2,749 research outputs found
The why's the limit: curtailing self-enhancement with explanatory introspection
Self-enhancement is linked to psychological gains (e.g., subjective well-being, persistence in adversity) but also to intrapersonal and interpersonal costs (e.g., excessive risk taking, antisocial behavior). Thus, constraints on self-enhancement may sometimes afford intrapersonal and interpersonal advantages. We tested whether explanatory introspection (i.e., generating reasons for why one might or might not possess personality traits) constitutes one such constraint. Experiment 1 demonstrated that explanatory introspection curtails self-enhancement. Experiment 2 clarified that the underlying mechanism must (a) involve explanatory questioning rather than descriptive imagining, (b) invoke the self rather than another person, and (c) feature written expression rather than unaided contemplation. Finally, Experiment 3 obtained evidence that an increase in uncertainty about oneself mediates the effect
Strategic delegation in experimental duopolies with endogenous incentive contracts
Often, deviations of firm behavior from profit maximization are the result of managerial incentive contracts. We study the endogenous emergence of incentive contracts used by firm owners to delegate the strategic decisions of the firm. These contracts are linear combinations either of own firm's profits and revenues, or own and rival firms' profits. A two- and three-stage game are studied depending on whether owners commit or not to a certain contract type before setting the managerial incentives and the level of output to produce in the market. We report experimental results which confirm some of the predictions of the model, especially those concerning owners' preference for relative performance incentives over profit-revenue contracts. Neglected behavioral aspects are proposed as possible explanation of some divergence between the theory and the experimental evidence, more specifically the relation between contract terms and managers' output choicesExperimental economics; Oligopoly theory; Managerial delegation; Endogenous contracts.
Collective nostalgia: a group-level emotion that confers unique benefits on the group
This research established collective nostalgia as a group-level emotion and ascertained the benefits it confers on the group. In Study 1, participants who reflected on a nostalgic event they had experienced together with ingroup members (collective nostalgia) evaluated the ingroup more positively and reported stronger intentions to approach (and not avoid) ingroup members than those who recalled a nostalgic event they had experienced individually (personal nostalgia), those who reflected on a lucky event they had experienced together with ingroup members (collective positive), and those who did not recall an event (no recall). In Study 2, collective (vs. personal) nostalgia strengthened behavioral intentions to support the ingroup more so than did recalling an ordinary collective (vs. personal) event. Increased collective self-esteem mediated this effect. In Study 3, collective nostalgia (compared with recall of an ordinary collective event) led participants to sacrifice money in order to punish a transgression perpetrated against an ingroup member. This effect of collective nostalgia was more pronounced when social identification was high (compared with low). Finally, in Study 4, collective nostalgia converged toward the group average (i.e., was socially shared) when participants thought of themselves in terms of their group membership. The findings underscore the viability of studying nostalgia at multiple levels of analysis and highlight the significance of collective nostalgia for understanding group-level attitudes, global action tendencies, specific behavioral intentions, and behavior
Edge and bulk components of lowest-Landau-level orbitals, correlated fractional quantum Hall effect incompressible states, and insulating behavior in finite graphene samples
Many-body calculations of the total energy of interacting Dirac electrons in
finite graphene samples exhibit joint occurrence of cusps at angular momenta
corresponding to fractional fillings characteristic of formation of
incompressible (gapped) correlated states (nu=1/3 in particular) and opening of
an insulating energy gap (that increases with the magnetic field) at the Dirac
point, in correspondence with experiments. Single-particle basis functions
obeying the zigzag boundary condition at the sample edge are employed in exact
diagonalization of the interelectron Coulomb interaction, showing, at all
sizes, mixed equal-weight bulk and edge components. The consequent depletion of
the bulk electron density attenuates the fractional-quantum-Hall-effect
excitation energies and the edge charge accumulation results in a gap in the
many-body spectrum.Comment: 8 pages with 7 figures. REVTEX4. For related publications, see
http://www.prism.gatech.edu/~ph274c
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High-throughput approaches to discover novel immunomodulatory agents for cancer
The clinical success of immunomodulatory thalidomide derivatives has renewed the general interest in immunomodulatory anticancer compounds and prompted us to develop a high-throughput system to quantify immune effector-cell activity. We documented that the interaction between cancer cells, their stroma, anticancer agents and cells from the innate system are critical for determining the response of tumors to immunomodulatory strategies
WIYN/Hydra Detection of Lithium Depletion in F Stars of the Young Open Cluster M35 and Implications for the Development of the Lithium Gap
We report discovery of significant depletion of Li on the surfaces of F dwarf
stars in the 150-Myr-old open cluster M35, analagous to a feature in the
700-Myr-old Hyades cluster that has been referred to as the ``Li gap.'' We have
caught the gap in the act of forming: using high resolution, high S/N,
WIYN/Hydra observations, we detect Li in all but a few M35 F stars; the maximum
depletion lies at least 0.6-0.8 dex below minimally depleted (or undepleted)
stars. The M35 Li depletion region, a) is quite wide, with clear depletion seen
from 6000K to 6700K or hotter; b) shows a significant dispersion in Li
abundance at all T_eff, even with stars of the same T_eff; and c) contains
undepleted stars (as well as depleted ones) in the (narrow) classical Hyades
gap region, which itself shows no undepleted stars. All of these M35 Li
depletion properties support rotationally-induced slow mixing as the primary
physical mechanism that forms the gap, and argues against other proposed
mechanisms, particularly diffusion and steady main sequence mass loss. When
viewed in the context of the M35 Li depletion properties, the Hyades Li gap may
well be wider than is usually recognized.Comment: 14 Pages, 3 figures. Accepted to ApJ Letter
A market investigation for a new confectionery product
Thesis (B.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Business and Engineering Administration, 1934.MIT copy bound with: An economic study of the nickel industry / Rene G. DuBois and W. Leslie Doten -- Development of the recorder method of radio broadcast analysis / Arthur C. Esslinger.Includes bibliographical references (leaf 60).by Constantine S. Dadakis and Edwin J. Geittmann.B.S
Pemanfaatan Vermikompos yang Berbeda terhadap Perubahan Parameter Kimia pada Media Tanah Gambut
This research was conducted from January to March 2017 located atPeat Moss Village of Kualu Nenas, District of Tambang, Kampar, Riau. The aimof this study was to know the best type of vermicompost to change the chemicalparameters of peat soil as pond bottom soil such as pH, soil organic matter content(KBOT), total N, total P, total K, C/N ratio and water chemical parameters such aspH, Dissolved oxygen (DO), Free carbon dioxide (CO2), Nitrate, Orthophosphateand Ammonia. The method used in this study was an experimental method byusing Completely Randomized Design (RAL) of one factor with four treatmentsand three replications. The treatments in this study were without vermicompost(P0), human vermicompost (P1), cow vermicompost (P2), chicken vermicompost(P3).The results showed that best treatment during the study was P1 (humanvermicompost) with pH 6.47, KBOT 59.69%, total N 2.79%, total P 2.33%, totalK 1.53% and C/N ratio 16.59. Furthermore, for the range of water chemistryparameters during the study was still good with pH ranges from 5.6 to 6.8, DOranged from 2.3 to 3.3 mg/L, CO2 ranged from 9.96-18.99 mg/L, nitrate 10,43mg/L, orthophosphate 6,76 mg/L, ammonia 0.08 mg/L
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