645 research outputs found
The Recent Respectability of Summary Judgments and Directed Verdicts in Intentional Age Discrimination Cases: ADEA Case Analysis through the Supreme Court\u27s Summary Judgment Prism
The purpose of this Article is to review recent Supreme Court guidance on standards for summary judgment and directed verdict and the effect these decisions are having upon ADEA cases
Four Imperatives Driving Business Schools to Adopt Mobile Content Delivery
Look around at people on any sidewalk, school hallway, classroom, and, most disturbingly, any car around yours on the road. You know that you are likely to see a staggering percentage of those people staring into the screen of a “smart” phone. Millennials and post-millennials are constantly “connected.” The Millennials even connect during class; at best to fact-check their teachers, at worst, to check the latest updates on Facebook. It will only get worse with the soon to arrive Post-Millennials who have been termed “millennials on steroids” by Lucie Green, the worldwide director of the Innovation Group at J. Walter Thompson. Post-millennials who account for a quarter of the U.S. population have not had to adapt to these devices. They were born into them and will expect nothing less than having them as a fixture in their learning experience. Significantly, the parents of post-millennials concur with their Generation Z offspring and believe that education technology has a positive influence on their children’s learning. Universities are struggling to catch up to this trend, with mixed results. Since teaching about the importance of detecting and acting proactively on macroenvironmental changes is part of its curriculum, it is particularly incumbent upon the AACSB-accredited business schools to lead the way for the rest of academe. This paper will report on the four main imperatives driving universities, and business schools in particular, to adopt mobile content delivery. Specifically, those imperatives are demographics, finances, ubiquitous technology, and concerns over accreditation. The current AACSB accreditation standards are built around three themes: innovation, impact, and engagement. Adopting mobile content delivery would seem to fit ideally within this new framework. This paper will discuss some innovative methods currently being employed by schools of business to utilize mobile delivery of teaching content. Finally, it will point out the advantages and the disadvantages associated with departing from the traditional classroom content delivery model
Social Media and the C-Suite: The Ethical and Legal Implications
The last twenty years has seen phenomenal growth of social media, with companies such as Facebook, Linked In, and Twitter seeing their registered users growing into the hundreds of millions worldwide (and, in the case of Facebook, over a billion). The advantages of using social media have been touted by many, and fortunes have been made by savvy practitioners with a deft hand at using social media to their advantage. However, as with any new technology unintended consequences have begun to unfold. These consequences have been thrust to the forefront as several high-profile corporate executives and celebrities have sabotaged their own success and the success of their companies by unwise and unfiltered use of social media. Furthermore, companies have created faulty social media policies and have utilized Facebook in the employment arena in a manner that has spawned an ethical and legal minefield. This paper will examine the maze of problems generated by the unbridled use of social media in the business and employment arenas. It will also offer some common sense solutions which could limit liability for companies and their shareholders
The blazar S5 0014+813: a real or apparent monster?
A strong hard X-ray luminosity from a blazar flags the presence of a very
powerful jet. If the jet power is in turn related to the mass accretion rate,
the most luminous hard X-ray blazars should pinpoint the largest accretion
rates, and therefore the largest black hole masses. These ideas are confirmed
by the Swift satellite observations of the blazar S5 0014+813, at the redshift
z=3.366. Swift detected this source with all its three instruments, from the
optical to the hard X-rays. Through the construction of its spectral energy
distribution we are confident that its optical-UV emission is thermal in
origin. Associating it to the emission of a standard optically thick
geometrically thin accretion disk, we find a black hole mass of 40 billion
solar masses, radiating at 40% the Eddington value. The derived mass is among
the largest ever found. Super-Eddington slim disks or thick disks with the
presence of a collimating funnel can in principle reduce the black hole mass
estimate, but tends to produce spectra bluer than observed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication as a letter in MNRAS
after minor revisio
Structural Properties of Central Galaxies in Groups and Clusters
Using a representative sample of 911 central galaxies (CENs) from the SDSS
DR4 group catalogue, we study how the structure of the most massive members in
groups and clusters depend on (1) galaxy stellar mass (Mstar), (2) dark matter
halo mass of the host group (Mhalo), and (3) their halo-centric position. We
establish and thoroughly test a GALFIT-based pipeline to fit 2D Sersic models
to SDSS data. We find that the fitting results are most sensitive to the
background sky level determination and strongly recommend using the SDSS global
value. We find that uncertainties in the background translate into a strong
covariance between the total magnitude, half-light size (r50), and Sersic index
(n), especially for bright/massive galaxies. We find that n depends strongly on
Mstar for CENs, but only weakly or not at all on Mhalo. Less (more) massive
CENs tend to be disk (spheroid)-like over the full Mhalo range. Likewise, there
is a clear r50-Mstar relation for CENs, with separate slopes for disks and
spheroids. When comparing CENs with satellite galaxies (SATs), we find that low
mass (<10e10.75 Msun/h^2) SATs have larger median n than CENs of similar Mstar.
Low mass, late-type SATs have moderately smaller r50 than late-type CENs of the
same Mstar. However, we find no size differences between spheroid-like CENs and
SATs, and no structural differences between CENs and SATs matched in both mass
and colour. The similarity of massive SATs and CENs shows that this distinction
has no significant impact on the structure of spheroids. We conclude that Mstar
is the most fundamental property determining the basic structure of a galaxy.
