT IN THE CREATIVE INDUSTRIES 39
Margarita Ruseva
INFLUENCE OF A TURBULENT ENVIRONMENT ON THE MANAGING OF A MINING
ENTERPRISE
40
Aurelia Rybak
SPECIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF MARKET SUPPLY FORMATION IN THE HOUSING
DEVELOPMENT SECTOR AND RESIDENTIAL BUILDINGS RECONSTRUCTION UNDER
THE PRESENT-DAY CONDITIONS IN RUSSIA
41
Larisa Selyutina, Natalia Vasileva, Tatyana Maleeva, Natalya Frolova
THE ANALYSIS OF RECYCLING INDUSTRY IN THE URAL FEDERAL DISTRICT 42
Elena Silova, Viktor Barkhatov
NEW APPROACHES OF REGIONAL POLICY AS A SUPPORTING FACTOR OF THE
SOCIOECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF THE REGION
43
Viktor Šoltés, Katarína Repková Štofková, Filip Lenko
EXPERT SYSTEM OF INDIVIDUAL PERFORMANCE EVALUATION OF EMPLOYEES 44
Ľubomír Šooš
THE CHANGE FROM A COMMAND-TO A MARKET BANKING SYSTEM IN THE CASES
OF SELECT GROUPS OF EUROPEAN COUNTRIES
45
Elena Stavrova
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
V
AGRICULTURE AS A POSSIBLE WAY FOR SUSTAINABLE DISTRICT DEVELOPMENT
IN BULGARIA
46
Zornitsa Stoyanova, Hristina Harizanova-Bartos
THE IMPACT OF EXCHANGE RATE ON ECONOMIC GROWTH IN ALGERIA 47
Mohammed Touitou, Yacine Laib, Ahmed Boudeghdegh
THE IMPORTANCE OF BRAND IN CONSUMER BUYING BEHAVIOR AND PRODUCT
QUALITY ASSESMENT
48
Viera Valjaskova, Pavol Kral
IMPACT OF OUTSOURCING OF HUMAN RESOURCES ON TEAM PERFORMANCE IN A
POLISH MINING COMPANY
49
Ewelina Włodarczyk
STUDY OF THE ORGANISATIONAL SCHEME IN A COAL COMPANY 50
Ewelina Włodarczyk, Aurelia Rybak
CONTAINING FACTORS OF THE RUSSIAN DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION AT THE
TRANSIT STAGE FROM THE FORMATION OF THE DIGITAL ECONOMY TO ITS
DEVELOPMENT IN THE CONTEXT OF GLOBAL TRENDS
51
Elena Zolochevskaya, Tatyana Cherkasova, Valeriya Arsenieva, Larisa Lozovova
SUSTAINABILITY IN THE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT THROUGH INTERCULTURAL
DIALOGUE
52
Vyara Kyurova, Teodora Kiryakova-Dineva
SOCIAL SCIENCES
CONSTRUCTION AND VALIDATION OF A PSYCHOMETRIC SCALE TO MEASURE
ACADEMIC ENGAGEMENT
53
Liliya Babakova
THE TESI PROJECT AS ONE OF THE WAYS TO PREVENT SOCIAL ISOLATION OF
PEOPLE WITH VERBAL COMMUNICATION DISORDERS
54
Mirosław Babiarz
RICH ЕDUCATIONAL VIDEO MAZES AS A VISUAL ENVIRONMENT FOR GAME-
BASED LEARNING
55
Boyan Bontchev
TEACHER TRAINEES’ ATTITUDE TOWARDS THE IMPLEMENTATION OF SELECTED
WEB-BASED APPLICATIONS IN TEACHER TRAINING
56
Beáta Brestenská, Zoltán Fehér, Ladislav Jaruska, György Juhász, Andrea Puskás, Katarína
Szarka
ASSESSMENT OF THE LOCAL STATE ADMINISTRATION PREPAREDNESS LEVEL ON
THE SOLUTION OF CRISIS EVENTS
57
Daniel Brezina, Michal Titko
STREET SPACE FROM THE VIEW OF HUMAN INTERACTION 58
Kristián Čulík, Alica Kalašová, Zuzana Otahálová
NURSING AND GENERAL MEDICAL STUDENTS’ SATISFACTION WITH THEIR
MEDICAL TRAINING
59
Liana Dehelean, Ana Maria Romosan, Radu Stefan Romosan, Ion Papava, Petru Papazian,
Mircea Babaita
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
VI
THE CULTURAL FACTORS IN INTERGROUP RELATIONS IN THE MODERN WORLD
(ON THE EXAMPLE OF RELIGIOUS AND ETHNIC GROUPS)
60
Anastasia Valiyevna Duminskaya, Nikita Nikolayevich Yakovlev, Denis Aleksandrovich
Lesnyansky
HIPPOTHERAPY AS AN ALTERNATIVE METHOD OF IMPROVING THE PRAXIS
FUNCTION IN CHILDREN WITH MULTIPLE DISORDERS
61
Diyana Georgieva, Veselina Ivanova
PARAMETERS OF THE CONFLICTING COMPETENCY OF THE STUDENTS – FUTURE
TEACHERS IN TECHNOLOGIES AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP
62
Sladuna Georgieva, Diana Mitova, Sashko Plachkov, Lyubima Zoneva
CHARACTERISTICS, DESCRIPTION AND ASSESSMENT OF THE ORGANIZATION'S
SAFETY CULTURE SUBSECTORS
63
Martin Halaj, Martin Boroš, Richard Jankura
ENGLISH PERFECT IN COGNITION OF SLOVAK ISCED3 LEARNERS OF ENGLISH –
PRELIMINARY EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
64
Tomáš Hlava
GENDER DIFFERENCES IN SELF-CONCEPT OF GIFTED PUPILS 65
Dominika Hosova, Jana Duchovicova
THE SHAKESPEARES OF JOZEF CILLER, STAGE DESIGNER 66
Dagmar Inštitorisová
TEACHERS’ SATISFACTION WITH THEIR PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES IN PHYSICAL
EDUCATION AND SPORT
67
Veselina Ivanova, Eleonora Mileva
ELECTRONIC MONITORING IN SLOVAK CRIMINAL JUSTICE 68
Libor Klimek, Jaroslav Klátik
THE IMPACT OF MENTAL MAPPING ON PUPILS' ATTITUDES TO LEARNING 69
Rebeka Štefánia Koleňáková, Nina Kozárová
PLOVDIV – THE CULTURAL CAPITAL OF BULGARIA 70
Vasil Kolev
EDUCATION CONCERNING HISTORICAL CITIES AS AN EXAMPLE OF AN ORIGINAL
CURRICULUM TAUGHT TO STUDENTS OF THE ARCHITECTURE AND SPATIAL
MANAGEMENT COURSES
71
Dominika Kuśnierz-Krupa
3D INNOVATION TECHNOLOGIES IN EDUCATION 72
Penio Lebamovski, Mitko Gospodinov
RESEARCH OF THE ABILITY TO ISOLATE SYLLABLES FROM WORDS IN
PRESCHOOL AGED CHILDREN
73
Monika Máčajová, Soňa Grofčíková
UNEVEN DISTRIBUTION OF RESOURCES FROM THE POINT OF VIEW OF GENDER
EQUALITY, CHANGE OF PARADIGM AND ITS CONSEQUENCES ON THE
DEVELOPMENT OF SOCIAL RELATIONS. PERSISTENT SOCIAL INEQUALITIES
74
Hermína Mareková
VIEWS OF VOLUNTARY IMMIGRANTS ON LIFE IN SLOVAKIA 75
Daniel Markovič
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
VII
SUSTAINABLE RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND THE EFFECTS OF EDUCATION,
DEMOGRAPHY AND ACCESS IN THE AGRICULTURAL SECTOR STRUCTURE AND
EFFICIENCY
76
Alda Miftari, Arta Musaraj
THE RECOGNITION OF EDUCATION AND QUALIFICATIONS IN THE GLOBAL
COMPACT MARRAKECH
77
Marek Moška, Peter Plavčan
FAMILY NEEDS OF INCURABLE ILL CHILDREN IN THE CONTEXT OF SPECIAL
EDUCATION
78
Kristína Nagyová, Terézia Harčaríková
KNOWLEDGE ALLIANCE AS EDUCATION SERVICES: UPDATED CONTENT OF
INTEGRATED FLIGHT PREPARATION AND TRAINING OF PILOTS
79
Hélia Némethová, Stanislav Szabo, Róbert Rozenberg
IN-WORK POVERTY IN LATVIA 80
Mareks Niklass
SOCIAL GENDER ROLES IN PERCEPTION OF FEMALE AND MALE POLISH
STUDENTS
81
Dominika Ochnik, Mirjam Holleman
LANGUAGE IMPAIRMENT: A REVIEW OF THE EFFICACY OF NON-VERBAL
COMMUNICATION IN WORKING WITH PATIENTS WHO HAVE DEMENTIA
82
Victor Otieno Okech, Monika Mačkinová, Petronela Šebestová, Pavol Kopinec
DIDACTIC MINI VIDEO GAMES – STUDENTS’ AND TEACHERS’ POINT OF VIEW 83
Elena Paunova-Hubenova
PREVENTIVE HEALTH CARE IN RELATION TO HEALTH INSURANCE SYSTEM IN
SLOVAKIA
84
Barbara Pavlíková
SITUATIONAL MANAGEMENT OF INTEGRATED FLIGHT PREPARATION AND
TRAINING OF PILOTS AS AN EDUCATION SERVICE
85
Pavol Petríček, Stanislav Szabo, Róbert Rozenberg
ACTIVISATION OF THE CREATIVE POTENTIAL IN 7/8-YEAR OLD CHILDREN BY
IMPLEMENTATION OF MIXED PAINTING TECHNIQUES IN FINE ART EDUCATION
86
Petar Petrov
WHY DO PUPILS FROM SOCIALLY DISADVANTAGED BACKGROUNDS FAIL IN
TECHNICAL SUBJECTS?
