437 research outputs found
On the basis of gender: Discrimination of transgender people in the hiring process
The study investigated the effect of a job applicantâs gender identity (male or female) and gender history (cisgender or transgender) on the evaluated quality of the applicant and the likelihood of the applicant being hired for a vacant software engineer position. Participants from the worker pool of Amazonâs Mechanical Turk evaluated the quality of a fictitious job applicant based on a mock resume and background check created for the purposes of this study, then completed the Social Dominance Orientation. There was no significant effect of gender identity or gender history on the evaluated quality of the job applicant or on the likelihood of the participant to hire the applicant, which is inconsistent with existing literature on employment discrimination against transgender individuals in America
Application of a mustard root bioassy to assess phytotoxicity of Group 2 herbicides
Non-Peer ReviewedGroup 2 herbicides exhibit high bioactivity at low concentrations in soil and may persist into the next growing season causing crop injury. A bioassay that is suitable for the detection of a range of Group 2 herbicides was developed; in this bioassay, a root growth inhibition of oriental mustard is used for the determination of the herbicide concentration in soil. The Group 2 herbicides included were: Everest (flucarbazone-sodium), Frontline (florasulam), Sundance (sulfosulfuron), and Odyssey (imazamox + imazethapyr). This bioassay was used to examine the degree of root inhibition by simultaneous application of two Group 2 herbicides. Application of varying levels of flucarbazone or sulfosulfuron combined with Odyssey resulted in root length inhibition that was comparable to the root length inhibition caused by application of flucarbazone alone or sulfosulfuron alone and Odyssey alone, possibly indicating an additive
effect of these pairs of herbicides. Further studies are needed to examine which combinations of Group 2 herbicides under what environmental and soil conditions may result in âstackingâ causing increased plant injury
Contribution of Scalar Loops to the Three-Photon Decay of the Z
I corrected 3 mistakes from the first version: that were an omitted Feynman
integration in the function f^3_{ij}, a factor of 2 in front of log f^3_{ij} in
eq.2 and an overall factor of 2 in Fig.1 c). The final result is changed
drastically. Doing an expansion in the Higgs mass I show that the matrix
element is identically 0 in the order (MZ/MH)^2, which is due to gauge
invariance. Left with an amplitude of the order (MZ/MH)^4 the final result is
that the scalar contribution to this decay rate is several orders of magnitude
smaller than those of the W boson and fermions.Comment: 6 pages, plain Tex, 1 figure available under request via fax or mail,
OCIP/C-93-5, UQAM-PHE-93/0
Did female prisoners with mental disorders receive psychiatric treatment before imprisonment?
© 2015 Mundt et al.; licensee BioMed Central. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and
reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain
Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article,
unless otherwise stated.BackgroundThroughout the world, high prevalence rates of mental disorders have been found in prison populations, especially in females. It has been suggested that these populations do not access psychiatric treatment. The aim of this study was to establish rates of psychiatric in- and outpatient treatments prior to imprisonment in female prisoners and to explore reasons for discontinuation of such treatments.Methods150 consecutively admitted female prisoners were interviewed in Berlin, Germany. Socio-demographic characteristics, mental disorders, and previous psychiatric in- and outpatient treatments were assessed by trained researchers. Open questions were used to explore reasons for ending previous psychiatric treatment.ResultsA vast majority of 99 prisoners (66%; 95% CI: 58Âż73) of the total sample reported that they had previously been in psychiatric treatment, 80 (53%; 95 CI: 45Âż61) in inpatient treatment, 62 (41%; 95 CI: 34Âż49) in outpatient treatment and 42 (29%; 21Âż39) in both in- and outpatient treatments. All prisoners with psychosis and 72% of the ones with any lifetime mental health disorder had been in previous treatment. The number of inpatient treatments and imprisonments were positively correlated (rhoÂż=Âż0.27; pÂż<Âż0.01). Inpatient treatment was described as successfully completed by 56% (NÂż=Âż41) of those having given reasons for ending such treatment, whilst various reasons were reported for prematurely ending outpatient treatments.ConclusionThe data do not support the notion of a general `mental health treatment gapÂż in female prisoners. Although inpatient care is often successfully completed, repeated inpatient treatments are not linked with fewer imprisonments. Improved transition from inpatient to outpatient treatment and services that engage female prisoners to sustained outpatient treatments are needed
Characterization of heavily carbon-doped GaAs grown by metalorganic chemical vapor deposition and metalorganic molecular beam epitaxy
