9,261 research outputs found
Smoking inequality across genders and socio-economic positions. Evidence from Italian data
There has been a dearth of literature on smoking inequalities, in spite of its contribution to health inequalities. We exploit Italian individual-level data from repeated cross-sections of the annual household survey, “Aspects of Daily Life,” that was part of the Multipurpose Survey carried out by the Italian National Statistical Office (ISTAT) for the period 1999–2012 to identify the main socio-demographic characteristics that determine smoking inequalities. We use the Concentration Index to identify in which groups smoking is relatively more prevalent. We find that, among men, pro-rich inequality is driven by members of the lower socio-economic positions, while we observe the opposite for women. We encourage policymakers to address the issue of smoking inequalities, which the current policies have largely disregarded
Hadron-hadron correlations at low and high in heavy-ion collisions
The modification of two particle correlations within a jet due to its
propagation through dense strongly interacting matter is explored. Different
properties of the medium may be probed by varying the momentum of the detected
hadrons. Very high transverse momentum () correlations sample the gluon
density of the medium; the minimal modification on the same side as the trigger
is consistent with the picture and parameters of partonic energy loss. Lower
momentum hadrons, sensitive to the presence of composite structures in the
medium may excite collective modes such as Cherenkov radiation, resulting in
conical patterns in the detected correlations.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Latex. To appear in the proceedings of the
International Conference on Strong & Electroweak Matter 2006, Brookhaven
National Laboratory, May 10-13, 200
Restriction categories III: colimits, partial limits, and extensivity
A restriction category is an abstract formulation for a category of partial
maps, defined in terms of certain specified idempotents called the restriction
idempotents. All categories of partial maps are restriction categories;
conversely, a restriction category is a category of partial maps if and only if
the restriction idempotents split. Restriction categories facilitate reasoning
about partial maps as they have a purely algebraic formulation.
In this paper we consider colimits and limits in restriction categories. As
the notion of restriction category is not self-dual, we should not expect
colimits and limits in restriction categories to behave in the same manner. The
notion of colimit in the restriction context is quite straightforward, but
limits are more delicate. The suitable notion of limit turns out to be a kind
of lax limit, satisfying certain extra properties.
Of particular interest is the behaviour of the coproduct both by itself and
with respect to partial products. We explore various conditions under which the
coproducts are ``extensive'' in the sense that the total category (of the
related partial map category) becomes an extensive category. When partial
limits are present, they become ordinary limits in the total category. Thus,
when the coproducts are extensive we obtain as the total category a lextensive
category. This provides, in particular, a description of the extensive
completion of a distributive category.Comment: 39 page
BirdSAT: Cross-View Contrastive Masked Autoencoders for Bird Species Classification and Mapping
We propose a metadata-aware self-supervised learning~(SSL)~framework useful
for fine-grained classification and ecological mapping of bird species around
the world. Our framework unifies two SSL strategies: Contrastive Learning~(CL)
and Masked Image Modeling~(MIM), while also enriching the embedding space with
metadata available with ground-level imagery of birds. We separately train
uni-modal and cross-modal ViT on a novel cross-view global bird species dataset
containing ground-level imagery, metadata (location, time), and corresponding
satellite imagery. We demonstrate that our models learn fine-grained and
geographically conditioned features of birds, by evaluating on two downstream
tasks: fine-grained visual classification~(FGVC) and cross-modal retrieval.
Pre-trained models learned using our framework achieve SotA performance on FGVC
of iNAT-2021 birds and in transfer learning settings for CUB-200-2011 and
NABirds datasets. Moreover, the impressive cross-modal retrieval performance of
our model enables the creation of species distribution maps across any
geographic region. The dataset and source code will be released at
https://github.com/mvrl/BirdSAT}.Comment: Accepted at WACV 202
Deciphering the properties of hot and dense matter with hadron-hadron correlations
Two classes of jet correlations in hot and dense matter are explored.