87
Jakub Pikna, Zuzana Frajštaková
THE COMPARISON OF PISA EDUCATIONAL RESULTS WITH GROSS DOMESTIC
PRODUCT IN MEMBER STATES OF EUROPEAN UNION
88
Peter Plavčan
THE HUMAN RIGHTS RELATIVIZED. PROJECT PREVENTION’S CASES OF PAID
STERILIZATION
89
Bartosz Płotka, Kamila Rezmer
COMPETENCIES AND ROLES OF A SOCIAL CURATOR IN WORKING WITH RISKY
YOUTH AND CRISIS INTERVENTION
90
Boris Pták, Soňa Šrobárová, Zuzana Gejdošová
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
VIII
CRISIS INTERVENTION IN THE WORK OF SOCIAL AND LEGAL PROTECTION AND
CURATION IN SLOVAKIA. AN ANALYSIS OF TARGET GROUPS AND METHODS
91
Boris Pták, Soňa Šrobárová
DIDACTICAL ASPECTS OF PROFESSIONAL TRAINING OF FUTURE MASTERS OF
PHARMACY STUDENTS
92
Tetiana Reva, Iryna Nizhenkovska, Olena Holik
DEVELOPMENT OF SOCIAL ECONOMY AND SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN
SLOVAKIA
93
Petronela Šebestová, Monika Mačkinová
THE ROLE OF TEXT ANALYSIS IN TRANSLATION 94
Katarína Seresová, Daniela Breveníková
COMMUNICATION BY TEXT IN THE PEDAGOGICAL INTERACTION FOR TEACHERS’
PROFESSIONAL COMPETENCE
95
Desislava Siderova
RAISING AWARENESS OF SCHOOL SOCIAL WORK IN SLOVAKIA 96
Veronika Šimonová, Miroslav Tvrdoň
SOCIAL INCLUSION OF ROMA YOUTH IN THE CONTEXT OF RISK BEHAVIOUR 97
Katarína Šiňanská, Lucia Tóthová
ON SOME SELECTED ASPECTS OF TEACHING AND TESTING ENGLISH GRAMMAR
IN SLOVAK UPPER-SECONDARY EDUCATION
98
Martina Šipošová
TEXT TASKS – PREREQUISITE FOR DEVELOPMENT OF CREATIVE THINKING IN
STUDENTS FROM GRADES 1-4
99
Maria Temnikova
ELECTRONIC TEXTBOOKS FOR LEARNING THE EDUCATIONAL CONTENT IN
GEOMETRY AS PART OF THE EDUCATION IN MATHEMATICS FOR GRADES 1 4
100
Maria Temnikova
INNOVATION IN CRIMINAL POLICY OF IMPOSING ALTERNATIVE SANCTIONS IN
SLOVAK JUSTICE
101
Veronika Tóthová, Simona Ferenčíková
MULTICULTURAL COMPETENCIES OF TEACHERS AND TEACHER TRAININGS ON
DIVERSITY/MULTCULTURALISM FOR INCLUSIVE SCHOOLS AND THE INCLUSION
OF ROMA AND MIGRANT CHIDREN - PROJECT ROMIGSC AS CASE STUDY
102
Nada Trunk Širca, Valerij Dermol, Anica Novak Trunk
THE EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH OF PERCEPTION OF MODERN CHARACTERS IN A
GROUP OF PRIMARY SCHOOL STUDENTS
103
Stanislava Turská, Jana Kurotová, Dominika Hoštáková, Roman Chinoracký
APPLIED BEHAVIORAL ANALYSIS THERAPY IN SPECIAL EDUCATION PRACTICE 104
Alica Vančová, Kristína Nagyová
CIVIL AND MILITARY AVIATION EDUCATION AS INTERDISCIPLINARY DIDACTIC
SYSTEM: UPDATED KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND COMPETENCES
105
Zuzana Zgodavová, Daniela Čekanová, Stanislav Szabo jr, Marek Košuda, Stanislav Szabo
DYNAMICS OF THE CREATIVE INTERPRETATION IN EARLY CHILDHOOD
COMMUNICATION WITH ART IN A MUSEUM ENVIRONMENT
106
Any Zlateva, Katya Tineva-Gyurkovska
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
IX
STYLOMETRIC ANALYSIS OF ADVERTISEMENTS OF MEDICAL PRODUCTS
BROADCAST IN POLAND - IMPLICITLY COMMUNICATING MEDICINAL PROPERTIES
107
Leszek Świeca
MEDICINE AND PHARMACY
DIAGNOSIS OF BLOOD LOSS BY THE METHOD OF DIGITAL STOKS POLARIMETRY
OF HISTOLOGICAL SECTIONS OF RECTUS ABDOMINAL MUSCLE
108
Viktor Bachynskiy, Oleh Vanchuliak, Anastasiia-Vira Syvokorovska, Marta Garazdiuk, Alina
Zavolovych
THE EFFECT OF CREATIVE DRAMA ON EMPATHIC TENDENCIES, COMMUNICATION
SKILLS AND CRITICAL THINKING OF PHYSIOTHERAPY STUDENTS
109
Murat Ali Çınar, Elif Dinler, Yavuz Yakut, Yavuz Yakut
SEROLOGICAL RESULTS OF MVV AND CAEV ANTIBODIES IN SAMPLES
COLLECTED FROM SHEEP AND GOAT FLOCKS OF ROMANIA
110
Dan Alexandru Enache, Stelian Baraitareanu, Marius Dan, Maria Rodica Gurau, Camelia Nuţiu,
Camelia Sarbu, Doina Danes
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF LASER POLARIMETRY METHODS OF
POLYCRYSTALLINE FILMS OF CEREBROSPINAL FLUID FOR POST-MORTEM
INTERVAL ESTIMATION
111
Marta Garazdiuk, Viktor Bachynskіy, Oleh Vanchuliak, Oleksandr Garazdiuk, Yuliya Sarkisova
INVESTIGATION OF HEART RATE VARIABILITY BY STATISTICAL METHODS AND
DETRENDED FLUCTUATION ANALYSIS
112
Galya Nikolova Georgieva-Tsaneva
FORMATION OF GRANULATION TISSUE BY DRILLING HOLES IN THE CRANIUM
AFTER CHEMICAL SCALP BURNS: A CASE STUDY
113
Ali Güneş, Ahmet Erkılıç, Murat Ali Çınar, Sait Bilal
MENTAL HEALTH OF NURSING STUDENTS WITH REGARD TO THEIR PREVIOUS
EDUCATION AND SATISFACTION WITH STUDYING
114
Ivana Gusar, Mira Klarin, Marija Ljubicic
MONITORING OF PATIENTS' FALLS IN HEALTHCARE FACILITIES 115
Marcela Ižová, Michaela Vicáňová, Mária Novysedláková
CHARACTERIZATION OF HUMAN CYP450 ISOZYMES RESPONSIBLE FOR THE IN
VITRO OXIDATIVE METABOLISM OF MESALAMINE USED FOR COLITIS
116
Elif Kale, Alaattin Şen
THE PREVALENCE OF INTESTINAL PARASITES IN CENTRAL SLOVAKIA FROM THE
YEAR 2000 – RETROSPECTIVE STUDY
117
Tatiana Kochlanova, Nina Kotlebova, Tatiana Kubickova, Martin Novak
THE POST-MORTEM EVALUATION OF GLUCOSE CONCENTRATION IN BLOOD AND
ITS DIAGNOSTICAL VALUE
118
Gintarė Lukočiūtė, Karolina Ginčienė, Sigitas Chmieliauskas, Sigitas Laima, Jurgita Stasiūnienė,
Dmitrij Fomin, Algimantas Jasulaitis
STUDY OF LIFE QUALITY AND TREATMENT SATISFACTION OF ROMANIAN
DIABETIC PATIENTS
119
Andrei Cătălin Muntean, Claudiu Morgovan, Smaranda Cosma, Smaranda Cosma, Anca Butucă,
Anca Maria Juncan, Luca Liviu Rus, Andreea Loredana Vonica, Felicia Gabriela Gligor, Steliana
Ghibu
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
X
VARIABILITY OF ARTERIAL BLOOD PRESSURE IN CHILDREN WITH DIABETES
MELLITUS AND OBESITY
120
Yuriy Nechitaylo, Oleksandr Buriak, Olesya Pidmurniak, Nataliya Kovtyuk, Tatiana Fomina
PUBLIC HEALTH IMPACT OF RAPID IDENTIFICATION OF EPIDEMIOLOGICALLY
IMPORTANT CHARACTERISTICS OF SALMONELLA SPP. BY MALDI-TOF MS
121
Martin Novak, Tatiana Kochlanova, Anna Tvrda, Nina Kotlebova
VARIATION OF COMORBIDITIES IN ROMANIA AT THE LAU2 LEVEL, A CROSS-
SECTIONAL ANALYSIS
122
Adrian Pana, Bogdan-Vasile Ileanu
ROLE OF HYPERCORTISOLEMIA IN PROGRESSION OF THE COMORBID COURSE OF
CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE, DIABETES MELLITUS TYPE 2 AND ANEMIA
123
Nataliia Pavliukovych, Oleksandr Pavliukovych, Oleksandr Buriak, Tamara Kopchuk,
Volodymyr Vivsyannuk
TRAUMATIC HEALTH EFFECTS DUE TO A STORM: AN OBSERVATIONAL CASE-
STUDY ON PATIENTS RECEIVED AT THE COUNTY EMERGENCY CLINICAL
HOSPITAL FROM TIMISOARA
124
Cristina Petrescu, Mihai Grecu, Silvia Barbu, Marius Craina
RESISTANCE TO ANTIPLATELET DRUGS IN PATIENTS WITH CEREBROVASCULAR
DISEASE
125
Elina Pucite, Arina Novasa, Renija Ievina, Tatjana Muravska, Evija Miglane, Andrejs Millers
RENOPROTECTIVE EFFECT OF MELATONIN IN CONDITIONS OF ACUTE KIDNEY
INJURY AND ALTERED PINEAL GLAND ACTIVITY
126
Tetiana Shchudrova, Yevheniia Dudka, Olena Korotun, Tetiana Bilous, Fedir Herman, Igor
Zamorskii
EPIDEMIOLOGY AND RISK FACTORS OF SUDDEN DEATH DUE TO PULMONARY
THROMBOEMBOLISM: A RETROSPECTIVE STUDY
127
Rokas Šimakauskas, Martinas Baltuonis, Sigitas Laima, Sigitas Chmieliauskas, Dmitrij Fomin,
Algimantas Jasulaitis, Jurgita Stasiūnienė
COSMETICS USAGE HABITS AND RELATED SIDE EFFECTS AMONG FEMALES:
LITHUANIAN CASE
128
Gražina Šniepienė, Judita Jonuševičienė
OUR EXPERIENCE IN CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME THERAPEUTIC EFFECTIVENESS
