44 research outputs found

    The Effect of Service on Research Performance: A Study on Italian Academics in Management

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    Academics all over the world are feeling the increasing pressure to attain satisfactory research performance. Since research is not the only activity required of academics, though, the debate on how it may be coupled with other knowledge transfer activities like teaching, patenting, and dissemination has been captivating scholars interested in higher education. Literature is surprisingly silent about the interplay between research performance and other roles and tasks that faculty are expected to carry out, namely academic citizenship, intended as the service that they provide to their institution, to the scientific community, and to the larger society. Through a negative binomial regression conducted on 692 Italian academics in management, this paper investigates both the direct and moderating effect exerted by academic citizenship on the relationship between research performance in two subsequent evaluation exercises, thus advancing our knowledge of the relationship between research and service. Findings show that institutional service acts as a pure moderator, discipline-based service is a quasi-moderator, while public service exerts only a direct negative effect on research performance. In light of the emergent interplay between research and service, the necessity to boost reflection on academic citizenship is discussed and suggestions for its acknowledgement and advancement are formulated

    Birth outcome in women with breast cancer

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    We investigated whether maternal breast cancer affects birth outcome in a nationwide cohort study of 695 births from 1973 to 2002 of women with breast cancer with respect to preterm birth, low birth weight at term, stillbirth and congenital abnormalities as well as mean birth weight, compared with the outcomes of 33 443 births from unaffected mothers. There was no excess risk of adverse birth outcome for the 216 newborns of women with breast cancer before pregnancy. Stratification by mother's treatment did not change the results. For 37 newborns of women diagnosed during pregnancy, the prevalence ratio (PR) of preterm birth was 8.1 (95% confidence interval (CI): 3.8–17). However, 10 of the 12 preterm deliveries among these women were elective early deliveries. Among 442 births of women diagnosed in the 2 years from time of delivery, the PR of preterm birth was 1.4 (95% CI: 1.0–2.0), and the PR of low birth weight at term for boys was 2.9 (95% CI: 1.3–6.3). Overall, our results are reassuring regarding the risks of adverse birth outcome for breast cancer patients

    Hodgkin's disease and birth outcome: a Danish nationwide cohort study

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    In a Danish nationwide cohort study of 292 births from 1973 to 2002 in women with Hodgkin's disease (HD), we compared birth outcome with 14 042 births from a cohort of mothers without cancer. We found no substantially increased risk of preterm birth, low birth weight at term, or stillbirth and no difference in proportion of male newborns for 192 children of women with HD before pregnancy. The prevalence odds ratio (POR) for congenital abnormalities was 1.7 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.9–3.1). Among 15 newborns of mothers diagnosed during pregnancy, the POR of preterm birth was 26.6 (95% CI: 8.5–83.0), but five out of the eight preterm deliveries among these women were elective. We found no substantially increased risk of adverse birth outcome among 85 newborns of women diagnosed within 2 years postpartum, though effect estimates were imprecise. The overall findings are reassuring, they cannot exclude the possibility of an increased risk of congenital abnormalities for newborns of women diagnosed with HD before pregnancy

    A motion observer with on-line parameter estimation for moving-coil based digital valves in digital displacement machines

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    In this paper, a method is developed to estimate the parameters and motion of a moving coil actuator in the digital valves of Digital Displacement machines. The parameter estimation is carried out using three simple distinctive schemes from which certain electrical and magnetic parameters may be estimated. The parameter estimation method uses simple adaptation laws to update the moving coil actuator parameters used to estimate the valve plunger motion in an observer. The observer estimates the velocity using the back electro-motive force (back-emf) induced when moving the coil based on current and voltage measurements, but without any mechanical sensors. The valve movement of digital valves is confined by mechanical end-stops enabling estimating the valve position through integration of the estimated velocity relatively accurate. The observer depends on precise knowledge of the electrical dynamics to accurately estimate the valve motion. When the parameters are converged through adaptation the observer proves to be capable of tracking the valve motion relatively accurate, however some deviation occur at the mechanical end-stops of the valve. The parameter estimation method and the observer is implemented and tested off-line when using experimental data obtained from a newly developed digi-valve prototype which uses a moving coil actuator as the force producing element.</jats:p
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