1,325 research outputs found

    Smarter task assignment or greater effort: the impact of incentives on team performance

    Get PDF
    We use an experiment to study the impact of team-based incentives, exploiting rich data from personnel records and management information systems. Using a triple difference design, we show that the incentive scheme had an impact on team performance, even with quite large teams. We examine whether this effect was due to increased effort from workers or strategic task reallocation. We find that the provision of financial incentives did raise individual performance but that managers also disproportionately reallocated efficient workers to the incentivised tasks. We show that this reallocation was the more important contributor to the overall outcome

    Comparison between the results of a new version of the AVACTA II atmospheric diffusion model and tracer experiments

    Get PDF
    A new version of the AVACTA II code (a code recommended by EPA) has been implemented and evaluated. AVACTA II is a code based on a mixed segmentpuff approach, which allows numerical simulations of both non-stationary and nonhomogeneous conditions. In our version, the wind field is calculated through the 3D mass-consistent code WINDS developed at the Department of Physics of the University of Genoa, Italy. The model evaluation of this new version of the AVACTA II code has been performed using field experiment data on flat, but rough, terrain (Karlsruhe Nuclear Research Center (KNRC) tracer experiments) and wind tunnel measurements(EPA Rushil experiments) both in flat and complex terrain. A comparison is made between simulated and measured concentration distributions. The results of these evaluations are very encouraging

    Effect of ovarian superstimulation on COC collection and maturation in alpacas

    Get PDF
    The objective of the present study was to compare the ovarian follicular response, cumulus-oocyte complex (COC) collection rate, and maturational status of COC collected from alpacas subsequent to treatment with two different superstimulatory protocols. Alpacas (n = 7 per group) were treated with: (1) 200 mg of FSH im divided bid for 3 d, plus a single i.v. dose of 1000 IU hCG 24 h after the last FSH treatment, or (2) 1200 IU of eCG as a single i.m. dose, plus a single i.v. dose of 1000 IU of hCG on day 3 after eCG treatment (day 0 = start of superstimulatory treatment). At 20-24 h post-hCG treatment, the ovaries were surgically exposed and COC were collected by needle aspiration of all follicles ≥6 mm. The FSH and eCG treatment groups did not differ with respect to the number of follicles ≥6 mm at the time of COC collection (20.0 ± 7.5 versus 27.0 ± 3.3; P = 0.5), the number of COC collected (26.2 ± 8.4 versus 23.3 ± 3.7; P = 0.7), or the collection rate per follicle aspirated (89% versus 87%; P = 0.7). No differences were detected between FSH- and eCG-treated alpacas in the number of expanded COC collected per alpaca (11.5 ± 2.9 versus 8.8 ± 2.8; P = 0.54), the number of expanded COC in metaphase II (8.5 ± 1.9 versus 6.0 ± 2.1; P = 0.1), or the number of compact COC with ≥3 layers of cumulus cells (12.5 ± 4.3 versus 14.3 ± 2.6; P = 0.72). A greater proportion (P < 0.05) of compact COC collected after FSH treatment matured in vitro to the metaphase II stage than after eCG treatment. Eight expanded alpaca COC were fertilized in vitro with llama sperm, three of which were fixed and stained 18 h after exposure to sperm and five were cultured in vitro. Two of the three stained oocytes were in the pronuclear stage, and all five of the cultured oocytes developed to the two-cell and morula stages at 2 and 7 days, respectively, after in vitro fertilization. In summary, FSH and eCG treatments were equally effective for ovarian superstimulation and oocyte collection. Cumulus-oocyte complexes were collected from more than 80% of follicles aspirated during laparotomy. Nearly one third of the COC collected after superstimulation were in metaphase II, and more than 70% of the remaining COC progressed to metaphase II after in vitro maturation for 26 h, bringing the mean number of oocytes available for in vitro fertilization to 16 per alpaca. Preliminary results support the hypothesis that alpaca oocytes obtained after superstimulation in the absence of progesterone are developmentally competent since morulae developed from all five COC fertilized and cultured in vitro

    Uncertainty, sensitivity analysis and the role of data based mechanistic modeling in hydrology

    Get PDF
    International audienceIn this paper, we discuss the problem of calibration and uncertainty estimation for hydrologic systems from two points of view: a bottom-up, reductionist approach; and a top-down, data-based mechanistic (DBM) approach. The two approaches are applied to the modelling of the River Hodder catchment in North-West England. The bottom-up approach is developed using the TOPMODEL, whose structure is evaluated by global sensitivity analysis (GSA) in order to specify the most sensitive and important parameters; and the subsequent exercises in calibration and validation are carried out in the light of this sensitivity analysis. GSA helps to improve the calibration of hydrological models, making their properties more transparent and highlighting mis-specification problems. The DBM model provides a quick and efficient analysis of the rainfall-flow data, revealing important characteristics of the catchment-scale response, such as the nature of the effective rainfall nonlinearity and the partitioning of the effective rainfall into different flow pathways. TOPMODEL calibration takes more time and it explains the flow data a little less well than the DBM model. The main differences in the modelling results are in the nature of the models and the flow decomposition they suggest. The "quick'' (63%) and "slow'' (37%) components of the decomposed flow identified in the DBM model show a clear partitioning of the flow, with the quick component apparently accounting for the effects of surface and near surface processes; and the slow component arising from the displacement of groundwater into the river channel (base flow). On the other hand, the two output flow components in TOPMODEL have a different physical interpretation, with a single flow component (95%) accounting for both slow (subsurface) and fast (surface) dynamics, while the other, very small component (5%) is interpreted as an instantaneous surface runoff generated by rainfall falling on areas of saturated soil. The results of the exercise show that the two modelling methodologies have good synergy; combining well to produce a complete modelling approach that has the kinds of checks-and-balances required in practical data-based modelling of rainfall-flow systems. Such a combined approach also produces models that are suitable for different kinds of application. As such, the DBM model can provides an immediate vehicle for flow and flood forecasting; while TOPMODEL, suitably calibrated (and perhaps modified) in the light of the DBM and GSA results, immediately provides a simulation model with a variety of potential applications, in areas such as catchment management and planning

