9,785 research outputs found
The Role of Re-entry in the Retirement Process
To what extent do older Americans re-enter the labor force after an initial exit and what drives these “unretirement” decisions? Retirement for most older Americans with full-time career jobs is not a one-time, permanent event. Labor force exit is more likely to be a process. Prior studies have found that between one half and two thirds of career workers take at least one other job before exiting from the labor force completely. The transitional nature of retirement may be even more pronounced when considering the impact of re-entry. This paper examines the extent to which older Americans with career jobs re-entered the labor force. The analysis is based on data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), an ongoing, longitudinal survey of older Americans that began in 1992. We examined the retirement patterns of a subset of 5,617 HRS respondents who were on a full-time career job at the time of the first interview. Logistic regression was used to explore determinants of re-entry among those who initially exited the labor force. We found that approximately 15 percent of older Americans with career jobs returned to the labor force after initially exiting. Respondents were more likely to re-enter if they were younger, were in better health, or had a defined-contribution pension plan. This research provides empirical evidence of how older Americans are utilizing bridge jobs as they transition from career employment, and that re-entry may be an important part of the work experience of older Americans.Economics of Aging, Partial Retirement, Bridge Jobs, Gradual Retirement
Cerebral small vessel disease, medial temporal lobe atrophy and cognitive status in patients with ischaemic stroke and transient ischaemic attack
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:
Small vessel disease (SVD) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) are two common causes of cognitive impairment and dementia, traditionally considered as distinct processes. The relationship between radiological features suggestive of AD and SVD was explored, and the association of each of these features with cognitive status at 1 year was investigated in patients with stroke or transient ischaemic attack.
METHODS:
Anonymized data were accessed from the Virtual International Stroke Trials Archive (VISTA). Medial temporal lobe atrophy (MTA; a marker of AD) and markers of SVD were rated using validated ordinal visual scales. Cognitive status was evaluated with the Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) 1 year after the index stroke. Logistic regression models were used to investigate independent associations between (i) baseline SVD features and MTA and (ii) all baseline neuroimaging features and cognitive status 1 year post-stroke.
RESULTS:
In all, 234 patients were included, mean (±SD) age 65.7 ± 13.1 years, 145 (62%) male. Moderate to severe MTA was present in 104 (44%) patients. SVD features were independently associated with MTA (P < 0.001). After adjusting for age, sex, disability after stroke, hypertension and diabetes mellitus, MTA was the only radiological feature independently associated with cognitive impairment, defined using thresholds of MMSE ≤ 26 (odds ratio 1.94; 95% confidence interval 1.28-2.94) and MMSE ≤ 23 (odds ratio 2.31; 95% confidence interval 1.48-3.62).
CONCLUSION:
In patients with ischaemic cerebrovascular disease, SVD features are associated with MTA, which is a common finding in stroke survivors. SVD and AD type neurodegeneration coexist, but the AD marker MTA, rather than SVD markers, is associated with post-stroke cognitive impairment
Neutrino Fluxes from Active Galaxies: a Model-Independent Analysis
There are tantalizing hints that jets, powered by supermassive black holes at
the center of active galaxies, are true cosmic proton accelerators. They
produce photons of TeV energy, possible higher, and may be the enigmatic source
of the highest energy cosmic rays. Photoproduction of neutral pions by
accelerated protons on UV light is the source of the highest energy photons, in
which most of the bolometric luminosity of the galaxy may be emitted. The case
that proton beams power active galaxies is, however, far from conclusive.
Neutrinos from the decay of charged pions represent an uncontrovertible
signature for the proton induced cascades. We show that their flux can be
estimated by model-independent methods, based on dimensional analysis and
textbook particle physics. Our calculations also demonstrate why different
models for the proton blazar yield very similar results for the neutrino flux,
consistent with the ones obtained here.Comment: Latex 2.09 with epsf.sty. 12 pages, 2 postscript figures. Compressed
postscript version of paper with figures also available soon at
http://phenom.physics.wisc.edu/pub/preprints/1997/madph-97-982.ps.Z or at
ftp://phenom.physics.wisc.edu/pub/preprints/1997/madph-97-982.ps.