EVALUATION
129
Jolanta Umure, Ināra Logina, Marija Mihailova
SUICIDES IN LITHUANIA: RATES, METHODS AND DISTRIBUTION BY AGE, GENDER
AND SETTLEMENT, 2012-2016
130
Diana Vasiljevaitė, Jurgita Stasiūnienė, Sigitas Laima, Sigitas Chmieliauskas, Dmitrij Fomin,
Algimantas Jasulaitis
ADVERSE EFFECTS OF GONADOTROPINS USED IN INFERTILITY TREATMENT 131
Bogdan Ioan Vintilă, Anca Butucă, Claudiu Morgovan, Andreea Loredana Vonica, Luca Liviu
Rus, Andrei Cătălin Muntean, Anca Maria Juncan, Felicia Gabriela Gligor
STUDENTS ATTITUDE TOWARDS MEDICAL ETHICS EDUCATION 132
Alexandrina Vodenitcharova, Nikoleta Leventi, Kristina Popova
THE USE OF FORENSIC CHEMISTRY METHODS IN THE DETERMINATION OF
COUNTERFEIT DRUGS
133
Elena Welchinska, Volodymyr Velchynskyi
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
XI
GRAPHICAL METHODS FOR NON-LINEAR ANALYSIS OF ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHIC
DATA
134
Evgeniya Gospodinova
FREQUENCY ANALYSIS OF CARDIAC DATA OBTAINED THROUGH HOLTER
MONITORING IN REAL LIVING CONDITIONS
135
Galya Nikolova Georgieva-Tsaneva
CORNEAL LANGERHANS CELL CHANGES IN PATIENTS
WITH HERPETIC KERATITIS
136
Vilija Danileviciene , Reda Zemaitienė , Vilte Marija Gintauskiene ,
Irena Nedzelskiene , Dalia Zaliuniene
HEALTHCARE SPECIALISTS’ ATTITUDES TOWARDS THEIR WORK ENVIRONMENT
IN LITHUANIAN GENERAL HOSPITALS
137
Tomas Steponkus , Rūta Ustinavičienė , Gvidas Urbonas
PRELIMINARY STUDIES REGARDING DEVELOPEMENT OF SOME HYDROPHILIC
CREAMS AND EMULGELS CONTAINING NATURAL SURFACTANT FOR DERMAL
DELIVERY OF SEA BUCKTHORN OIL
138
Lavinia Vlaia , Georgeta Coneac , Mirela Georgiu , Ioana Olariu ,
Ana Maria Muţ , Vicenţiu Vlaia , Dan Dragoş , Dumitru Lupuleasa
NATURAL SCIENCES AND ICT
HUMAN AS A PHYSIOLOGICAL SOURCE OF DETERIORATION OF THE AIR QUALITY
AND COMFORT CONDITIONS INDOORS
139
Radostina A. Angelova, Peter Stankov, Detelin Markov, Rositsa Velichkova, Iskra Simova
IMPACT OF PHYSICAL MUTAGENS ON THE MALE GAMETOPHYTE OF THE TEA
PLANT FOR ITS FURTHER USE IN HYBRIDIZATION
140
Davit Baratashvili, Nino Lomtatidze, Guguli Dumbadze, Neli Khalvashi, Nino Kedelidze
INFLUENCE OF TECHNOLOGICAL PARAMETERS OF THE ULTRAFILTRATION
PROCESS OF CITRUS JUICES ON THEIR QUALITY
141
Irina Bejanidze, Tina Kharebava, Nunu Nakashidze, Lamzira Komcelidze, Nazi Davitadze
INFLUENСE OF SEASONAL FACTOR ON THE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF
PERSIMMON
142
Irina Bejanidze, Tina Kharebava, Nargiz Alasania, Nato Didmanidze, Nazi Davitadze
USE OF MOBILE NETWORKS FOR THE PURPOSE OF PROTECTING PERSONS AND
PROPERTY
143
Martin Boroš, Matej Kučera, Ladislav Mariš
IDENTIFICATION OF THE AVIAN PATHOTYPE OF ESCHERICHIA COLI ON LAYER
FLOCKS BY MULTIPLEX PCR
144
Marilena Burtan, Virgilia Popa, Maria Rodica Gurau, Doina Danes
THE USE OF DAMPER SYSTEMS IN BUILDINGS WITH REINFORCED CONCRETE
STRUCTURES
145
Naima Ezzaki, Daniel Stoica, Laurentiu Rece, Amelitta Legendi
WAY OF CONNECTION OF A THREE-PHASE MOTOR TO A SINGLE-PHASE NETWORK
VIA RESONANCE EFFECT
146
Zharilkassin Iskakov, Vladimir Kossov
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
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XII
THE USE OF SIMULATION IN THE MODEL OF CRISIS MANAGEMENT 147
Michaela Jánošíková, Maroš Lacinák
LIQUID CRYSTAL MATERIALS ORIENTATION USING NEW APPROACH 148
Natalia Kamanina
CHARACTERIZATION OF SEVERAL WEST GEORGIAN AUTOCHTHONOUS GRAPES
AND THEIR WINE STILBENES
149
Maia Kharadze, Maia Vanidze, Indira Djaparidze, Givi Kalandia, Ruslan Davitadze, Aleko
Kalandia
AN ANALYSIS OF FOREST GROWTH FEATURES OF LOW-PRODUCTIVE GREY
FOREST SANDY SOILS OF UKRAINE WITH REGARD TO THEIR RELEVANCE FOR
FOREST CULTIVATION
150
Peter Kijovský, Anatoliy Lisnyak, Kateryna Utkina, Alexey Kraynukov, Eva Michaeli
RAPD-ANALYSIS OF CYCLAMEN SPP. GENOME POLYMORPHISM 151
Elza Makaradze, Galina Meparishvili, Natela Varshanidze, Inga Diasamidze, Ketevan Dolidze,
Eteri Jakeli, Nana Zarnadze
DESIGNING A SMALL CLIMATE CHAMBER TO CHARACTERIZE PEOPLE AS A
SOURCE OF DETERIORATION OF INDOOR AIR QUALITY BY RESPIRATION
152
Detelin Ganchev Markov, Sergey Mijorski, Peter Stankov, Iskra Simova, Radositna A. Angelova,
Rositsa Velichkova
MICROPROPAGATION OF CHUKRASIA TABULARIS A. FUSS BY SOMATIC
EMBRYOGENESIS TECHNIQUE
153
Tran Van Minh
MICROPROPAGATION OF RHYNCHOSTYLIS GIGANTEA ORCHID BY SOMATIC
EMBRYOGENIC CULTURES
154
Tran Van Minh
UTILIZATION OF BY-PRODUCTS GENERATED BY A WOOD GASIFICATION PLANT
THROUGH ITS USE FOR THE RECLAMATION OF DISTURBED TERRAINS
155
Petar G. Petrov
CONTAMINATION OF SOILS BY HEAVY METALS AND THEIR INFLUENCE ON THE
ENVIRONMENT IN BULGARIA
156
Tsvetelina Petrova, Iskra Simova, Martin Pushkarov, Rositsa Velichkova, Detelin Markov
ASPECTS CONCERNING THE MEASUREMENT OF FLATNESS DEVIATIONS 157
Laurentiu Rece, Tone Ionescu, Virgil Florescu, Amelitta Legendi, Carmen Ardelean
INTERACTIVE SYSTEM FOR DIGITAL PRESENTATION OF CULTURAL ROUTES AND
SPECIALIZED COLLECTIONS
158
Negoslav Sabev, Galina Bogdanova, Pavel Hristov
SMART CLASSROOM, INTERNET OF THINGS AND PERSONALIZED TEACHING 159
Teodor Savov, Valentina Terzieva, Katia Todorova, Petia Kademova-Katzarova
SOIL DEVELOPMENT AND PROPERTIES OF MICROBIAL BIOMASS SUCCESSION IN
RECLAIMED SITES IN BULGARIA
160
Veneta V. Stefanova, Petar G. Petrov
INFLUENCE OF INDOOR POLLUTION AND PARAMETERS ON HUMAN HEALTH 161
Rositsa Velichkova, Peter Stankov, Radositna A. Angelova , Iskra Simova, Detelin Markov
MICROCLONAL PROPAGATION OF CRATAEGUS MONOGYNA JACQ. IN VITRO 162
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-20, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
XIII
Nana Zarnadze, Ketevan Dolidze, Sophiko Manjgaladze, Nazi Turmanidze, Jana Chitanava, Gia
Bolkvadze, Eteri Jakeli
CONFERENCE CHAIRS
Petr Hajek, ISE Research Institute, CBU Research Institute, Unicorn College, Prague, Czech Republic
David Hartman, Unicorn College, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Charles University in
Prague, Czech Republic
EDITORIAL COMMITTEES
Editor-in-chief
Petr Hajek
Editors
Petr Hájek, Ondřej Vít,
Economics and Business Section Committee
Prof. Thurasamy Ramayah, Universiti Sains, Malaysia
Assoc. Prof. Mustafa Cagatay Korkmaz, Artvin Çoruh University, Turkey
Prof. Milen Ivanov Baltov, Burgas Free University, Bulgaria
Dr. Maria Johann, Warsaw School of Economics, Poland
Dr. Anna Lemańska-Majdzik, Czestochowa University of Technology, Faculty of Management, Poland
Assoc. Prof. Soner Gokten, Baskent University, Turkey
Dr. Enes Emre Başar, Bayburt University, Turkey
Assoc. Prof. Maria Eneva Bakalova, University of National and World Economy, Faculty of International
Economy and Politics, Bulgaria
Prof. Goran R. Milovanovic, Faculty of Economics, University of Nis, Serbia
Assoc. Prof. Mária Bohdalová, Comenius University in Bratislava, Faculty of Management, Slovakia
Dr. Holger Blisse, Independent researcher, Austria
Assoc. Prof. Błażej Prusak, Gdańsk University of Technology, Faculty of Management and Economics, Poland
Dr. Marija Risto Magdinceva-Sopova, University Goce Delcev –Stip, Faculty of Tourism and business logistic –
Gevgelija, Macedonia