    On the second variation of the biharmonic Clifford torus in S-4

    Get PDF
    The flat torus T = S-1 (1/2) x S-1 (1/2) admits a proper biharmonic isometric immersion into the unit 4-dimensional sphere S-4 given by Phi = i o phi, where phi : T -&gt; S-3 (1/root 2) is the minimal Clifford torus and i : S-3 (1 root 2) -&gt; S-4 is the biharmonic small hypersphere. The first goal of this paper is to compute the biharmonic index and nullity of the proper biharmonic immersion Phi. After, we shall study in the detail the kernel of the generalised Jacobi operator I-2 Phi. We shall prove that it contains a direction which admits a natural variation with vanishing first, second and third derivatives, and such that the fourth derivative is negative. In the second part of the paper, we shall analyse the specific contribution of phi to the biharmonic index and nullity of Phi. In this context, we shall study a more general composition (Phi) over tilde = i o (phi) over tilde, where (phi) over tilde : M-m -&gt; Sn-1 (1/root 2), m &gt;= 1, n &gt;= 3, is a minimal immersion and i : Sn-1 (1/root 2) -&gt; S-n is the biharmonic small hypersphere. First, we shall determine a general sufficient condition which ensures that the second variation of (Phi) over tilde is nonnegatively defined on C((phi) over tilde -1TSn-1(1/root 2)). Then, we complete this type of analysis on our Clifford torus and, as a complementary result, we obtain the p-harmonic index and nullity of phi. In the final section, we compare our general results with those which can be deduced from the study of the equivariant second variation

    The October 2000 flooding in Valle d'Aosta (Italy): Event description and land planning measures for the risk mitigation

    Get PDF
    On October 13-16th, 2000 heavy rainfalls in the Northwestern Italian Alps caused huge flooding and landslides with significant damages to houses and infrastructures and several life losses. In this paper a description of the main events that affected Valle d’Aosta’s region and the subsequent land planning measures adopted for the risk mitigation are presented. After a first meteorological and hydrological framing, based on the data of the regional monitoring system (that pointed out rainfalls up to 236 mm in 24 h also in high‐altitude zones, because of the rise of the isotherm 0°C around 3000 m above sea level), the main effects of the event (extensive flooding, landslides, soil slips and debris flows) in the regional catchment of the Dora Baltea river are described. Through aerial and direct surveys those effects have been transferred into a thematic cartography within two months from the event, in order to have detailed elements for the technical, administrative and political land planning decisions, and, on this basis, a new regional directive containing detailed measures for the hydro‐geological risk mitigation and land safety has been adopted. © 2003 by Taylor nad Francis Group, LLC

    The politics of collective repair: examining object-relations in a postwork society

    Get PDF
    In this article we look at repair as an emergent focus of recent activism in affluent societies, where a number of groups are reclaiming practices of repair as a form of political and ecological action. Ranging from those that fight for legislative change to those groups who are trying to support ecological and social change through everyday life practices, repair is beginning to surface tensions in everyday life and as such poses opportunities for its transformation. We survey a few of the practices that make up this movement in its various articulations, to take stock of their current political import. While we suggest that these practices can be seen as an emergent lifestyle movement, they should not be seen as presenting a unified statement. Rather, we aim to show that they articulate a spectrum of political positions, particularly in relation to the three specific issues of property, pedagogy and sociality. These three dimensions are all facets of current internal discrepancies of repair practices and moreover express potential bifurcations as this movement evolves. Drawing on a diverse methodology that includes discourse analysis and participant observation, we suggest some of the ways in which this growing area of activity could play a significant role in resisting the commodification of the everyday and inventing postwork alternatives

    Temporary techno-social gatherings? A (hacked) discussion about open practices

    Get PDF
    This paper is rooted in an experimental inquiry of issue-oriented temporary techno-social gatherings or TTGs, which are typically referred to as hackathons, workshops or pop-ups and employ rapid design and development practices to tackle technical challenges while engaging with social issues. Based on a collaboration between three digital practitioners (a producer, a researcher and a designer), qualitative and creative data was gathered across five different kinds of TTG events in London and in Tartu which were held in partnership with large institutions, including Art:Work at Tate Exchange within Tate Modern, the Mozilla Festival at Ravensbourne College and the 2017 Association of Internet Researchers conference hosted in Tartu. By analysing data using an open and discursive approach manifested in both text and visual formats, we reflect on the dynamic and generative characteristics of TTG gatherings while also arriving at our own conclusions as situated researchers and practitioners who are ourselves engaged in increasingly messy webs where new worlds of theory and practice are built
    corecore