10,586 research outputs found
The Effect of Organizational Context on Individual Performance
Several observers have suggested that highly skilled workers convey little in the way of competitive advantage for firms due to their mobility. Implicit in this view is the belief that organizations are not important in determining the performance of such individuals. In this study, we address this issue by examining skilled individuals who work within multiple organizations roughly simultaneously. Specifically, we consider the performance of cardiac surgeons, many of whom perform operations at multiple hospitals during the course of a given year. Using patient mortality as an outcome measure, we find that the quality of a surgeon's performance at a given hospital improves significantly with increases in his or her annual procedure volume at that hospital but does not significantly improve with increases in his or her volume at other hospitals. Our findings suggest that surgeon performance is not fully portable across hospitals (i.e., some portion of performance is firm specific). We consider the implications of our results for settings beyond health care.
Reply to ``Comment on `Majoron emitting neutrinoless double beta decay in the electroweak chiral gauge extensions' ''
We demonstrate that in the process of deducing the constraint on the
electroweak mixing angle in our paper, we have indeed been working
with three mass scales while implementing (331) model.Comment: Revtex, 3pages, Reply to hep-ph/9902448, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Preliminary evaluation of probiotic properties of Lactobacillus strains isolated from Sardinian dairy products
Twenty-three Lactobacillus strains of dairy origin were evaluated for some functional properties relevant to their use as probiotics. A preliminary subtractive screening based on the abilities to inhibit the growth of microbial pathogens and hydrolyze conjugated bile salts was applied, and six strains were selected for further characterization including survival under gastrointestinal environmental conditions, adhesion to gut epithelial tissue, enzymatic activity, and some safety properties. All selected strains maintained elevated cell numbers under conditions simulating passage through the human gastrointestinal tract, well comparable to the values obtained for the probiotic strain Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG, and were able to adhere to Caco-2 cells to various extents (from 3 to 20%). All strains exhibited high aminopeptidase, and absent or very low proteolytic and strong β-galactosidase activities; none was found to be haemolytic or to produce biogenic amines and all were susceptible to tetracycline, chloramphenicol, erythromycin, ampicillin, and amoxicillin/clavulanic acid. Our results indicate that the Lactobacillus strains analyzed could be considered appropriate probiotic candidates, due to resistance to GIT simulated conditions, antimicrobial activity, adhesion to Caco-2 cell-line, and absence of undesirable properties. They could be used as adjunct cultures for contributing to the quality and health related functional properties of dairy products
Minimal extended flavor groups, matter fields chiral representations, and the flavor question
We show the specific unusual features on chiral gauge anomalies cancellation
in the minimal, necessarily 3-3-1, and the largest
3-4-1 weak isospin chiral gauge semisimple group leptoquark-bilepton
extensions of the 3-2-1 conventional standard model of nuclear and
electromagnetic interactions. In such models a natural explanation for the
fundamental question of fermion generation replication arises from the
self-consistency of a local gauge quantum field theory, which constrains the
number of the
QFD fermion families to the QCD color charges.Comment: 10 pages. <[email protected]
Remark on the vectorlike nature of the electromagnetism and the electric charge quantization
In this work we study the structure of the electromagnetic interactions and
the electric charge quantization in gauge theories of electroweak interactions
based on semi-simple groups. We show that in the standard model of the
electroweak interactions the structure of the electromagnetic interactions is
strongly correlated to the quantization pattern of the electric charges. We
examine these two questions also in all possible chiral bilepton gauge models
of the electroweak interactions. In all they we can explain the vectorlike
nature of the electromagnetic interactions and the electric charge quantization
together demanding nonvanishing fermion masses and the anomaly cancellations.Comment: 17 pages, latex, no figure
Electromagnetic Hadron Form Factors and Higher Fock Components
Investigation of the spacelike and timelike electromagnetic form factors of
hadrons, within a relativistic microscopical model characterized by a small set
of hypothesis, could shed light on the components of hadron states beyond the
valence one. Our relativistic approach has been successfully applied first to
the pion and then the extension to the nucleon has been undertaken. The pion
case is shortly reviewed as an illustrative example for introducing the main
ingredients of our approach, and preliminary results for the nucleon in the
spacelike range are evaluated.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figs, espcrc1.sty included. Proceedings of Fifth
International Conference on Perspectives In Hadronic Physics, ICTP, May
22-26, 200
Investigation of Hamamatsu H8500 phototubes as single photon detectors
We have investigated the response of a significant sample of Hamamatsu H8500
MultiAnode PhotoMultiplier Tubes (MAPMTs) as single photon detectors, in view
of their use in a ring imaging Cherenkov counter for the CLAS12 spectrometer at
the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility. For this, a laser working
at 407.2nm wavelength was employed. The sample is divided equally into standard
window type, with a spectral response in the visible light region, and
UV-enhanced window type MAPMTs. The studies confirm the suitability of these
MAPMTs for single photon detection in such a Cherenkov imaging application
Radio continuum observations of local star-forming galaxies using the Caltech Continuum Backend on the Green Bank Telescope
We observed radio continuum emission in 27 local (D < 70 Mpc) star-forming
galaxies with the Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope between 26 GHz and 40 GHz
using the Caltech Continuum Backend. We obtained detections for 22 of these
galaxies at all four sub-bands and four more marginal detections by taking the
average flux across the entire bandwidth. This is the first detection (full or
marginal) at these frequencies for 22 of these galaxies. We fit spectral energy
distributions (SEDs) for all of the four-sub-band detections. For 14 of the
galaxies, SEDs were best fit by a combination of thermal free-free and
nonthermal synchrotron components. Eight galaxies with four-sub-band detections
had steep spectra that were only fit by a single nonthermal component. Using
these fits, we calculated supernova rates, total number of equivalent O stars,
and star formation rates within each ~23 arcsecond beam. For unresolved
galaxies, these physical properties characterize the galaxies' recent star
formation on a global scale. We confirm that the radio-far-infrared correlation
holds for the unresolved galaxies' total 33 GHz flux regardless of their
thermal fractions, though the scatter on this correlation is larger than that
at 1.4 GHz. In addition, we found that for the unresolved galaxies, there is an
inverse relationship between the ratio of 33 GHz flux to total far-infrared
flux and the steepness of the galaxy's spectral index between 1.4 GHz and 33
GHz. This relationship could be an indicator of the timescale of the observed
episode of star formation.Comment: 36 pages, 9 figures; accepted for publication in ApJ. First and
second author affiliation updated to reflect departmental name chang
- …