Prof. Petr Marek, Department of Finance and Business Valuation, Executive board member of Acta Oeconomica
Pragensia, University of Economics in Prague, Czech Republic
Assoc. Prof. Kudret GUL, Tourism and Hotel Management Department, Balikesir Vocational School, Balikesir
University, Turkey
Prof. Irfan Ridwan Maksum, University of Indonesia, Malaysia
Prof. Carmen Balan, The Bucharest University of Economic Studies, Romania
Prof. Yesim Kustepeli, Dokuz Eylul University, Faculty Of Business, Turkey
Dr. Borut Vrščaj, Agricultural Institute of Slovenia, Department for Agroecology and Natural Resources,
Slovenia
Prof. Carmen-Aida Hutu, “Gheorghe Asachi” Technical University of Iasi, Romania
Dr. Milan Čupić, University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Economics, Serbia
Dr. Małgorzata Okręglicka, Czestochowa University of Technology, Poland
Dr. Marcel Kordoš, Alexander Dubček University in Trenčín, Slovakia
Assoc. Prof. Eglantina Hysa, Economics Department, Epoka University, Albania
Dr. Hulya Kaftelen Odabasi, Firat University, School of Civil Aviation, Turkey
Assoc. Prof. Venelin Nikolaev Boshnakov, University of National and World Economy, Bulgaria
Prof. Matilda Ivanova Alexandrova, University of National and World Economy – Sofia, Bulgaria
Assoc. Prof. Jasmina Starc, Higher Education Centre, Faculty of Business and Management Sciences, Slovenia
Murat Kantar, Pamukkale University, Turkey
Dr. Mirjana Todorović, University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Economics, Serbia
Dr. Belem Barbosa, University of Aveiro, Portugal
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
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XIV
Dr. Teguh Kurniawan, Faculty of Administrative Science, Universitas Indonesia, Indonesia
Dr. Jolanta Wartini-Twardowska, University of Economics in Katowice, Poland
Dr. Petr Hajek, Central Bohemia University and Unicorn College, Prague, Czech Republic
Dr. Sherzod Tashpulatov, Czech technical university in Prague, Czech Republic
Dr. Michal Brožka, Unicorn College, Prague, Czech Republic
Dr. Jan Vorlíček, Unicorn College AND College of information Management and Business Administration,
Prague, Czech Republic
Jerome Dumetz, Unicorn College, Prague, Czech Republic
Prof. Drahomír Jančík, Institute of Economic and Social History, Faculty of Arts, Charles University, Prague and
Faculty of Business Administration, University of Economics in Prague, Czech Republic
Assoc. Prof. Aneta Kucińska-Landwójtowicz, Opole University of Technology, Poland
Prof. Jiří Kleibl, Unicorn College, Prague, and Faculty of Business Administration, University of Economics,
Prague, Czech Republic
Assoc. Prof. Miloš Kaňka, Faculty of Informatics and Statistics University of Economics in Prague AND The
College of Polytechnics Jihlava, Czech Republic
Dr. Kholnazar Amonov, Central Bohemia University, Prague, Czech Republic
Assoc. Prof. Murtaz Kvirkvaia, Dean of the Faculty School of Business and Management, Grigol Robakidze
University, Georgia
Dr. Quang Van Tran, Faculty of Finance and Accounting, University of Economics in Prague, Czech Republic
Assoc. Prof. Tomáš Pavelka, Faculty of Business Administration, University of Economics in Prague, Czech
Republic
Social Sciences Section Committee
Prof. Mehmet Zülfü Yildiz, Adiyaman University, Turkey
Assoc. Prof. Mihai Gligor, 1 Decembrie 1918 University of Alba Iulia, Romania
Assoc. Prof. Seyed Mohammad Kalantarkousheh, Allamah Tabataba’i University, Iran
Prof. Stanislava Yordanova Stoyanova, South-West University “Neofit Rilski”, Bulgaria
Assoc. Prof. Aleksandra Maria Rogowska, University of Opole, Poland
Assoc. Prof. Radka Ivanova Massaldjieva, Medical University in Plovdiv, Faculty of Public Health, Bulgaria
Assoc. Prof. Lehte Roots, Tallinn University of Technology, Tallinn Law School, Estonia
Dr. Eriada Cela, Aleksander Xhuvani University, Albania
Assoc. Prof. Savaş Zafer Şahin, Atilim University, Turkey
Assoc. Prof. Peter Jusko, Matej Bel University in Banska Bystrica, Faculty of Education, Slovakia
Assoc. Prof. Michal Kozubík, Constantine the Philosopher University in Nitra, Faculty of Social Sciences and
Health Care, Dept. of Social Work and Social Sciences, Slovakia
Dr. Jana Kliestikova, University of Zilina, The Faculty of Operation and Economics of Transport and
Communications, Department of Economics, Slovakia
Assoc. Prof. Cihat Yaşaroğlu, Bingöl University, Turkey
Dr. Alma Karasaliu, Fan S. Noli University, Faculty of Education and Phylology, Albania
Assoc. Prof. Amani Hamdan, Imam Abdulrahman University, Saudi Arabia
Dr. Taher Afsharnezhad, Shomal University, Iran
Dr. Pavel Král, Faculty of Management, University of Economics in Prague, Czech Republic
Prof. Nino Kemertelidze, Vice-rector of Grigol Robakidze University (Heading Scientific Research Management
Centre and Center of International Integration), Tbilisi, Georgia
Prof. Eduard Kubů, Faculty of Arts, Charles University AND University of Economics in Prague AND Unicorn
College, Prague, Czech Republic
Andrius Puksas, Mykolas Romeris University, Lithuania
Giedrė Valūnaitė-Oleškevičienė, Mykolas Romeris University, Lithuania
Anna Karłyk-Ćwik, Faculty of Education, University of Lower Silesia in Wrocław, Poland
Venelin Terziev, Vasil Levski National Military University, Veliko Turnovo, Bulgaria
Arta Musaraj, Founder and Editor in Chief, “Academicus” – International Scientific Journal, Albania
Assoc.Prof. Libor Klimek,Criminology and Criminalistics Research Centre director, Matej Bel University,
Slovakia and Chair of European Law, Faculty of Law, Leipzig University, Germany
Medicine and Pharmacy Section Committee
Olga Součková, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Czech Republic
Helena Paszeková, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Czech Republic
Dr. Petra Bašová, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Czech Republic
Matyáš Krijt, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Czech Republic
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
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XV
Dr. Ondřej Vít, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Czech Republic
Prof. Martin Rusnak, Department of Public Health, Trnava University, Slovakia
Prof. Igor Jerkovic, Faculty of Chemistry and Technology, University of Split, Croatia
Dr. Hakan Çelebi, Aksaray University Department of Environmental Engineering, Turkey
Prof. Naim Deniz Ayaz, Kırıkkale University Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Department of Food Hygiene and
Technology, Turkey
Assoc. Prof. Rostam Jalali, Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences, Iran
Dr. Valentina Gineviciene, Department of Human and Medical Genetics Faculty of Medicine, Biomedical
science institute, Vilnius University, Lithuania
Dr. Cumali Keskin, Mardin Artuklu University, School of Health, Turkey
Prof. Arfan Yousaf, Pir Mehr Ali Shah Arid Agriculture University, Faculty of Veterinary and Animal Sciences,
Rávalpindí, Pakisan
Assoc. Prof. Lorena Dima, Transilvania University of Brasov, Faculty of Medicine, Romania
