8,001 research outputs found
Estimate of the Collins function in a chiral invariant approach
We estimate the Collins function at a low energy scale by calculating the
fragmentation of a quark into a pion at the one-loop level in the chiral
invariant model of Manohar and Georgi. We give a useful parametrization of our
results and we briefly discuss different spin and/or azimuthal asymmetries
containing the Collins function and measurable in semi-inclusive DIS and e+ e-
annihilationComment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Proceedings of 10th International
Workshop on Deep Inelastic Scattering (DIS 2002), Cracow, Poland, 30 Apr-4
May 200
The demand for liquid assets, corporate saving, and international capital flows
The recent period of capital outflows from emerging economies has coincided with an increase in their corporate saving. In this paper, we model corporate saving as a demand for liquid assets by credit-constrained firms in a dynamic open-economy macroeconomic model. We find that the implications of this model are very different from standard models, because the demand for foreign bonds is a complement to domestic investment rather than a substitute. We show that this complementarity is at work when an emerging economy is on its convergence path or when it has a higher TFP growth rate. This framework is consistent with a number of stylized facts found in high-growth, high-investment emerging economies
Single spin asymmetries in hadron-hadron collisions
We study weighted azimuthal single spin asymmetries in hadron-hadron
scattering using the diagrammatic approach at leading order and assuming
factorization. The effects of the intrinsic transverse momenta of the partons
are taken into account. We show that the way in which -odd functions, such
as the Sivers function, appear in these processes does not merely involve a
sign flip when compared with semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering, such as
in the case of the Drell-Yan process. Expressions for the weighted scattering
cross sections in terms of distribution and fragmentation functions folded with
hard cross sections are obtained by introducing modified hard cross sections,
referred to as gluonic pole cross sections.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figures; minor text modifications and some additional
reference
Chiral-Odd Fragmentation Functions in Single Pion Inclusive Electroproduction
We consider a sub-leading twist chiral-odd pion fragmentation function and
explore its contribution in single pion semi-inclusive electroproduction. We
evaluate the single beam-spin azimuthal asymmetry and the double spin
asymmetry in polarized electroproduction of pions from an unpolarized
and transversely polarized nucleon respectively. The beam asymmetry is
expressed as the product of chiral-odd, and -odd and even distribution and
fragmentation functions. The double spin asymmetry contains information on the
quark's transversity distribution. In a quark diquark-spectator framework we
estimate these asymmetries at , , and energies.Comment: 10 pages, 4 eps figures, elsart.cls, typos corrected. To be published
in Physics Letters
Capital Controls with International Reserve Accumulation: Can this Be Optimal ?
Motivated by the Chinese experience, we analyze a semi-open economy where the central bank has access to international capital markets, but the private sector has not. This enables the central bank to choose an interest rate different from the international rate. We examine the optimal policy of the central bank by modelling it as a Ramsey planner who can choose the level of domestic public debt and of international reserves. The central bank can improve savings opportunities of credit-constrained consumers modelled as in Woodford (1990). We find that in a steady state it is optimal for the central bank to replicate the open economy, i.e., to issue debt financed by the accumulation of reserves so that the domestic interest rate equals the foreign rate. When the economy is in transition, however, a rapidly growing economy has a higher welfare without capital mobility and the optimal interest rate differs from the international rate. We argue that the domestic interest rate should be temporarily above the international rate. We also find that capital controls can still help reach the first best when the planner has more fiscal instruments
Optimal Exchange Rate Policy in a Growing Semi-Open Economy
This paper considers an alternative perspective to China's exchange rate policy. It studies a semi-open economy where the private sector has no access to international capital markets but the central bank has full access. Moreover, it assumes limited financial development generating a large demand for saving instruments by the private sector. The paper analyzes the optimal exchange rate policy by modeling the central bank as a Ramsey planner. Its main result is that in a growth acceleration episode it is optimal to have an initial real depreciation of the currency combined with an accumulation of reserves, which is consistent with the Chinese experience. This depreciation is followed by an appreciation in the long run. The paper also shows that the optimal exchange rate path is close to the one that would result in an economy with full capital mobility and no central bank intervention
Lorentz invariance relations and Wandzura-Wilczek approximation
A complete list of the so-called Lorentz invariance relations between parton
distribution functions is given and some of their consequences are discussed,
such as the Burkhardt-Cottingham sum rule. The violation of these relations is
considered in a model independent way. It is shown that several Lorentz
invariance relations are not violated in a generalized Wandzura-Wilczek
approximation, indicating that numerically their violation may be small.Comment: 10 pages; Proceedings of the workshop "Recent Advances in
Perturbative QCD and Hadronic Physics", July 20-24, 2009, at ECT*, Trento
(Italy), in honor of Anatoli V. Efremov on the occasion of his 75th birthday;
to appear in Mod. Phys. Lett.
Emotional crisis in a naturalistic context: characterizing outpatient profiles and treatment effectiveness.
Crisis happens daily yet its understanding is often limited, even in the field of psychiatry. Indeed, a challenge is to assess the potential for change of patients so as to offer appropriate therapeutic interventions and enhance treatment program efficacy. This naturalistic study aimed to identify the socio-demographical characteristics and clinical profiles at admission of patients referred to a specialized Crisis Intervention Center (CIC) and to examine the effectiveness of the intervention.
The sample was composed of 352 adult outpatients recruited among the referrals to the CIC. Assessment completed at admission and at discharge examined psychiatric symptoms, defense mechanisms, recovery styles and global functioning. The crisis intervention consisted in a psychodynamically oriented multimodal approach associated with medication.
Regarding the clinical profiles at intake, patients were middle-aged (M = 38.56, SD = 10.91), with a higher proportion of women (62.22%). They were addressed to the CIC because they had attempted to commit suicide or had suicidal ideation or presented depressed mood related to interpersonal difficulties. No statistical differences were found between patients dropping out (n = 215) and those attending the crisis intervention (n = 137). Crisis intervention demonstrated a beneficial effect (p < 0.01) on almost all variables, with Effect Sizes (ES) ranging from small to large (0.12 < ES < 0.75; median = 0.49). However, the Reliable Change Index indicated that most of the issues fall into the undetermined category (range 41.46 to 96.35%; median = 66.20%).
This study establishes the profile of patients referred to the CIC and shows that more than half of the patients dropped out from the crisis intervention before completion. Our findings suggest that people presenting an emotional crisis benefit from crisis intervention. However, given methodological constraints, these results need to be considered with caution. Moreover, the clinical significance of the improvements is not confirmed. Thus, the effectiveness of crisis intervention in naturalistic context is not fully determined and should be more rigorously studied in future research
Azimuthal single spin asymmetries in SIDIS in the light of chiral symmetry breaking
An attempt is made to understand the z-dependence of the azimuthal single
spin asymmetries observed by the HERMES collaboration in terms of chiral models
based on effective quark and Goldstone boson degrees of freedom. The effects of
respectively neglecting and considering Gaussian intrinsic parton transverse
momenta and the Sivers effect are explored. Predictions for the transverse
target polarization experiment at HERMES are presented.Comment: 14 pages, 18 figure
- …