54,418 research outputs found
Determinants of project success
The interactions of numerous project characteristics, with particular reference to project performance, were studied. Determinants of success are identified along with the accompanying implications for client organization, parent organization, project organization, and future research. Variables are selected which are found to have the greatest impact on project outcome, and the methodology and analytic techniques to be employed in identification of those variables are discussed
Permutation-Symmetric Multicritical Points in Random Antiferromagnetic Spin Chains
The low-energy properties of a system at a critical point may have additional
symmetries not present in the microscopic Hamiltonian. This letter presents the
theory of a class of multicritical points that provide an interesting example
of this in the phase diagrams of random antiferromagnetic spin chains. One case
provides an analytic theory of the quantum critical point in the random
spin-3/2 chain, studied in recent work by Refael, Kehrein and Fisher
(cond-mat/0111295).Comment: Revtex, 4 pages (2 column format), 2 eps figure
Is All Campaigning Equally Positive? The Impact of District Level Campaigning on Voter Turnout at the 2010 British General Election
A significant comparative literature suggests that campaigning efforts by political parties impact positively, both in terms of mobilization and turnout. However, effects are not uniform. They may be affected by the electoral system used, the electoral circumstances and effectiveness of party management. Studies of district-level constituency campaigning in Britain have identified two important trends. First, that effective targeting is a core component of a successful district campaign strategy in terms of delivering electoral payoffs and that, over time, political parties have become better at targeting resources where they are needed most. While improvements in targeting have helped ensure that all three principal parties’ campaigns have tended to deliver electoral payoffs, a question has arisen as to whether increasingly ruthless partisan targeting by parties could have detrimental effects on overall levels of turnout. Second, they have shown how campaign techniques are continuously being modernised but that, despite these changes, just as in other democracies, more traditional labour-intensive campaigning tends to produce stronger electoral payoffs. This article therefore considers three questions in respect of the impact of district level campaigns on turnout: whether the combined campaign efforts of the three principal parties in Britain are associated with higher levels of turnout; whether the different campaigning styles of parties affect levels of turnout equally; and whether the campaigning efforts of different parties have differential effects on turnout and whether intense partisan targeting does indeed impact upon turnout overall. It shows that while campaigning boosts turnout, the impact varies by campaign technique and by party, as a function not only of targeting but also of electoral context
You get what you (don’t) pay for: The impact of volunteer labour and candidate spending at the 2010 British general election
The published version of this article is fully available from the publisher at the link below.Repeated evidence in Britain demonstrates the positive electoral payoffs from constituency campaigning. However, the impact of such campaigning varies depending upon the electoral context and the effectiveness of campaign management. Debate also exists in respect of the relative impact of traditional versus more modern campaign techniques, as well as between campaign techniques that incur cost and those that are carried out voluntarily. Such debates are of interest not only to academics and political parties, but also to regulators when considering whether to restrict campaign spending in the interests of electoral parity. This article uses candidate spending data and responses to an extensive survey of election agents at the British General Election of 2010 to assess the impact of both campaign expenditure and free, voluntary labour on electoral performance. It suggests that both have some independent impact, but that impact varies by party. The implications of these results are highly significant in both academic and regulatory terms—campaign expenditure can affect electoral outcomes but these effects are offset to some extent by voluntary efforts
Isostaticity of Constraints in Jammed Systems of Soft Frictionless Platonic Solids
The average number of constraints per particle in
mechanically stable systems of Platonic solids (except cubes) approaches the
isostatic limit at the jamming point (), though
average number of contacts are hypostatic. By introducing angular alignment
metrics to classify the degree of constraint imposed by each contact,
constraints are shown to arise as a direct result of local orientational order
reflected in edge-face and face-face alignment angle distributions. With
approximately one face-face contact per particle at jamming chain-like
face-face clusters with finite extent form in these systems.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 4 tabl
Numerical Results for the Ground-State Interface in a Random Medium
The problem of determining the ground state of a -dimensional interface
embedded in a -dimensional random medium is treated numerically. Using a
minimum-cut algorithm, the exact ground states can be found for a number of
problems for which other numerical methods are inexact and slow. In particular,
results are presented for the roughness exponents and ground-state energy
fluctuations in a random bond Ising model. It is found that the roughness
exponent , with the related energy
exponent being , in ,
respectively. These results are compared with previous analytical and numerical
estimates.Comment: 10 pages, REVTEX3.0; 3 ps files (separate:tar/gzip/uuencoded) for
figure
On the speed of pulled fronts with a cutoff
We study the effect of a small cutoff on the velocity of a pulled
front in one dimension by means of a variational principle. We obtain a lower
bound on the speed dependent on the cutoff, and for which the two leading order
terms correspond to the Brunet Derrida expression. To do so we cast a known
variational principle for the speed of propagation of fronts in new variables
which makes it more suitable for applications.Comment: 12 pages no figure
Effect of interactions on the noise of chiral Luttinger liquid systems
We analyze the current noise, generated at a quantum point contact in
fractional quantum Hall edge state devices, using the chiral Luttinger liquid
model with an impurity and the associated exact field theoretic solution. We
demonstrate that an experimentally relevant regime of parameters exists where
the noise coincides with the partition noise of independent Laughlin
quasiparticles. However, outside of this regime, this independent particle
picture breaks down and the inclusion of interaction effects is essential to
understand the shot noise.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; v2: modified FIG.1, new FIG.
NASA micromin computer Monthly progress letter, Jan. 1967
Microminiature circuit development for flight control computer
Patterned Geometries and Hydrodynamics at the Vortex Bose Glass Transition
Patterned irradiation of cuprate superconductors with columnar defects allows
a new generation of experiments which can probe the properties of vortex
liquids by confining them to controlled geometries. Here we show that an
analysis of such experiments that combines an inhomogeneous Bose glass scaling
theory with the hydrodynamic description of viscous flow of vortex liquids can
be used to infer the critical behavior near the Bose glass transition. The
shear viscosity is predicted to diverge as at the Bose glass
transition, with the dynamical critical exponent.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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