822 research outputs found
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Psychological Costs of Migration: Home Country Natural Disasters and Mental Health
The psychological toll of leaving one's familiar environment is a dominant explanation for why some people do not migrate despite relatively high wage differentials and low monetary costs of moving. Yet there is little direct empirical evidence on the existence and the characteristics of psychic costs. Using linked administrative and survey data (the 45 and Up Study) from Australia, a country where one in four residents was born overseas, we show that migrant mental health is significantly affected by home country natural disasters. In the three months following a disaster, mental health related drug use and visits to mental health specialists increase by 5% and 33%, respectively. The effects persist for up to 12 months after the initial shock and increase with distance to the home country. In contrast, we do not find any effects of home country disasters on the physical health conditions of migrants. Given that individuals in our sample have lived in their destination country for an average of 40 years, our estimates suggest strong persistence in these costs
A Monte Carlo comparison of estimators for a bivariate probit model with selection
prototypical sample selection model consists of a two-equation system: one equation representing the selection mechanism and the second a continuous outcome variable that is only observed for the selected cases. A variant of this model where the outcome variable is binary leads to a bivariate probit model with sample selection. A Monte Carlo experiment is undertaken to examine the small sample properties of three alternative estimators of a bivariate probit model with selection. The three estimators are the censored probit estimator, single-equation probit applied to the selected sub-sample and single-equation probit applied to the full sample
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Does self-assessed health measure health?
Despite concerns about reporting biases and interpretation, self-assessed health (SAH) remains the measure of health most used by researchers, in part reflecting its ease of collection and in part the observed correlation between SAH and objective measures of health. Using a unique Australian data set, which consists of survey data linked to administrative individual medical records, we present empirical evidence demonstrating that SAH indeed predicts future health, as measured by hospitalizations, out-of-hospital medical services and prescription drugs. Our large sample size allows very disaggregate analysis and we find that SAH predicts more serious, chronic illnesses better than less serious illnesses. Finally, we compare the predictive power of SAH relative to administrative data and an extensive set of self-reported health measures; SAH does not add to the predictive power of future utilization when the administrative data is included and improves prediction only marginally when the extensive survey-based health measures are included. Clearly there is value in the more extensive survey and administrative health data as well as greater cost of collection
Baryonic Operators for Lattice Simulations
The construction of baryonic operators for determining the N* excitation
spectrum is discussed. The operators are designed with one eye towards
maximizing overlaps with the low-lying states of interest, and the other eye
towards minimizing the number of sources needed in computing the required quark
propagators. Issues related to spin identification are outlined. Although we
focus on tri-quark baryon operators, the construction method is applicable to
both mesons and penta-quark operators.Comment: 3 pages, poster presented at Lattice2003(spectrum), Tsukuba, Japan,
July 15-19, 200
Coupled Negative magnetocapacitance and magnetic susceptibility in a Kagome staircase-like compound Co3V2O8
The dielectric constant of the Kagome staircase-like Co3V2O8 polycrystalline
compound has been measured as function of temperature and magnetic field up to
14T. It is found that the application of an external magnetic field suppresses
the anomaly for the dielectric constant beyond 6.1K. Furthermore, its magnetic
field dependence reveals a negative magnetocapacitance which is proportional to
the magnetic susceptibility, suggesting a common magnetostrictive origin for
the magnetic field dependence of the two quantities. This result is very
different from that obtained from the isostructural compound Ni3V2O8 that
presents a peak in the dielectric constant at the incommensurate magnetic phase
transition coupled to a sign change of the magnetocapacitance
Theory of Excitonic States in CaB6
We study the excitonic states in CaB6 in terms of the Ginzburg-Landau theory.
By minimizing the free energy and by comparing with experimental results, we
identify two possible ground states with exciton condensation. They both break
time-reversal and inversion symmetries. This leads to various magnetic and
optical properties. As for magnetic properties, it is expected to be an
antiferromagnet, and its spin structure is predicted. It will exhibit the
magnetoelectric effect, and observed novel ferromagnetism in doped samples and
in thin-film and powder samples can arise from this effect. Interesting optical
phenomena such as the nonreciprocal optical effect and the second harmonic
generation are predicted. Their measurement for CaB6 will clarify whether
exciton condensation occurs or not and which of the two states is realized.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figure
Baryon operators and spectroscopy in lattice QCD
The construction of the operators and correlators required to determine the
excited baryon spectrum is presented, with the aim of exploring the spatial and
spin structure of the states while minimizing the number of propagator
inversions. The method used to construct operators that transform irreducibly
under the symmetries of the lattice is detailed, and the properties of example
operators are studied using domain-wall fermion valence propagators computed on
MILC asqtad dynamical lattices.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Proceedings of Workshop on Lattice
Hadron Physics 2003, Cairns, Australia, July 22 - July 30, 200
Magnetodielectric effect and optic soft mode behaviour in quantum paraelectric EuTiO3 ceramics
Infrared reflectivity and time-domain terahertz transmission spectra of
EuTiO3 ceramics revealed a polar optic phonon at 6 - 300K, whose softening is
fully responsible for the recently observed quantum paraelectric behaviour.
Even if our EuTiO3 ceramics show lower permittivity than the single crystal due
to a reduced density and/or small amount of secondary pyrochlore Eu2Ti2O7
phase, we confirmed the magnetic field dependence of the permittivity, also
slightly smaller than in single crystal. Attempt to reveal the soft phonon
dependence at 1.8K on the magnetic field up to 13T remained below the accuracy
of our infrared reflectivity experiment
Symmetry Analysis of Second Harmonic Generation at Surfaces of Antiferromagnets
Using group theory we classify the nonlinear magneto-optical response at
low-index surfaces of fcc antiferromagnets, such as NiO. Structures consisting
of one atomic layer are discussed in detail. We find that optical second
harmonic generation is sensitive to surface antiferromagnetism in many cases.
We discuss the influence of a second type of magnetic atoms, and also of a
possible oxygen sublattice distortion on the output signal. Finally, our
symmetry analysis yields the possibility of antiferromagnetic surface domain
imaging even in the presence of magnetic unit-cell doubling.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures incorporated. Accepted to Phys. Rev. B,
scheduled for July'9
Infrared Behavior of the Gluon Propagator on a Large Volume Lattice
The first calculation of the gluon propagator using an order a^2 improved
action with the corresponding order a^2 improved Landau gauge fixing condition
is presented. The gluon propagator obtained from the improved action and
improved Landau gauge condition is compared with earlier unimproved results on
similar physical lattice volumes of 3.2^3 \times 6.4 fm^4. We find agreement
between the improved propagator calculated on a coarse lattice with lattice
spacing a = 0.35 fm and the unimproved propagator calculated on a fine lattice
with spacing a = 0.10 fm. This motivates us to calculate the gluon propagator
on a coarse large-volume lattice 5.6^3 \times 11.2 fm^4. The infrared behavior
of previous studies is confirmed in this work. The gluon propagator is enhanced
at intermediate momenta and suppressed at infrared momenta. Therefore the
observed infrared suppression of the Landau gauge gluon propagator is not a
finite volume effect.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, minor typos corrected and repsonse to referees
comment
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