253 research outputs found

    Care provision: An experimental investigation

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    In many principal-agent settings, the effort provided by the agent benefits a third party. In these settings, the quality of the work is determined, at least in part, by pro-social motivations. We present lab experiments that utilize a new three-player trust game to examine one such setting, care provision. Players include a principal, an agent, and a needy recipient. The principal can transfer resources to an agent, who then can transfer resources to the needy recipient; the latter transfers are tripled. As in the two-player version, we find high, but variable, levels of trust and reciprocity (agent transfers to target) in the baseline game. Two treatments allow us to gauge the impact of potential policy interventions to enhance care of the target recipient. The first provides a budget subsidy to the principle, and the second alters the effectiveness (multiplier) of the agent’s transfers. Results show that the behavior of the agent does not vary by treatment, and is determined primarily by the amount received from the principal. Principals, on the other hand, do respond to the policy changes. While budget subsidies increase the expenditure of the principal only slightly, policies impacting the agent’s efficiency increase the amount entrusted to them by principals and significantly impact the well-being of the recipient. Results suggest that policies that increase the effectiveness of care workers (the agents) may significantly impact the quality of work provided. Examples of such policies include increased worker training and reductions in red tape

    The Power of Two Choices in Distributed Voting

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    Distributed voting is a fundamental topic in distributed computing. In pull voting, in each step every vertex chooses a neighbour uniformly at random, and adopts its opinion. The voting is completed when all vertices hold the same opinion. On many graph classes including regular graphs, pull voting requires Θ(n)\Theta(n) expected steps to complete, even if initially there are only two distinct opinions. In this paper we consider a related process which we call two-sample voting: every vertex chooses two random neighbours in each step. If the opinions of these neighbours coincide, then the vertex revises its opinion according to the chosen sample. Otherwise, it keeps its own opinion. We consider the performance of this process in the case where two different opinions reside on vertices of some (arbitrary) sets AA and BB, respectively. Here, A+B=n|A| + |B| = n is the number of vertices of the graph. We show that there is a constant KK such that if the initial imbalance between the two opinions is ?ν0=(AB)/nK(1/d)+(d/n)\nu_0 = (|A| - |B|)/n \geq K \sqrt{(1/d) + (d/n)}, then with high probability two sample voting completes in a random dd regular graph in O(logn)O(\log n) steps and the initial majority opinion wins. We also show the same performance for any regular graph, if ν0Kλ2\nu_0 \geq K \lambda_2 where λ2\lambda_2 is the second largest eigenvalue of the transition matrix. In the graphs we consider, standard pull voting requires Ω(n)\Omega(n) steps, and the minority can still win with probability B/n|B|/n.Comment: 22 page

    The hadronic vacuum polarization contribution to aμa_{\mu} from full lattice QCD

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    We determine the contribution to the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon from the αQED2\alpha^2_{\mathrm{QED}} hadronic vacuum polarization diagram using full lattice QCD and including u/du/d quarks with physical masses for the first time. We use gluon field configurations that include uu, dd, ss and cc quarks in the sea at multiple values of the lattice spacing, multiple u/du/d masses and multiple volumes that allow us to include an analysis of finite-volume effects. We obtain a result for aμHVP,LOa_{\mu}^{\mathrm{HVP,LO}} of 667(6)(12)667(6)(12), where the first error is from the lattice calculation and the second includes systematic errors from missing QED and isospin-breaking effects and from quark-line disconnected diagrams. Our result implies a discrepancy between the experimental determination of aμa_{\mu} and the Standard Model of 3σ\sigma.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures. Discussion of method extended with additional tests and figures added. Typographical errors correcte

    Induction and growth curve of calli from leaf and nodal explants of genipap.

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    The aim of this study was to determine the effect of the auxin 2,4-D (2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic) in calli formation from leaf and nodal segments of genipap and to characterize its growth curve. Explants obtained from shoots previously established from in vitro seedlings were used for calli induction. The experimental design was completely randomized in a 3x5x2 factorial with three accessions (NB, SA, SAL), five concentrations of 2,4-D (0.0; 2.0; 4.0, 6.0 or 8.0 mg L-1) and two times of measurement for calli fresh weight (30 and 60 days). There was callus formation in all treatments tested. It was observed that the best response for callus induction from leaf segments was with 2.0 mg L-1 of 2,4-D. For the nodal segment, the response among the accessions was different due to 2,4-D concentrations. The growth curve was plotted according to the fresh weight of callus obtained at intervals of 10 days up to 60 days. Through the established growth curve, the nodal-derived calli from accession SA should be transferred to a new medium, after 40 days of culture

    The dust properties and physical conditions of the interstellar medium in the LMC massive star forming complex N11

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    We combine Spitzer and Herschel data of the star-forming region N11 in the Large Magellanic Cloud to produce detailed maps of the dust properties in the complex and study their variations with the ISM conditions. We also compare APEX/LABOCA 870um observations with our model predictions in order to decompose the 870um emission into dust and non-dust (free-free emission and CO(3-2) line) contributions. We find that in N11, the 870um can be fully accounted for by these 3 components. The dust surface density map of N11 is combined with HI and CO observations to study local variations in the gas-to-dust mass ratios. Our analysis leads to values lower than those expected from the LMC low-metallicity as well as to a decrease of the gas-to-dust mass ratio with the dust surface density. We explore potential hypotheses that could explain the low observed gas-to-dust mass ratios (variations in the XCO factor, presence of CO-dark gas or of optically thick HI or variations in the dust abundance in the dense regions). We finally decompose the local SEDs using a Principal Component Analysis (i.e. with no a priori assumption on the dust composition in the complex). Our results lead to a promising decomposition of the local SEDs in various dust components (hot, warm, cold) coherent with that expected for the region. Further analysis on a larger sample of galaxies will follow in order to understand how unique this decomposition is or how it evolves from one environment to another.Comment: 24 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    [developing The Hospital's Mission To Facilitate Organizational Change: Limits And Possibilities].

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    The author begins by discussing the field of General Administration Theory vis-à-vis the defining role of organizational goals within an overall change process in organizations. While admitting the validity of some challenges raised by certain authors who deny the possibility of establishing a single direction for the organization by explicitly outlining its formal or official goals, the author presents and discusses his experience in defining the mission in the health sector as a way to implement organizational goals. This definition is meant as a strategy to improve communications among health team members and to a culture of responsibility when dealing with health service users.16973-8
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