Prof. Zeliha Selamoglu, Nigde Ömer Halisdemir University, Faculty of Medicine, Turkey
Dr. Surena Nazarbaghi, URMIA University of Medical Sciences, Azerbaijan
Dr. Onur Aydoğdu, Marmara University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physiotherapy and
Rehabilitation, Turkey
Dr. Seda Genc, Yasar University, Turkey
Assoc. Prof. Nevenka Velickova, Faculty of medical sciences, University Goce Delcev – Stip, Macedonia
Dr. Gulcan Bakan, Pamukkale University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Internal Medicine, Turkey
Dr. Elouaer Mohamed Aymen, High Institute of Agronomy, Chott Mariem, Tunisia
Assoc. Prof. Florentina Matei, University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine Bucharest, Faculty of
Biotechnologies, Romania
Dr. Jana Staňurová, Universitats Klinikum Essen und Medizinische Fakultat, Institute of Human Genetics,
Essen, Germany
Assoc. Prof. Izzet Yavuz, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Dicle in Diyarbakir, Turkey
Dr. Eva Tůmová, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, and General University Hospital in Prague,
Czech Republic
Prof. Liana Gogiashvili, Head of the Experimental Pathology Department, A. Natishvili Morphology Institute,
Tbilisi, Georgia
Assoc. Prof. Ekaterine Chkhartishvili, Tbilisi State Medical University, Chachava Clinic, Tbilisi, Georgia,
Georgia
Dr. Eliška Potluková, Universitatsspital Basel, Department of Internal Medicine, Basel, Switzerland
Assoc. Prof. Dr. Sezer Okay, Cankiri Karatekin University, Faculty of Science, Depart. of Biology, Turkey
Natural Sciences Section Committee
Maxim Usatov, Founder and CTO @ BusinessCom Networks, USA
Assoc. Prof. Barış Sevim, Yildiz Technical University, Turkey
Prof. Radu-Emil Precup, Politehnica University of Timisoara, Romania
Dr. Ali Özer, Cumhuriyet University, Dept. of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering, Turkey
Assoc. Prof. Vasilija Sarac, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, University Goce Delcev, Macedonia
Dr. Ilknur Ucak, Nigde Omer Halisdemir University, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences and Technologies, Turkey
Dr. Nadezhda Traycheva Petkova, University of Food Technologies, Technological Faculty, Bulgaria
Dr. Korhan Cengiz, Trakya University, Turkey
Dr. Katarzyna Marek-Kolodziej, Opole University of Technology, Faculty of Production Engineering and
Logistics, Poland
Dr. Cornel-Liviu Tugulan, Horia Hulubei National Institute for Physics and Nuclear Engineering, IFIN-HH,
Romania
Prof. Srinivasulu Tadisetty, Kakatiya University, India
Prof. Bahattin Akdemir, Namik Kemal University Faculty of Agriculture Deaprtment of Biosystems
Engineering, Turkey
Dr. Petru Papazian, “Politehnica” University of Timisoara, Romania
Assoc. Prof. Svetla Dimitrova Stoilova, Technical University-Sofia, Bulgaria
Assoc. Prof. Desislava Ivanova Paneva-Marinova, Institute of Mathematics and Informatics, Bulgarian Academy
of Sciences, Bulgaria
Dr. Hasan Öz, Suleyman Demirel University, Agriculture Faculty, Turkey
Prof. Murat Kunelbayev, Kazakh State Women’s Teacher Training University, Kazakhstan
Assoc. Prof. Kemal Baris, Bulent Ecevit University, Turkey
Assoc. Prof. Ahmad Fakharian, Faculty of Electrical, Biomedical and Mechatronics Engineering, Qazvin
Branch, Islamic Azad University, Iran
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
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XVI
Dr. Rajshree B. Jotania, Gujarat University, Ahmedabad, India
Assoc. Prof. Murat Kurudirek, Ataturk University, Faculty of Science, Department of Physics, Turkey
Prof. Victor Iliev Rizov, University of Architecture, Civil Engineering and Geodesy, Sofia, Bulgaria
Prof. Harun Kemal Ozturk, Pamukkale University, Turkey
Dr. Mihail-Razvan Ioan, Horia Hulubei National Institute for Research and Development in Physics and Nuclear
Engineering (IFIN-HH), Romania
Dr. Mahdi Salimi, Islamic Azad University, Iran
Prof. Mehmet Odabaşi, Aksaray University, Faculty of Arts and Science, Chemistry Department, Biochemistry
Div., Turkey
Assoc. Prof. Valentin Mateev, Technical University of Sofia, Electrical Engineering Faculty, Bulgaria
Dr. Mircea Constantin Pentia, National Institute for Physics and Nuclear Engineering – Horia Hulubei, Romania
Dr. Ionut Ovidiu Toma, The “Gheorghe Asachi” Technical University of Iasi, Romania
Assoc. Prof. Cem Tokatlı, Trakya University, Turkey
Dr. Rhyme Kagiso Setshedi, Saudi Electric Services Polytechnic, Saudi Arabia
Dr. Ozge Erken, Adiyaman University, Turkey
Dr. Mutlu Akar, Yildiz Technical University, Turkey
Assoc. Prof. Katarzyna Hys, Opole University of Technology, Poland
Sana Malik, University of Management and Technology , Pakistan
Ozge Suzer, Bilkent University, Turkey
Muhammad Kamran Khan, Department of Computer Science & IT, Sarhad University of Science and
Information Technology, Peshawar, Pakistan
Assoc. Prof. İpek Güler, Çankaya University, Turkey
Dr. Erdal Erdal, Kirikkale University, Turkey
Prof. Renaldas Raisutis, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania
Dr. Asim Mantarcı, Mus Alparslan University, Turkey
Dr. Ceren Türkcan Kayhan, Izmir University of Economics, Vocational School of Healthy Services Medical,
Turkey
Dr. Ivo Yordanov Damyanov, South-West University, Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria
Dr. Serap Akdemir, Namik Kemal University, Technical Sciences School, Turkey
Hande Sezgin, Istanbul Technical University, Turkey
Dr. Reşit Çelik, Yildiz Technical University, Turkey
Dr. Cihan Çetinkaya, University of Gaziantep, Department of Industrial Engineering, Turkey
Assoc. Prof. Saniye Karaman Öztaş, Gebze Technical University, Turkey
Prof. Onder Erkarslan, Izmir Institute of Technology, Turkey
Dr. Hakan Butuner, Istanbul Aydin University, IMECO – Industrial Management and Engineering Co., Turkey
Assoc. Prof. Vitalii Ivanov, Sumy State University, Ukraine
Dr. Viktor Goliáš, Institute of geochemistry, mineralogy and mineral resources, Faculty of Science, Charles
University in Prague, Czech Republic
Dr. Michal Kökörčený, Unicorn College, Prague, Czech Republic
Dr. Yılmaz Uyaroğlu, Electrical & Electronics Engineering Department, Engineering Faculty, Sakarya
University, Sakarya, Turkey
Dr. Ahmet Çifci, Electrical and Energy Department, Burdur Mehmet Akif Ersoy University, Burdur, Turkey
Dr. Uğur Erkin Kocamaz, Computer Technologies Department, Uludağ University, Karacabey, Turkey
Dr. David Hartman, Head of IT department, Unicorn College, Prague, AND Institute of Computer Science,
Academy of Science of the Czech Republic, AND Department of Applied Mathematics, Charles University,
Prague, Czech Republic
Dr. Petr Bitala, Department of Fire Protection, Faculty of Safety Engineering, VŠB-Technical University of
Ostrava, Czech Republic
Dr. Barbora Baudišová, Laboratory for Risk Research and Management, Faculty of Safety Engineering, AND
Energy research center, VŠB-Technical University of Ostrava, Czech Republic
Dr. Jan Kamenický, Institute of Mechatronics and Computer Engineering, Faculty of Mechatronics, Informatics