The lack of a clear n-Mhalo relation rules out a distinct group mass for
producing spheroids, and the responsible morphological transformation processes
must occur at the centres of groups spanning a wide range of masses. (abridged)Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures, submitted to MNRA
Ongoing Assembly of Massive Galaxies by Major Merging in Large Groups and Clusters from the SDSS
We investigate the incidence of major mergers creating >10e11 Msun galaxies
in present-day groups and clusters more massive than 2.5e13 Msun. We identify
38 pairs of massive galaxies with mutual tidal interaction signatures selected
from >5000 galaxies with >5e10 Msun that reside in 845 such groups. We fit the
images of each galaxy pair as the line-of-sight projection of symmetric models
and identify mergers by the presence of residual asymmetries around each
progenitor, such as off-center isophotes, broad tidal tails, and dynamical
friction wakes. At the resolution and sensitivity of the SDSS, such mergers are
found in 16% of high-mass, galaxy-galaxy pairs with magnitude differences of
<1.5 and <30 kpc projected separations. We find that 90% of these mergers have
nearly equal-mass progenitors with red-sequence colors and
centrally-concentrated morphologies, the hallmarks of dissipationless merger
simulations. Mergers at group centers are more common than between 2
satellites, but both are morphologically indistinguishable and we tentatively
conclude that the latter are likely located at the dynamical centers of
recently accreted subhalos. The frequency of central and satellite merging
diminishes with group mass consistent with dynamical friction expectations.
Based on reasonable assumptions, the centers of these massive halos are growing
in stellar mass by 1-9% per Gyr, on average. Compared to all LRG-LRG mergers,
we find a 2-9 times higher rate for their merging when restricted to these
dense environments. Our results imply that the massive end of the galaxy
population continues to evolve hierarchically at a measurable level, and that
the centers of massive groups are the preferred environment for merger-driven
galaxy assembly. (abridged)Comment: 48 pages, 21 figures. Submitted for publication in MNRAS. Version
with full resolution figures at
http://www.astro.umass.edu/~dmac/Preprints/mergers.hires.pd
Observation of Exclusive Gamma Gamma Production in p pbar Collisions at sqrt{s}=1.96 TeV
We have observed exclusive \gamma\gamma production in proton-antiproton
collisions at \sqrt{s}=1.96 TeV, using data from 1.11 \pm 0.07 fb^{-1}
integrated luminosity taken by the Run II Collider Detector at Fermilab. We
selected events with two electromagnetic showers, each with transverse energy
E_T > 2.5 GeV and pseudorapidity |\eta| < 1.0, with no other particles detected
in -7.4 < \eta < +7.4. The two showers have similar E_T and azimuthal angle
separation \Delta\phi \sim \pi; 34 events have two charged particle tracks,
consistent with the QED process p \bar{p} to p + e^+e^- + \bar{p} by two-photon
exchange, while 43 events have no charged tracks. The number of these events
that are exclusive \pi^0\pi^0 is consistent with zero and is < 15 at 95% C.L.
The cross section for p\bar{p} to p+\gamma\gamma+\bar{p} with |\eta(\gamma)| <
1.0 and E_T(\gamma) > 2.5$ GeV is
2.48^{+0.40}_{-0.35}(stat)^{+0.40}_{-0.51}(syst) pb.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Shrinking a large dataset to identify variables associated with increased risk of Plasmodium falciparum infection in Western Kenya
Large datasets are often not amenable to analysis using traditional single-step approaches. Here, our general objective was to apply imputation techniques, principal component analysis (PCA), elastic net and generalized linear models to a large dataset in a systematic approach to extract the most meaningful predictors for a health outcome. We extracted predictors for Plasmodium falciparum infection, from a large covariate dataset while facing limited numbers of observations, using data from the People, Animals, and their Zoonoses (PAZ) project to demonstrate these techniques: data collected from 415 homesteads in western Kenya, contained over 1500 variables that describe the health, environment, and social factors of the humans, livestock, and the homesteads in which they reside. The wide, sparse dataset was simplified to 42 predictors of P. falciparum malaria infection and wealth rankings were produced for all homesteads. The 42 predictors make biological sense and are supported by previous studies. This systematic data-mining approach we used would make many large datasets more manageable and informative for decision-making processes and health policy prioritization
Combined search for the standard model Higgs boson decaying to a bb pair using the full CDF data set
We combine the results of searches for the standard model Higgs boson based
on the full CDF Run II data set obtained from sqrt(s) = 1.96 TeV p-pbar
collisions at the Fermilab Tevatron corresponding to an integrated luminosity
of 9.45/fb. The searches are conducted for Higgs bosons that are produced in
association with a W or Z boson, have masses in the range 90-150 GeV/c^2, and
decay into bb pairs. An excess of data is present that is inconsistent with the
background prediction at the level of 2.5 standard deviations (the most
significant local excess is 2.7 standard deviations).Comment: To be published in Phys. Rev. Lett (v2 contains minor updates based
on comments from PRL
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