1,943,973 research outputs found
Movin' On Up: Reforming America's Social Contract to Provide a Bridge to the Middle Class
This research brief summarizes recent findings by the Center for Economic and Policy Research on job quality and workers' economic security. Using a rigorous methodology that improves on other more standard measures of economic security, we find that one in five Americans in working families have income below a minimum middle-class budget standard for the area in which they live. The authors argue this is the result of a frayed social contract that must be updated so that more workers can move into the middle class. The report concludes with proposals that would strengthen labor market institutions, expand work supports for families in the middle and working classes, and provide workers, particularly those in low- and moderate-wage jobs, with more opportunities to improve their skills and education throughout their lifetimes
A tentative step towards healthy public policy
More consistent attention to implementing healthy public policy, and amassing the evidence for it, are urgently required
Structural analyses of features in cultural landscapes based on historical cadastral maps and GIS
A landscape may appear to be ancient and to contain old man-made structures even if this is not the whole truth. Structures are moved, removed, replaced and added over the years. New users introduce new land use and management regimes. In Norway, information from land consolidation processes is crucially important in gaining a better understanding of the history, dynamics and development of farms, identifying older traces of human activity and selecting important areas for protection and management. When cadastral maps are transformed, common points are needed during the transformation process and for testing the accuracy of the final transformation. It is often difficult to find enough common points to satisfy statistical requirements. Paper I presents a simple method using buffers based on linear features to evaluate whether or not the accuracy of the transformation results is better than the known accuracy of the source. Papers II, III and IV show how digitised and geographically referenced historical cadastral maps can be used to reconstruct the situation at various dates back to the 19th century, and for some information back to the 16th century. The digitised cadastral map provides a snapshot of the situation at the time of the land consolidation process, and the information is considered to be very exact. Paper IV also demonstrates how a DEM (digital elevation model) can add significantly to an understanding of the information contained in the land consolidation material. The use of digitised cadastral maps reveals that many man-made structures generally perceived as old, because they are constructed using traditional techniques, in fact date from after the land consolidation process. One aim of the new European Landscape Convention is to promote landscape protection, management and planning. It therefore requires identification of landscapes and analysis of their characteristics and the forces and pressures transforming them. Using land consolidation material in a GIS makes it possible to document changes in a landscape and improve understanding of the pressures behind these changes
The effects of nonlocal impact ionization on the speed of avalanche photodiodes
The nonlocal enhancement in the velocities of charge carriers to ionization is shown to outweigh the opposing effects of dead space, increasing the avalanche speed of short avalanche photodiodes (APDs) over the predictions of a conventional local model which ignores both of these effects. The trends in the measured gain-bandwidth product of two short InAlAs APDs reported in the literature support this result. Relatively large speed benefits are predicted to result from further small reductions in the lengths of short multiplication regions
Autocratic opening to democracy: why legitimacy matters
As recent experiments in democratisation around the world show signs of achieving success, or failure, or more usually something in between, the attention of democracy promotion actors in the international community is turning to the world's remaining outstanding autocracies. This article identifies the autocracies, discusses the notion of autocratic opening, and explores how opening can come about, with particular reference to international intervention. The article argues that, for identifying the prospects for autocratic opening and determining the forms of constructive engagement available to international actors, it is useful to distinguish between the different grounds on which various autocracies claim legitimacy, and the specific vulnerabilities to which their principal legitimating base gives rise
The quality of district plans and their implementation: Towards environmental quality
Since inception of the Resource Management Act 1991 (RMA) the issue of sustainable management has
dominated planning practice in New Zealand. Over the past decade, councils have wrestled with converting the
concept of sustainable management into policy and practice. Implicit to the requirement that district councils
develop plans for managing the environmental effects of the use and development of natural and physical
resources is the assumption that good quality plans will result in improved environmental quality.