and Interdisciplinary studies, Liberec Technical University, Czech Republic, Czech Republic
Dr. Václav Nevrlý, Institute of Thermomechanics, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic; Faculty of
Safety Engineering, VŠB-Technical University of Ostrava, Czech Republic
Prof. Natalia Kamanina, S.I. Vavilov State Optical Institute, Russia
Prof. Snezhana Gocheva-Ilieva, University of Plovdiv “Paisii Hilendarski”, Bulgaria
ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
MARCH 20-22, 2019, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC WWW.ISEIC.CZ, WWW.JOURNALS.CZ
1
DETERMINANTS OF TRANSPORT COMPANY VALUE AND THE SELECTION OF VALUATION METHODS
Eva Adámiková1, Tatiana Čorejová2, Lenka Môcová3
Abstract: The development of a company significantly influences its final value. The value of a transport company can be
determined for various legal acts, which also influence the selection of valuation methods. The view of the transport company
may differ, depending on whether it is seen by investors or the company owners. Methods of evaluating a transport company,
but also of all companies in expert practice, usually follow methodological procedures outlined in the legal standards. These
methods are based on basic principles, namely the asset principle, the yield principle, the combined principle, and the market
principle. These principles also include other methods of determining the company's value. Each method has its own specifics,
a modification of only one model parameter changes the entire company value. The aim of this paper is to analyze the input
data and their impact on the value of the transport company from the perspective of various methods. The paper shows the
impact of the change in the rate of capitalization and g - the sustainable growth rate and the significant impact of the continuing
value on the general value of the company.
JEL Classification Numbers: M41, G32, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1334
Keywords: transport company value, company assets, asset method, yield method
1 Deparment of Communications, The Faculty of Operation and Economics of Transport and Communications,
University of Žilina, Slovak Republic, eva.adamikova@fpedas.uniza.sk 2 Deparment of Communications, The Faculty of Operation and Economics of Transport and Communications,
University of Žilina, Slovak Republic, tatiana.corejova@fpedas.uniza.sk 3 Institute of Lifelong Learning, University of Zilina, Slovak Republic lenka.mocova123@gmail.com
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2
STRUCTURAL DEFORMATION OF THE RUSSIAN ECONOMY IN THE CONTEXT OF GLOBAL CHALLENGES
Viktor Barkhatov1, Iuner Kapkaev2, Daria Benz3, Pavel Kadyrov4
Abstract: The objective of the study is to determine the nature of heterogeneous structural deformations in the economy of
Russia. The structural deformations result from the development strategy formed during the transitional period in the 1990s.
Implementation of the strategy caused an increase in investment in the commodity sector along with its shortage in the high-
tech sector; it resulted in a low knowledge-intensity level of the Russian production which became uncompetitive both on the
domestic and global markets. The article covers all the aspects of the structural deformations in the Russian economy including
the preconditions for these deformations to arise.
JEL Classification Numbers: F02, F62, F63, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1335
Keywords: The structure of the national economy, structural deformation, structural shift, global challenges.
1 Institute of Economy, Business and Administration, Chelyabinsk State University, Chelyabinsk, Russia,
ecoba@csu.ru 2 Institute of Economy, Business and Administration, Chelyabinsk State University, Chelyabinsk, Russia,
zam@csu.ru 3 Institute of Economy, Business and Administration, Chelyabinsk State University, Chelyabinsk, Russia,
benz@csu.ru 4 Institute of Economy, Business and Administration, Chelyabinsk State University, Chelyabinsk, Russia,
pavel@csu.ru
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3
THE INTERRELATION AND INTERACTION OF FINANCIAL MARKETS WITH FINANCIAL CYCLES OF THE NATIONAL ECONOMY OF RUSSIA
Viktor Barkhatov1, Ekaterina Lymar2, Ivan Koptelov3
Abstract: A market economy assumes the circularity of economic development. Many scholars have speculated on the existing
relationship between economic and financial cycles. The emergence of financial markets in the early 20th century gave impetus
to the development of the theory of financial cycles which account for financial ups and downs similarly with economic cycles.
One of the most impactful areas of research of current trends in financial cycles is the study of how these are influenced by
contemporary financial market tools, as this will help determine whether the basic phases of financial cycles can be reconciled.
This article aims at analyzing various aspects of the relationship and the interaction of financial markets with the financial
cycles of the national economy in the context of the Russian Federation. We also give consideration to the behavior of the
contemporary financial system’s chief players––large corporations, credit institutions, facilitating agencies, and state
authorities acting as regulators of financial and economic cycles.
JEL Classification Numbers: G01, G10, G18, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1336
Keywords: financial market, financial cycle, interrelation, national economy
1 Chelyabinsk State University, Russian Federation, ecoba@csu.ru 2 Chelyabinsk State University, Russian Federation, lymar@csu.ru 3 Chelyabinsk State University, Russian Federation, koptelov@csu.ru
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4
PROJECT MANAGEMENT AND ITS STRATEGIES IN GLOBAL ORGANISATION: CASE STUDY
Kateřina Bočková1, Miroslav Škoda2, Tomáš Lengyelfalusy3
Abstract: The goal of the presented paper is to compare the different approaches of the Novartis Global IT project management
in its four divisions. The basics of the project management with the focus on the global or international project management
are described in the theoretical part. There are highlighted the ways of projects´ monitoring and evaluation. The history and the
evolution of the project management in the context of used methods and approaches in various time periods in the particular
divisions of the Novartis Global group are described in the analytical part. The comparison is used through the identification
of positives and negatives of the analysed IT project management parameters. Currently we underline the importance of the
communication within and outside of the projects with emphasis on the cultural differences in global project management. The
results of the comparison are becoming essential for the recommendation for future project management plans in the Novartis
Global group.
JEL Classification Numbers: M21, O32, O5, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1337
Keywords: Project management, KPI’s, Strategies, Novartis, Sandoz, Alcon.
