40,859 research outputs found
Charm semileptonic decays at LHCb
In these proceedings, we explore the possible reach of the LHCb dataset in
the area of charm semileptonic decays. Specifically, we give prospects for the
measurement of using with Run I data.
Preliminary projections show that the LHCb Run I dataset would give a relative
statistical uncertainty of on this ratio. We also motivate the
search for lepton non-universality in the charm sector.Comment: Proceedings of the 9th International Workshop on the CKM Unitarity
Triangle, 28 November - 3 December 2016, Tata Institute for Fundamental
Research (TIFR), Mumbai, India. 6 pages, 3 figure
Can we estimate the impact of the choices package in pathways to work?
The Pathways to Work programme is an important policy innovation in Britain. It provides greater support, obligations and incentives for claimants of incapacity benefits with the goal of encouraging employment. The programme has various components, including a 'Choices' package. 'Choices' is the collective name for a variety of voluntary schemes intended to improve labour market readiness and opportunities. Previous quantitative research has focused on the overall impact of Pathways to Work while this study was designed to look at the impact of the Choices component
Early quantitative evidence on the impact of the pathways to work pilots
Since October 2003 the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has been piloting reforms in England, Scotland and Wales which provide greater support alongside greater obligations to encourage many new claimants of incapacity benefits to move into paid work.
The Pathways to Work package of reforms includes: a series of usually mandatory workfocused interviews; programmes designed to boost claimants' prospects of being able to work; and increased financial incentives for individuals to enter paid employment. As part of a quantitative assessment of the impact of the programme, a telephone survey of those making an initial enquiry to Jobcentre Plus about claiming incapacity benefits was conducted in both pilot and comparison areas before and after the pilots were implemented.
This report focuses on the differences in some early quantitative outcomes between Pathways and non-Pathways areas. Two empirical techniques are used to investigate the early impact of the pilots on employment, earnings, receipt of incapacity benefits, and a potential indicator of the extent to which individuals' health affects their everyday activities. The analysis was undertaken by researchers at the Institute for Fiscal Studies and the telephone interviews were undertaken by the National Centre for Social Research.
All these findings are preliminary: more comprehensive analysis will be conducted in later stages of the evaluation. This report analyses outcomes at a time shortly after the pilots started. Further analysis of outcomes will assess Pathways to Work using survey and administrative data from a later cohort and will examine outcomes over a longer period of time
A comparative survey of job prospects for the period 1991-1996
How discouraging is the job market for young scientists these days? It seems that most scientists who have tried to land a job in· recent years can tell you, unambiguously, Very. Are prospects bleaker for some experimental psychologists than for others? To us, it subjectively seemed so. In an effort to answer this question more rigorously. we analyzed issues of the APS Observer Employment Bulletin, published by the American Psychological Society, from 1991-1996. Admittedly, the number of classified ads for jobs in a specific category is only one index of the job prospects for that category, but it is a start
THE DYSON-SCHWINGER EQUATION FOR A MODEL WITH INSTANTONS - THE SCHWINGER MODEL
Using the exact path integral solution of the Schwinger model -- a model
where instantons are present -- the Dyson-Schwinger equation is shown to hold
by explicit computation. It turns out that the Dyson-Schwinger equation
separately holds for every instanton sector. This is due to Theta-invariance of
the Schwinger model.Comment: LATEX file 11 pages, no figure
A cost-benefit analysis of pathways to work for new and repeat incapacity benefits claimants
This latest research forms part of a comprehensive independent evaluation of Pathways to Work. The report is based on a cost-benefit analysis conducted by a consortium of researchers from the Institute for Fiscal Studies, the University of Maryland, Baltimore County and the Policy Studies Institute. It examines whether the financial benefits from Pathways are larger or smaller than its costs and the generalisability of some of the quantitative findings. The estimates of costs and benefits relate to new and repeat incapacity benefits claimants in the seven original Jobcentre Plus districts. The overall findings provide a favourable impression of the financial benefits of the Pathways to Work for new and repeat incapacity benefits claimants, for the Exchequer and hence, for society as a whole
Exchange Rate Regimes and Revenue Performance in Sub-Saharan Africa
It has been argued that the institutions of the CFA Franc zone may have reduced inflation but that they also induced misalignment of the real exchange rate and that this is the explanation for their dismal revenue performance. This paper uses a panel of 22 countries in sub-Saharan Africa to estimate revenue performance over the period from 1980 to 1996. It finds that the poor cumulative relative revenue performance of the franc zone countries is mainly attributable to differences in environmental and structural factors, and to their different responses to changes in the equilibrium real exchange rate, but that the misalignment of the real exchange rate also played a part.
Oncologic outcomes following surgical management of clinical stage II sex cord stromal tumors
Objective
To investigate the clinical history of patients with clinical stage II sex cord stromal tumors who underwent RPLND at our institution.
Methods
Our prospectively maintained testicular cancer database was queried to identify patients who presented with or developed clinical stage II sex cord stromal tumors and underwent RPLND at our institution between 1980 and 2018. Demographic, clinical and pathological characteristics were reviewed. Kaplan-Meier curves were graphed to assess recurrence-free and overall survival.
Results
Fourteen patients were included in the study with a median age of 44.2 years. Four patients presented with clinical stage II disease and 10 patients developed metastatic disease during follow-up of initial clinical stage I disease with a median time to metastasis of 2.7 years (range: 0.4-19.5 years). Of the 10 patients with orchiectomy pathology data available, all patients had at least 1 risk factor on testis pathology (mean: 2.9 risk factors). Nine patients received treatment prior to referral to our institution. All patients recurred post-RPLND at Indiana University. Median recurrence-free survival was 9.8 months. Twelve patients died of disease with a median overall survival of 14.4 months.
Conclusions
Metastatic sex cord stromal tumors are rare and are more resistant to standard treatment modalities than metastatic germ cell tumors. Patients presenting with sex cord stromal tumors should consider prophylactic primary RPLND in the setting of one or more pathological predictor of malignancy
Renormal-order improvement of the Schwinger mass
The massive Schwinger model may be analysed by a perturbation expansion in
the fermion mass. However, the results of this mass perturbation theory are
sensible only for sufficiently small fermion mass. By performing a
renormal-ordering, we arrive at a chiral perturbation expansion where the
expansion parameter remains small even for large fermion mass. We use this
renormal-ordered chiral perturbation theory for a computation of the Schwinger
mass and compare our results with lattice computations.Comment: Latex file, 13 pages, 3 figures, needed macro: psbox.te
An Application of Feynman-Kleinert Approximants to the Massive Schwinger Model on a Lattice
A trial application of the method of Feynman-Kleinert approximants is made to
perturbation series arising in connection with the lattice Schwinger model. In
extrapolating the lattice strong-coupling series to the weak-coupling continuum
limit, the approximants do not converge well. In interpolating between the
continuum perturbation series at large fermion mass and small fermion mass,
however, the approximants do give good results. In the course of the
calculations, we picked up and rectified an error in an earlier derivation of
the continuum series coefficients.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, 5 table
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