1,750,132 research outputs found
Handbook on Employment of Persons with a Disability - Support Services
[Excerpt] Nowadays, more and more employers are willing to employ persons with a disability after learning about their working capacity. However, some employers who wish to offer them employment opportunities might have concern over their accommodation in workplace and have reservation about employing them.
In fact, there are various services offered by different organisations with a view to facilitating open employment of persons with a disability so that they could fit in to their work and integrate into society. This handbook is published by the Selective Placement Division of the Labour Department in order to enhance the confidence of employers who have already employed disabled staff or those who wish to employ persons with a disability by introducing a range of support services and the means through which these services could be acquired. We hope that by introducing these support services to employers and disabled employees, the working relationship between them will be enhanced
Optimizing The Spatial Content Caching Distribution for Device-to-Device Communications
We study the optimal geographic content placement problem for
device-to-device (D2D) networks in which the content popularity follows the
Zipf law. We consider a D2D caching model where the locations of the D2D users
(caches) are modeled by a Poisson point process (PPP) and have limited
communication range and finite storage. Unlike most related work which assumes
independent placement of content, and does not capture the locations of the
users, we model the spatial properties of the network including spatial
correlation in terms of the cached content. We propose two novel spatial
correlation models, the exchangeable content model and a Mat\'{e}rn (MHC)
content placement model, and analyze and optimize the \emph{hit probability},
which is the probability of a given D2D node finding a desired file at another
node within its communication range. We contrast these results to the
independent placement model, and show that exchangeable placement performs
worse. On the other hand, MHC placement yields a higher cache hit probability
than independent placement for small cache sizes.Comment: appeared in Proc. IEEE Intl. Symposium on Info. Theory, Barcelona,
Spain, July 201
When Intrusive Can Be Likable: Product Placement Effects on Multitasking Consumers
Using movie scenes, this study examines how multitasking by viewers influences the product-plot integration effect. Findings indicate that multitasking dampens a well-integrated placement\u27s brand-enhancing effect and mitigates an intrusive placement\u27s brand-damaging effect. Well-integrated placement produces an assimilation effect, leading to convergence of viewers\u27 attitudes toward the placed versus competing brands, while intrusive placement triggers a contrast effect that results in divergence of these attitudes. Among single-tasking viewers, the boomerang effect of an intrusive placement decreases the favorability of the placed brand and increases the favorability of the not-shown competitor. The opposite is true among multitasking viewers, however
Hard times made harder: struggling caregivers and child neglect
Poverty is only one of many challenges tied to a report of child neglect. The analysis in this brief finds that neglected children whose caregivers struggle with substance abuse and mental health problems are at significant risk for out-of-home placement. Risk factors for out-of-home placement for neglected children are discussed, as well as a multifaceted approach to services to prevent neglect and out-of-home placement
Product placement as a way of promoting on an international scale based on a series of films about James Bond
This article presents the characteristics of product placement as global promotion.
The reader may refer to the types of product placement, its regulatory framework
and its short genesis and evolution. The paper presents the results of a survey
conducted on a group of 123 respondents. The survey results indicate that product
placement in James Bond films is noticeable by more than 90% of respondents.
The respondents have positive opinions on the use of product placement to promote
the products. This may encourage potential investors to make more use of
film as a medium of product placement
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