201 research outputs found
Contemplating the future of competency assessment
Health education's competency models are evolving to balance universal skills with those that are job- and organization-specific. These authors argue that a three-layer framework emphasizing person-organization fit will create better outcomes
Applicant perceptions of initial job candidate screening with asynchronous job interviews : does personality matter?
Applicant fairness perceptions of asynchronous job interviews were assessed among panelists (Study 1, N = 160) and highly educated actual applicants (Study 2, N = 103). Furthermore, we also examined whether personality explained applicants' perceptions. Participants, particularly actual applicants, had negative perceptions of the fairness and procedural justice of asynchronous job interviews. Extraverted applicants perceived more opportunity to perform with the asynchronous job interview than introverts. A trait interaction between Neuroticism and Extraversion was tested, but no significant results were found. Although the first selection stage is increasingly digitized, this study shows that applicant perceptions of asynchronous job interviews are relatively negative. The influence of personality on these perceptions appears to be limited
The Geometry of Most Probable Trajectories in Noise-Driven Dynamical Systems
This paper presents a heuristic derivation of a geometric minimum action
method that can be used to determine most-probable transition paths in
noise-driven dynamical systems. Particular attention is focused on systems that
violate detailed balance, and the role of the stochastic vorticity tensor is
emphasized. The general method is explored through a detailed study of a
two-dimensional quadratic shear flow which exhibits bifurcating most-probable
transition pathways.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
The net effects of medical malpractice tort reform on health insurance losses: the Texas experience
In this paper, we examine the influence of medical malpractice tort reform on the level of private health insurance company losses incurred. We employ a natural experiment framework centered on a series of tort reform measures enacted in Texas in 2003 that drastically altered the medical malpractice environment in the state. The results of a difference-in-differences analysis using a variety of comparison states, as well as a difference-in-difference-in-differences analysis, indicate that ameliorating medical malpractice risk has little effect on health insurance losses incurred by private health insurers
On a universal photonic tunnelling time
We consider photonic tunnelling through evanescent regions and obtain general
analytic expressions for the transit (phase) time (in the opaque barrier
limit) in order to study the recently proposed ``universality'' property
according to which is given by the reciprocal of the photon frequency.
We consider different physical phenomena (corresponding to performed
experiments) and show that such a property is only an approximation. In
particular we find that the ``correction'' factor is a constant term for total
internal reflection and quarter-wave photonic bandgap, while it is
frequency-dependent in the case of undersized waveguide and distributed Bragg
reflector. The comparison of our predictions with the experimental results
shows quite a good agreement with observations and reveals the range of
applicability of the approximated ``universality'' property.Comment: RevTeX, 8 pages, 4 figures, 1 table; subsection added with a new
experiment analyzed, some other minor change
The physics of dynamical atomic charges: the case of ABO3 compounds
Based on recent first-principles computations in perovskite compounds,
especially BaTiO3, we examine the significance of the Born effective charge
concept and contrast it with other atomic charge definitions, either static
(Mulliken, Bader...) or dynamical (Callen, Szigeti...). It is shown that static
and dynamical charges are not driven by the same underlying parameters. A
unified treatment of dynamical charges in periodic solids and large clusters is
proposed. The origin of the difference between static and dynamical charges is
discussed in terms of local polarizability and delocalized transfers of charge:
local models succeed in reproducing anomalous effective charges thanks to large
atomic polarizabilities but, in ABO3 compounds, ab initio calculations favor
the physical picture based upon transfer of charges. Various results concerning
barium and strontium titanates are presented. The origin of anomalous Born
effective charges is discussed thanks to a band-by-band decomposition which
allows to identify the displacement of the Wannier center of separated bands
induced by an atomic displacement. The sensitivity of the Born effective
charges to microscopic and macroscopic strains is examined. Finally, we
estimate the spontaneous polarization in the four phases of barium titanate.Comment: 25 pages, 6 Figures, 10 Tables, LaTe
Ab initio Hartree-Fock Born effective charges of LiH, LiF, LiCl, NaF, and NaCl
We use the Berry-phase-based theory of macroscopic polarization of dielectric
crystals formulated in terms of Wannier functions, and state-of-the-art
Gaussian basis functions, to obtain benchmark ab initio Hartree-Fock values of
the Born effective charges of ionic compounds LiH, LiF, LiCl, NaF, and NaCl. We
find excellent agreement with the experimental values for all the compounds
except LiCl and NaCl, for which the disagreement with the experiments is close
to 10% and 16%, respectively. This may imply the importance of many-body
effects in those systems.Comment: 11 pages, Revtex, 2 figures (included), to appear in Phys. Rev. B
April 15, 200
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