Principles of Entrainment: Diagnostic Utility for Supraventricular Tachycardia
Entrainment is an important pacing maneuver that can be used to identify reentry as a tachycardia mechanism and define components of the circuit. This review examines how principles of entrainment can be used to arrive at a firm supraventricular tachycardia diagnosis using a simple algorithm and builds a foundation for the application of entrainment to more complex or unknown circuits
Spin phase diagram of the nu_e=4/11 composite fermion liquid
Spin polarization of the "second generation" nu_e=4/11 fractional quantum
Hall state (corresponding to an incompressible liquid in a one-third-filled
composite fermion Landau level) is studied by exact diagonalization. Spin phase
diagram is determined for GaAs structures of different width and electron
concentration. Transition between the polarized and partially unpolarized
states with distinct composite fermion correlations is predicted for realistic
parameters.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Quantum Hall Spherical Systems: the Filling Fraction
Within the newly formulated composite fermion hierarchy the filling fraction
of a spherical quantum Hall system is obtained when it can be expressed as an
odd or even denominator fraction. A plot of as a function
of for a constant number of particles (up to N=10001) exhibits structure
of the fractional quantum Hall effect. It is confirmed that
for all particle-hole conjugate systems, except systems with , and
.Comment: 3 pages, Revtex, 7 PostScript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B
Rapid Communicatio
A generalization of Gabriel's Galois covering functors II: 2-categorical Cohen-Montgomery duality
Given a group , we define suitable 2-categorical structures on the class
of all small categories with -actions and on the class of all small
-graded categories, and prove that 2-categorical extensions of the orbit
category construction and of the smash product construction turn out to be
2-equivalences (2-quasi-inverses to each other), which extends the
Cohen-Montgomery duality.Comment: 31 pages. I moved the Sec of G-GrCat into Sec 3, and added Lem 5.6. I
added more explanations in the proof of Cor 7.6 with (7.5). I added Def 7.7
and Lem 7.8 with the necessary additional assumptions in Props 7.9 and 7.11.
I added Lem 8.8 with a short proof, Rmk 8.9 and the proof of Lem 8.10. The
final publication is available at Springer via
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10485-015-9416-
The effects of classic and variant infectious bursal disease viruses on lymphocyte populations in specific-pathogen-free White Leghorn chickens
Infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) is a pathogen that primarily infects B lymphocytes in domestic avian species. This viral infection has been associated with immunosuppression, clinical disease/mortality, and enteric malabsorption effects. The purpose of this experiment was to compare the effects of a classic (USDA-STC) and a new variant IBDV (RB-4, known to induce primarily the enteric disease) on immune cell populations in lymphoid organs. Seventeen-dayold specific-pathogen-free (SPF) White Leghorn chickens were either not infected (control) or inoculated with either USDA-STC or RB-4 IBD viral isolate. On days 3 and 5 post-inoculation (PI), lymphoid tissues were collected to prepare cell suspensions for immunofluorescent staining and cell population analysis by flow cytometry. Portions of the tissues were snap frozen for immunohistochemistry to localize various immune cells and IBD virus in the tissues. Tissue homogenates were prepared to test for IBDV by quantitative MTT assay. Both the USDA-STC and RB-4 viruses greatly altered lymphocyte populations in the spleen and bursa. At 5 d PI, bursal B cells were approximately 25% and 60% of lymphocytes in chicks infected with USDA-STC and RB-4, respectively, whereas in control birds, B cells constituted 99% of bursal lymphocytes. This reduction in the proportions of bursal B cells was associated with an infiltration of T cells. In the spleen, IBDV infection also reduced the percentage of B cells and increased the percentage of T cells. The differential effects of classic and variant IBDV infection on immune cell populations in lymphoid organs may explain the differences in clinical effects induced by these viruse
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