1 DTI University, Department of Management and Economics, Dubnica nad Váhom, Slovakia, bockova@dti.sk 2 DTI University, Department of Management and Economics, Dubnica nad Váhom, Slovakia, skoda@dti.sk 3 DTI University, Department of School Didactics, Dubnica nad Váhom, Slovakia, lengyelfalusy@dti.sk
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5
PRICE–VOLUME DEPENDENCE OF BITCOIN AND ITS FRACTAL ANALYSIS
Mária Bohdalová1, Michal Greguš2
Abstract: Nowadays Bitcoin as cryptocurrency takes a significant place on the global financial markets. This paper analyzes
the Bitcoin closing prices and traded volume during the period from December 28, 2013 to January 22, 2019. This period is
known as a period with rapid increasing of the Bitcoin closing prices, mainly in the second half of the year 2017. The aim of
this paper is twofold. First, we compute the Hurst coefficient to discover the close price dynamics and traded volume using a
fractal point of view. We have discovered an anti-persistent behavior in the traded volume and random character of bitcoin
closing prices. Second, we propose an analysis of the relationship between the close prices and traded volume. Our findings
show how changes in the high-price period differ from changes in the low-price period. We also found that high prices caused
investors to be afraid to trade due to possible rapid decrease in bitcoin closing prices.
JEL Classification Numbers: C21, G12, D53, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1338
Keywords: cryptocurrency, Bitcoin, R/S analysis, quantile regression
1 Comenius University in Bratislava, Faculty of Management, Slovakia, Maria.Bohdalova@fm.uniba.sk 2 Comenius University in Bratislava, Faculty of Management, Slovakia, Michal.Gregus@fm.uniba.sk
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6
KNOWLEDGE SHARING IN BUSINESS NETWORKS FROM THE BUILDING INDUSTRY
Alina Czapla1
Abstract:
Introduction: Both networking and knowledge management can give a company a competitive advantage. But the combination
of these two approaches is particularly interesting. Knowledge sharing is crucial in the building industry, because it is changing
all the time nowadays. The knowledge of new technologies and environmentally friendly building materials is especially
important for companies from the construction industry. Also an average investor, who plans on building a house, has a very
low level of knowledge about building materials and modern building technologies. So it is not surprising, that there are some
business networks in building industry, which use knowledge sharing in their strategy.
Objectives: The objective of this study is to explore the knowledge sharing in business networks from the building industry.
Our research question is: what forms of knowledge sharing take place in the construction industry and what is the scale of this
phenomenon.
Methods: The case study method was used to analyze one of the largest and fastest growing Polish business networks of small
and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) - Grupa Polskie Składy Budowlane (PSB). The survey among the owners and managers
was carried out, interviews, document studies and observations were used.
Results: Both the sharing of date and a large number of educational activities were observed in the studied business network.
The vast majority of network members are engaged in these actions. Knowledge sharing in the building industry is implemented
not only in relation to network partners and their employees but also in relation to customers.
Conclusions: A business network can use knowledge management to achieve its business goals. The educational aspects of this
approach are especially interesting. The scale of this phenomenon in the building industry is much bigger than it might seem.
The range of these educational actions can go beyond the formal boundaries of the network.
JEL Classification Numbers: L100, L140, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1339
Keywords: knowledge sharing, knowledge management, business network, case study, building industry.
1 Faculty of Informatics and Communication, University of Economics in Katowice, alina.czapla@edu.uekat.pl
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7
ENHANCING THE DESTINATION IMAGE THROUGH PROMOTING POPULAR RIVER CRUISE DESTINATIONS
Maksym Dimitrov1, Mariya Zlatkova Stankova2
Abstract: The sector of cruise tourism is growing in both subdivisions: river and ocean cruises. The most popular river cruise
destinations in Europe are connected with historical places around big rivers such as the Danube, Rhine, Volga and others. One
cruise itinerary consists of several tourist destinations, well-known and unknown for the cruise tourist, and creates one tourist
destination combined with different ports of call. The well-known ports of call such as Paris, Vienna, St. Petersburg are the
main attraction for the tourists.
Among them there are some ports of calls which the tourist is not familiar with before visiting them. River cruise tourists have
the opportunity to discover smaller cities in the chosen country or visit a new country as a tourist destination. For the areas
where tourism is in a very early developing stage it is crucial to create a unique destination image which could influence the
future choice of the tourists and bring them back.
The study focuses on the main objective of exploring the attitudes of tourists traveling on two European river cruise routes,
their experience and satisfaction within the visited destinations. Тhe research has a scientifically applied character, outlining
certain attitudes that would be of interest to the business operating on river cruise destinations. Research results show that
popular cities are a pull factor for river cruise tourism. Integrating them into the tourism offer as part of the long-term tourism
planning would bring benefits to the destination by contributing to the creation of a unique and attractive destination image and
growing popularity.
JEL Classification Numbers: L83, Z31, Z32, Z38, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1340
Keywords: river cruises, tourist destinations, destination image.
1 South-West University “Neofit Rilski”, Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria, m.n.dimitrov@gmail.com 2 South-West University “Neofit Rilski”, Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria, mzlstan@yahoo.com
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8
MONETARY DISCRETION BY FISCAL MEANS: THE CASE OF BULGARIA
Preslav Dimitrov1, Ivan Todorov2, Stoyan Tanchev3, Petar Yurukov4
Abstract: The specific design of the Bulgarian currency board arrangement (CBA), which provides an opportunity to the
Bulgarian government to conduct discretionary monetary policy by changes in the fiscal reserve, was analyzed. The impact of
government deposit fluctuations on the dynamics of reserve money and interbank interest rates was investigated. The
hypotheses of an automatic adjustment mechanism and a liquidity effect under the Bulgarian currency board arrangement were
tested. The methodology employed was a vector autoregression, which included the following variables: MB – monetary base;
BP – balance of payments; GD – government deposit on the balance sheet of the Issue Department of the Bulgarian National
Bank; MRR – minimum required reserve ratio of commercial banks. The target variable was MB. Monthly data for the period
January 1998 - December 2018 were used. The study results did not provide evidence of a statistically significant impact of
changes in government deposit on reserve money and interbank interest rates. The hypotheses for the existence of an automatic
adjustment mechanism and a liquidity effect did not find an empirical confirmation.
JEL Classification Numbers: E42, E52, E62, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1341
Keywords: Bulgaria, currency board arrangement, automatic adjustment mechanism, liquidity effect
1 South-West University “Neofit Rilski”, Faculty of Economics, Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria,
preslav.dimitrov@swu.bg 2 South-West University “Neofit Rilski”, Faculty of Economics, Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria, ivank.todorov@swu.bg 3 South-West University “Neofit Rilski”, Faculty of Economics, Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria,
stoyan_tanchev@swu.bg 4 South-West University “Neofit Rilski”, Faculty of Economics, Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria,
petaryurukovofficial@gmail.com
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9
OPTIMIZATION OF THE LOGISTICS NETWORK OF THE SELECTED ONLINE STORE
Mykhailo Dobroselskyi1, Radovan Madleňák2
Abstract: The Internet serves as the main infrastructure for global shopping. For this purpose, the construction of an e-
commerce logistics network is the main aspect of a successful existence in the virtual environment.
This paper analyses the logistics system of a company located in Ukraine. The core business of the company is selling diagnostic
equipment for cars through an online store. The structure of the company consists of one warehouse and five branches. The
company does not have its own fleet for the transportation of products from warehouse to branches or to end customers and it
outsources the services of another logistics company.
The main goal of the paper is to optimize the existing logistics system of the product flow between the warehouse, branches
and the final buyers of the online store.
At the end of the article, after optimizing the warehouse localization, we received a reduction in shipping costs by 23%. Also,
an existing and optimized logistics network is compared in terms of speed and cost of transportation between warehouse,
affiliates and end users.
JEL Classification Numbers: L81, L87, L91, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1342
Keywords: online shopping, e-commerce, inventory management, logistics, truck logistics, logistic network design
1 University of Žilina, The Faculty of Operation and Economicsof Transport and Communications, Deparment of
Communications, Slovak Republic, mykhailo.dobroselskyi@fpedas.uniza.sk 2 University of Žilina, The Faculty of Operation and Economicsof Transport and Communications, Deparment of
Communications, Slovak Republic, radovan.madlenak@fpedas.uniza.sk
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10
DETERMINANTS AND DIRECTIONS OF THE TRANSITION FROM TRADITIONAL TO SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE: THE BULGARIAN CASE
Julia Doitchinova1, Albena Miteva2, Darina Zaimova3
Abstract: On the basis of a literature review, the directions for transition of agriculture from the productive to the post-
productive model are presented. A methodological framework has been developed, including the directions of the transition
and the indicators on which it can be assessed. On the basis of this implementation, the passage from quantity to production
quality, to the sustainability of agriculture, to new business models based on multifunctionality are assessed. It turns out that
the changes in Bulgarian agriculture cannot be assessed unambiguously. The transition to sustainability is accompanied by
continued mechanization and digitization of technological processes. There is a simultaneous development of both the
productive and the post-productive model of agriculture. Together with the increasing interest in organic production, the
implementation of environmentally friendly practices and the implementation of ecosystem services, modernization based on
computerization and chemisation continues.
The results are part of scientific project DN 15/8 2017 Sustainable multifunctional rural areas: reconsidering agricultural models
and systems with increased demands and limited resources funded by the Bulgarian research fund.