The key question to be addressed in this paper is: Do good plans matter? Measuring the quality of plan implementation is a complex task, and little, if any, attempt has been made in
councils to do it. The PUCM research is the first in New Zealand to attempt a quantitative analysis of the links between the quality
of plans produced under the RMA and the quality of plan implementation. The purpose of this paper is to describe the methodology that we adopted for the research and to present some
preliminary results from studying the implementation of plans through the resource consent process. Overall, we are trying to determine: how best to measure the quality of plan implementation and the effect that
district plan quality has on implementation quality; and what factors influence the relationship between plan
quality and implementation quality.
This paper is structured into three main parts. The first is a description of the methodological approach taken to
conduct the research. In the second part, the key preliminary results are presented. Finally the findings and the
implications for achieving good environmental outcomes are discussed
Inertial-Magnetic Sensors for Assessing Spatial Cognition in Infants
This paper describes a novel approach to the
assessment of spatial cognition in children. In particular we
present a wireless instrumented toy embedding magneto-inertial
sensors for orientation tracking, specifically developed to assess
the ability to insert objects into holes. To be used in naturalistic
environments (e.g. daycares), we also describe an in-field calibration
procedure based on a sequence of manual rotations, not
relying on accurate motions or sophisticated equipment.
The final accuracy of the proposed system, after the mentioned
calibration procedure, is derived by direct comparison with
a gold-standard motion tracking device. In particular, both
systems are subjected to a sequence of ten single-axis rotations
(approximately 90 deg, back and forth), about three different
axes. The root-mean-square of the angular error between the
two measurements (gold-standard vs. proposed systems) was
evaluated for each trial. In particular, the average rms error
is under 2 deg.
This study indicates that a technological approach to ecological
assessment of spatial cognition in infants is indeed feasible. As
a consequence, prevention through screening of large number of
infants is at reach
Quasimodularity and large genus limits of Siegel-Veech constants
Quasimodular forms were first studied in the context of counting torus
coverings. Here we show that a weighted version of these coverings with
Siegel-Veech weights also provides quasimodular forms. We apply this to prove
conjectures of Eskin and Zorich on the large genus limits of Masur-Veech
volumes and of Siegel-Veech constants.
In Part I we connect the geometric definition of Siegel-Veech constants both
with a combinatorial counting problem and with intersection numbers on Hurwitz
spaces. We introduce modified Siegel-Veech weights whose generating functions
will later be shown to be quasimodular.
Parts II and III are devoted to the study of the quasimodularity of the
generating functions arising from weighted counting of torus coverings. The
starting point is the theorem of Bloch and Okounkov saying that q-brackets of
shifted symmetric functions are quasimodular forms. In Part II we give an
expression for their growth polynomials in terms of Gaussian integrals and use
this to obtain a closed formula for the generating series of cumulants that is
the basis for studying large genus asymptotics. In Part III we show that the
even hook-length moments of partitions are shifted symmetric polynomials and
prove a formula for the q-bracket of the product of such a hook-length moment
with an arbitrary shifted symmetric polynomial. This formula proves
quasimodularity also for the (-2)-nd hook-length moments by extrapolation, and
implies the quasimodularity of the Siegel-Veech weighted counting functions.
Finally, in Part IV these results are used to give explicit generating
functions for the volumes and Siegel-Veech constants in the case of the
principal stratum of abelian differentials. To apply these exact formulas to
the Eskin-Zorich conjectures we provide a general framework for computing the
asymptotics of rapidly divergent power series.Comment: 107 pages, final version, to appear in J. of the AM
Aportaciones al conocimiento florístico de la Sierra de Aracena (Huelva, España)
A check�list of the Sierra de Aracena (Huelva, Spain) is presented. A total of 900 vascular plants have been identificated.Se ha realizado un catálogo floristico de la Sierra de Aracena (Huelva, España), en el que se citan 900 táxones de plantas vasculares
Communications link for SDS 900 series computers
High speed, self-clocking single channel control and data link apparatus interfaces between two computers. This combined system reduces data errors
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