243 research outputs found
Responsibility-Sensitive Fair Compensation in Different Cultures
Recently many philosophers and social choice theorists have questioned traditional welfare egalitarianism by introducing a notion of responsibility. They propose to distinguish between two sets of individual characteristics: those for which individuals are to be kept responsible and those for which they can be compensated. This approach raises the related questions of where to draw the line between those two sets of characteristics and how to operationalise the notion of 'responsibility-sensitive fair compensation'. The answers to these questions may depend on the cultural context. We present some empirical results from questionnaire studies in Belgium, Burkina Faso and Indonesia. The notion of control seems to play an important role in determining the variables for which individuals are to be held responsible. The strong notion of 'full compensation' is clearly rejected in favour of more conservative distribution rules. Moreover, a large fraction of the respondents take the non-liberal position that the talented should be punished if they do not use their talents in a productive way. We find some intercultural differences. Belgian students are more in favour of redistribution. Indonesian students are the most conservative. While the Pareto principle is decisively rejected in Burkina Faso and Belgium, it is accepted by a majority of the Indonesian sample.distributive justive, fair compensation
Allocating an indivisible good. A questionnaire-experimental study of intercultural differences.
We present the results of a questionnaire study in Belgium, Burkina Faso and Indonesia focusing on the problem of the just allocation of an indivisible good. The formal axioms proposed in social choice theory are helpful in structuring the response patterns. Interindividual differences can be interpreted in a meaningful way in terms of basic intuitions about desert, efficiency and compensation. Belgian students are most resourceegalitarian, Burkinese students attach a large weight to innate capacities, Indonesian students focus on actual production. The crucial no-envy criterion is supported by a majority of respondents, but this majority becomes small if there is an unavoidable conflict between no-envy and the "responsibility" requirement of the stand-alone upper bound.Costs; Cost; Risk; Policy; Choice; Studies;
Bullies in the Block Area: The Early Childhood Origins of Mean Behavior
Bullying can pose a serious threat to children's immediate and long-term health and well-being, and can have profound impacts on all children involved in bullying behaviors, whether as the one bullying others, the one being bullied, or the one witnessing bullying. At least some of the roots of bullying behaviors, and conversely the roots of positive pro-social skills, can likely be found in adverse and positive experiences during early childhood, yet the research literature on these connections is limited. The early childhood field lacks a coherent, theoretical model that identifies the factors contributing to "mean" or aggressive behavior in young children, and establishes the developmental link between this early behavior and later bullying behavior. This white paper summarizes the literature on seven key hypotheses about the roots of bullying behavior in early childhood experiences
Approximate Solutions of the Boltzmann Equation for Secondary Electron Emission: Results and Comparisons to Experiments
The aim of the present paper is to survey the theoretical work performed in Brussels about secondary electron emission (SEE). Two new approximate solutions of the Boltzmann equation for internal secondary electrons are applied to both electron and ion induced SEE. Using a realistic set of interaction cross sections, most calculated characteristics of electron emission compare fairly well to experiments.
The improved age-diffusion model can be used to calculate the electron yield, the energy and angular spectrum and also the depth and radial distributions of outgoing electrons for incident electrons and ions.
The transport-albedo model assumes an uniform internal electron source in a semiinfinite medium and gives the electron yield and the energy spectrum of secondary electrons for incident light ions. Taking into account the anisotropy of the internal electron source, the ratio of the forward and backward yields and the influence of the angle of incidence have been calculated for thin targets
Predictive maintenance for the heated hold-up tank
We present a numerical method to compute an optimal maintenance date for the
test case of the heated hold-up tank. The system consists of a tank containing
a fluid whose level is controlled by three components: two inlet pumps and one
outlet valve. A thermal power source heats up the fluid. The failure rates of
the components depends on the temperature, the position of the three components
monitors the liquid level in the tank and the liquid level determines the
temperature. Therefore, this system can be modeled by a hybrid process where
the discrete (components) and continuous (level, temperature) parts interact in
a closed loop. We model the system by a piecewise deterministic Markov process,
propose and implement a numerical method to compute the optimal maintenance
date to repair the components before the total failure of the system.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1101.174
Accelerating advances in landscape connectivity modelling with the ConScape library
Increasingly precise spatial data (e.g. high-resolution imagery from remote sensing) allow for improved representations of the landscape network for assessing the combined effects of habitat loss and connectivity declines on biodiversity. However, evaluating large landscape networks presents a major computational challenge both in terms of working memory and computation time. We present the ConScape (i.e. âconnected landscapesâ) software library implemented in the high-performance open-source Julia language to compute metrics for connected habitat and movement flow on high-resolution landscapes. The combination of Julia's âjust-in-timeâ compiler, efficient algorithms and âlandmarksâ to reduce the computational load allows ConScape to compute landscape ecological metricsâoriginally developed in metapopulation ecology (such as âmetapopulation capacityâ and âprobability of connectivityâ)âfor large landscapes. An additional major innovation in ConScape is the adoption of the randomized shortest paths framework to represent connectivity along the continuum from optimal to random movements, instead of only those extremes. We demonstrate ConScape's potential for using large datasets in sustainable land planning by modelling landscape connectivity based on remote-sensing data paired with GPS tracking of wild reindeer in Norway. To guide users, we discuss other applications, and provide a series of worked examples to showcase all ConScape's functionalities in Supplementary Material. Built by a team of ecologists, network scientists and software developers, ConScape is able to efficiently compute landscape metrics for high-resolution landscape representations to leverage the availability of large data for sustainable land use and biodiversity conservation. As a Julia implementation, ConScape combines computational efficiency with a transparent code base, which facilitates continued innovation through contributions from the rapidly growing community of landscape and connectivity modellers using Julia. circuitscape, conefor, ecological networks, least-cost path, metapopulation, random walk, randomized shortest pathspublishedVersio
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