Carbon-doped GaAs with carbon concentrations ranging from 2~ 1Ol7 cmW3 to 2.6~ 102' cm -' has been characterized by variable temperature Hall effect measurements, secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS)) and double-crystal x-ray diffraction (DCXD). The samples studied were grown by metalorganic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) and by metalorganic molecular beam epitaxy (MOMBE). The hole mobility is dominated by degenerate conduction for hole concentrations > 1 X 1019 cma3, and the 77 K resistivity is typically 30%-35% lower than at 300 K in these samples. The mobilities of C-dopedp+-GaAs are found to be significantly higher than for Zn-or Be-doped p+-GaAs for doping concentrations in excess of 2x lo'* cmW3. The maximum achievable hole mobilities for C-doped material grown by the two techniques are nearly identical, indicating that neither MOCVD nor MOMBE has an inherent advantage over the other for producing low-resistivity p-type GaAs. SIMS analysis and Hall effect measurements reveal that the total carbon concentration, [Cl, is higher than the as-grown hole concentration, p, in the most heavily doped samples. DCXD measurements show general agreement with the lattice mismatch predicted by Vegard's law. However, for [C] > 102' cmm3 a discrepancy between the predicted and measured mismatch suggests that partial lattice relaxation or the presence of interstitial carbon may need to be considered in order to adequately describe the lattice contraction
Interacting mindreaders
Could interacting mindreaders be in a position to know things which they would be unable to know if they were manifestly passive observers? This paper argues that they could. Mindreading is sometimes reciprocal: the mindreader's target reciprocates by taking the mindreader as a target for mindreading. The paper explains how such reciprocity can significantly narrow the range of possible interpretations of behaviour where mindreaders are, or appear to be, in a position to interact. A consequence is that revisions and extensions are needed to standard theories of the evidential basis of mindreading. The view also has consequences for understanding how abilities to interact combined with comparatively simple forms of mindreading may explain the emergence, in evolution or development, of sophisticated forms of social cognition
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Callous-unemotional traits, low cortisol reactivity and physical aggression in children: findings from the Wirral Child Health and Development Study
Callous-unemotional (CU) traits are thought to confer risk for aggression via reduced amygdala responsivity to distress cues in others. Low cortisol reactivity is thought to confer risk for aggression via reduced arousal and this effect may be confined to boys. We tested the hypothesis that the association between childhood CU traits and aggression would be greatest in the absence of the inhibitory effects of cortisol reactivity, and that this effect would be sex dependent. Participants were 283 members of a stratified subsample within an epidemiological longitudinal cohort (WCHADS). Cortisol reactivity to a social stressor was assessed at 5 years. CU traits were reported by mothers at 5 years, and physical aggression by mothers and teachers at age 7. Results showed that CU traits were associated with elevated aggression at 7 years controlling for earlier aggression. There was no main effect of cortisol reactivity on regression. The association between CU traits and aggression was moderated by cortisol reactivity (pâ=â.011) with a strong association between CU traits and aggression in the presence of low reactivity, and a small and non-significant association in the presence of high reactivity. This association was further moderated by child sex (pâ=â.041) with the joint effect of high CU traits and low cortisol reactivity seen only in boys (pâ=â.016). We report first evidence that a combined deficit in inhibitory processes associated with CU traits and low cortisol reactivity increases risk for childhood aggression, in a sex-dependent manner
Supersymmetry Relations Between Contributions To One-Loop Gauge Boson Amplitudes
We apply ideas motivated by string theory to improve the calculational
efficiency of one-loop weak interaction processes with massive external gauge
bosons. In certain cases ``supersymmetry'' relations between diagrams with a
fermion loop and with a gauge boson loop hold. This is explicitly illustrated
for a particular one-loop standard model process with four-external gauge
bosons. The supersymmetry relations can be used to provide further significant
improvements in calculational efficiency.Comment: 21 pages of plain TeX + 5 PostScript figures (compressed and
uuencoded), UCLA/93/TEP/36 and DTP/93/8
Is It Rational to Assume that Infants Imitate Rationally? A Theoretical Analysis and Critique
It has been suggested that preverbal infants evaluate the efficiency of others' actions (by applying a principle of rational action) and that they imitate others' actions rationally. The present contribution presents a conceptual analysis of the claim that preverbal infants imitate rationally. It shows that this ability rests on at least three assumptions: that infants are able to perceive others' action capabilities, that infants reason about and conceptually represent their own bodies, and that infants are able to think counterfactually. It is argued that none of these three abilities is in place during infancy. Furthermore, it is shown that the idea of a principle of rational action suffers from two fallacies. As a consequence, is it suggested that it is not rational to assume that infants imitate rationally. Copyright (C) 2012 S. Karger AG, Base
The Search for Higgs particles at high-energy colliders: Past, Present and Future
I briefly review the Higgs sector in the Standard Model and its minimal
Supersymmetric extension, the MSSM. After summarizing the properties of the
Higgs bosons and the present experimental constraints, I will discuss the
prospects for discovering these particle at the upgraded Tevatron, the LHC and
a high-energy linear collider. The possibility of studying the
properties of the Higgs particles will be then summarized.Comment: 28 pages, latex, 15 figures, talk at WHEPP VII, Allahabad, Indi
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