JEL Classification Numbers: O13, Q16, Q56, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1343
Keywords: sustainability, multifunctionality, model of agriculture
1 Business faculty, University of National and World Economy, Sofia, Bulgaria, juliadoj@abv.bg 2 Business faculty, University of National and World Economy, Sofia, Bulgaria, albenakm@yahoo.com 3 Faculty of economics, Trakia University, Stara Zagora, Bulgaria, dzaimova@gmail.com
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11
INNOVATIVE APPROACHES AND INNOVATIONS IN RURAL DEVELOPMENT IN BULGARIA
Julia Doitchinova1, Zornitsa Stoyanova2, Hristina Harizanova-Bartos3
Abstract: The LEADER approach has an important role for strengthening and the development of local communities and for
stimulating innovations and innovative practices in rural areas. The aim of this paper is to analyze and evaluate the LEADER
approach as an innovative approach and on this basis to prepare general conclusions about the innovative development of rural
areas in Bulgaria. The local active group (LAG) is interpreted as an innovative "coordinating" activity and it is the core of the innovation system that solves conflicts, and creates and implements local strategies for rural development. The LEADER and
the Community – led local development approaches introduce innovative practices for Bulgarian conditions in order to improve
local governance and facilitate innovations. The main contributions of the LEADER and the Community approaches are related
to: the establishment of local active groups in different network structures of partnership; activating stakeholders, broadcasting
leaders and improving coordination between them; establishing local expertise and administrative capacities; support for
business organizations, local authorities and the non-governmental sector in the development and management of innovative
projects. The factors that influence the success of the LEADER approach and its importance for rural development in each
country differ in their administrative, socio-economic, historical and cultural contexts. Bulgarian LAGs continue to implement
the Community – led local development approach (CLLDA) in the process of adapting to the specific conditions of rural areas.
The results are part of scientific project DN 15/8 2017 Sustainable multifunctional rural areas: reconsidering agricultural models
and systems with increased demands and limited resources funded by the Bulgarian research fund.
JEL Classification Numbers: O31, R58, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1344
Keywords: LEADER, innovative approach, rural development
1 Business faculty, UNWE, juliadoj@abv.bg 2 Business faculty, UNWE, zstoyanova@unwe.bg 3 Business faculty, UNWE, h.harizanova@gmail.com
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12
SKILLS FOR THE BANKING SECTOR. A PERSPECTIVE FROM ROMANIAN GRADUATE STUDENTS.
Ovidiu Folcut1, Victoria Folea2
Abstract: Due to the current nature of jobs and the labour market landscape, jobs themselves change much more rapidly today
for many reasons, one of them being the increased digitization of life and the economy. We use digital technologies for social
interactions and online transactions, but we increasingly use digital technologies at work as well. Universities prepare the next
generation for the workforce and deliver graduates according to the needs of employers. However, in many cases, employers
need to train or re-train their newly employed graduates according to the real and specific needs of the job. In some cases, this
may be justified by the specific nature of the job. Here, we attempted to understand the mismatch between university
specializations and the requirements of jobs in a certain field.
The paper analyses the perception of students and graduates of the way in which university programmes help them become
well-trained professionals that match job requirements in the field of economics and finance. Between March 2018 and March
2019, 500 surveys were distributed to students and graduates in the fields of economics, business administration, finance and
banking, and 396 completed questionnaires were analysed. In the course of our research, we also interviewed employers in the
banking sector to obtain their thoughts and opinions on the correspondence between jobs and university specializations and
programmes.
Based on our research, an increased collaboration between universities and employers would be beneficial. The involvement
of students and graduates in collaborative projects between universities and employers and the direct participation of employers
in delivering courses and seminars are some examples of implementing these ideas.
JEL Classification Numbers: A23, I23, J23, J24, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1345
Keywords: digital skills, banking sector, digital technologies
1 Romanian-American University, Bucharest, Romania, ovidiu.folcut@rau.ro 2 Romanian-American University, Bucharest, Romania, victoria.folea@rau.ro
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13
PERCEPTIONS AND INTENTIONS OF ADOPTING THE INTERNET OF THINGS BY GENERATION Z
Silvana Costa Gonçalves1, Belem Barbosa2, Anabela Rocha3
Abstract: The Internet of Things (IoT) represents a new technological revolution expected to impact all aspects of our daily
lives in the future. Generation Z is foreseen as playing a fundamental role in the adoption of this type of technology, namely
because of their growing importance as a consumer segment, their global role in the society, and in particular their close
relationship with technology. However, extant literature on the adoption of IoT disregarded this segment. This paper aims to
fulfill this gap, by exploring their knowledge, perceptions, and intentions of adopting IoT. After considering the main
contributions in the consumer behavior literature regarding IoT, a qualitative approach was adopted, and 7 semi-structured
interviews were conducted with Portuguese consumers aged 18-22. Content analysis was performed following the
recommendations by Bardin (1977). The results showed that although Generation Z is not familiar with the concept of the IoT, they expressed a strong desire to integrate IoT technology in their lives, being open to its adoption in all fields of application,
including for personal use, at home, and for work. One of the conclusions is that in order to foster the IoT adoption by this
Generation, the functional benefits (performance, price, comfort, and safety) should be emphasized, so that the main risks
perceived are weakened, namely the financial, performance, and physical risks.
UDC Classification: 304, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1346
Keywords: Generation Z, Internet of Things, IoT Adoption, Perceived Risks, Perceived Benefits
1 University of Aveiro, Portugal, silvana.goncalves@ua.pt 2 University of Aveiro, Portugal, belem.barbosa@ua.pt 3 University of Aveiro, Portugal, anabela.rocha@ua.pt
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14
ANALYSIS OF THE IMPACT OF INFRUSTRUCTURE ON THE DEVELOPMENT LEVEL OF RUSSIAN REGIONS
Rogneda Groznykh1, Elena Ignatieva2, Oleg Mariev3, Alla Serkova4
Abstract: Infrastructure is one of the main determinants of consistent and sustainable development in different countries and
regions. Considering the Russian Federation, where there are 85 regions, not counting the federal cities, the problem of regional
development and factors that can promote it, is currently of high importance. Different levels of regional development lead to
higher economic differentiation between regions and cause serious damage to the Russian economy. Our main hypothesis
suggests that a higher level of infrastructure development in a region positively affects economic development in the areas.
Therefore, the main aim of our research is to estimate the impact of infrastructure on economic development in Russian regions
using econometric analysis. In addition, cluster analysis was implemented to reveal the difference in infrastructural
development levels in the regions. To provide a precise estimation, a database was constructed on Russian regions for the
period of 2012 to 2016. The main method used in the research is econometric analysis and cluster analysis by using k-means
method based on three main indicators: social, industrial and financial. The results of the analysis reveal 5 different clusters
with highly differentiated levels of infrastructural development. Econometric analysis has shown that the most significant
infrastructural factors are industrial factors and social factors. The results of the research could be taken into consideration as
recommendations for development in order to improve government policy towards less developed Russian regions.
JEL Classification Numbers: O18, O47, DOI: 10.12955/cbup.v7.1347
Keywords: Infrastructure, infrastructure develoment of regions, static and dynamic indicators, real sector of economy, cluster
analysis
1 Graduate School of Economics and Management, Ural Federal University, Ekaterinburg, Russian Federation,
ronav999@gmail.com 2 The Ural branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Ekaterinburg, Russian Federation, elen_i99@mail.ru 3 Graduate School of Economics and Management, Ural Federal University and Institute of Economics, The Ural
Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences; Ekaterinburg, Russian Federation, o.s.mariev@urfu.ru 4 Ural Federal University and Institute of Economics, The Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences,
Russian Federation, muccio@bk.ru
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15
THE IMPACT OF INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS ON FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT INFLOWS: CROSS-COUNTRY ANALYSIS
Rogneda Groznykh1, Igor Drapkin2, Oleg Mariev3
Abstract: This research paper is devoted to analysis of various institutional factors as determinants of foreign direct investment
(further – FDI) inflows to different countries. The objective of the research is to estimate the effect of institutions on FDI
inflows. The analysis is provided on a database of cross-country FDI inflows on 72 countries FDI-importers and 112 countries
FDI-exporters in the period from 2001 to 2016. It is supposed in the paper that the impact of institutional factors might be
different for the groups of developed and developing countries; since developed economies have higher institutional indicators,
they tend to attract larger amounts of foreign direct investment compared to developing economies, where institutional
development is at the lower level. The estimation is based on the gravity approach, which considers the positive effects of
countries’ GDP and the negative effect of the distance between them. The main method used for the econometric estimation is
the Pseudo Poisson Maximum Likelihood (PPML) regression, which is considered to be one of the adequate methods for
estimating such data. During the research the problems of zero-observations and correlat