Correlations between very high transverse momentum hadrons within a jet sample
the gluon density of the medium, where, the minimal modification on the same
side as the trigger is consistent with the picture and parameters of partonic
energy loss. Lower momentum partons, sampled through softer correlations, due
to their larger wavelengths are sensitive to the presence of composite
structures in the medium. Scattering off such states may modify the dispersion
relation of the radiated gluons resulting in conical patterns in the detected
correlations.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, Latex, To appear in the proceedings of the
International Conference on Hard and Electromagnetic Probes of High-Energy
Nuclear Collisions, June 9-16, 2006, Pacific Grove, Californi
Smoking Inequality across Genders and Socioeconomic Classes. Evidence from Longitudinal Italian Data
There has been a dearth of literature on smoking inequalities, in spite of its contribution to health inequalities. We exploit longitudinal Italian individual-level data to identify the main sociodemographic characteristics that determine smoking inequalities. We use the Erreygers Concentration Index to identify in which groups smoking is relatively more prevalent. We find that, among men, pro-poor prevalence is driven by members of the lower socio-economic classes, while we observe the opposite for women. We encourage policymakers to address the issue of smoking inequalities, which the current policies have largely disregarded
O(d,d)-invariance in inhomogeneous string cosmologies with perfect fluid
In the first part of the present paper, we show that O(d,d)-invariance
usually known in a homogeneous cosmological background written in terms of
proper time can be extended to backgrounds depending on one or several
coordinates (which may be any space-like or time-like coordinate(s)). In all
cases, the presence of a perfect fluid is taken into account and the equivalent
duality transformation in Einstein frame is explicitly given. In the second
part, we present several concrete applications to some four-dimensional
metrics, including inhomogeneous ones, which illustrate the different duality
transformations discussed in the first part. Note that most of the dual
solutions given here do not seem to be known in the literature.Comment: 25 pages, no figures, Latex. Accepted for publication in General
Relativity and Gravitatio
The Nuclear Stellar Disk in Andromeda: A Fossil from the Era of Black Hole Growth
The physics of angular momentum transport from galactic scales (~10-100 pc)
to much smaller radii is one of the oustanding problems in our understanding of
the formation and evolution of super-massive black holes (BHs). Seemingly
unrelated observations have discovered that there is a lopsided stellar disk of
unknown origin orbiting the BH in M31, and possibly many other systems. We show
that these nominally independent puzzles are in fact closely related.
Multi-scale simulations of gas inflow from galactic to BH scales show that when
sufficient gas is driven towards a BH, gravitational instabilities form a
lopsided, eccentric disk that propagates inwards from larger radii. The
lopsided stellar disk exerts a strong torque on the remaining gas, driving
inflows that fuel the growth of the BH and produce quasar-level luminosities.
The same disk can produce significant obscuration along many sightlines and
thus may be the putative 'torus' invoked to explain obscured active galactic
nuclei and the cosmic X-ray background. The stellar relic of this disk is long
lived and retains the eccentric pattern. Simulations that yield quasar-level
accretion rates produce relic stellar disks with kinematics, eccentric
patterns, precession rates, and surface density profiles in reasonable
agreement with observations of M31. The observed properties of nuclear stellar
disks can thus be used to constrain the formation history of super-massive BHs.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted to MNRAS Letters (matches published
version
Well-Being and psychological consequences of temporary contracts : the case of younger Italian employees
Working conditions in Western countries have changed dramatically in the last twenty years, witnessing the emergence of new forms of employment contracts. The number of "standard" fulltime permanent jobs has decreased, while non-standard work arrangements such as temporary, contingent or part-time contracts have become much more common. This paper analyses the impact of temporary contracts and job insecurity on well-being among younger Italian employees. We use the "Health Conditions and Use of the Health Service Survey" carried out by the Italian National Institute of Statistics in conjunction with the Bank of Italy's Survey on Households Income and Wealth (SHIW). We consider four dimensions of individual well-being: physical health, mental health, self-assessed health and happiness. To account for individual heterogeneity we match each temporary worker with a permanent worker using propensity score matching. Well-being of matched individuals is compared to estimates of the average effect of working with a temporary as opposed to a permanent contract. Our analysis reveals a negative relationship between psychological well-being, happiness and having a temporary job and is particularly marked for male
Well-being and psychological consequences of temporary contracts: the case of younger Italian employees
Working conditions in Western countries have changed dramatically in the last twenty years,
witnessing the emergence of new forms of employment contracts. The number of "standard" fulltime
permanent jobs has decreased, while non-standard work arrangements such as temporary,
contingent or part-time contracts have become much more common. This paper analyses the impact
of temporary contracts and job insecurity on well-being among younger Italian employees. We use
the "Health Conditions and Use of the Health Service Survey" carried out by the Italian National
Institute of Statistics in conjunction with the Bank of Italy's Survey on Households Income and
Wealth (SHIW). We consider four dimensions of individual well-being: physical health, mental
health, self-assessed health and happiness. To account for individual heterogeneity we match each
temporary worker with a permanent worker using propensity score matching. Well-being of
matched individuals is compared to estimates of the average effect of working with a temporary as
opposed to a permanent contract. Our analysis reveals a negative relationship between
psychological well-being, happiness and having a temporary job and is particularly marked for males
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