26,030 research outputs found
Generalized Taylor and Generalized Calvo price and wage-setting: micro evidence with macro implications
The Generalized Calvo and the Generalized Taylor model of price and wage-setting are, unlike the standard Calvo and Taylor counterparts, exactly consistent with the distribution of durations observed in the data. Using price and wage micro-data from a major euro-area economy (France), we develop calibrated versions of these models. We assess the consequences for monetary policy transmission by embedding these calibrated models in a standard DSGE model. The Generalized Taylor model is found to help rationalizing the hump-shaped response of inflation, without resorting to the counterfactual assumption of systematic wage and price indexation.Contract length, steady state, hazard rate, Calvo, Taylor, wage-setting, price-setting.
Public Health and Epidemiology Informatics: Recent Research and Trends in the United States
Objectives
To survey advances in public health and epidemiology informatics over the past three years.
Methods
We conducted a review of English-language research works conducted in the domain of public health informatics (PHI), and published in MEDLINE between January 2012 and December 2014, where information and communication technology (ICT) was a primary subject, or a main component of the study methodology. Selected articles were synthesized using a thematic analysis using the Essential Services of Public Health as a typology.
Results
Based on themes that emerged, we organized the advances into a model where applications that support the Essential Services are, in turn, supported by a socio-technical infrastructure that relies on government policies and ethical principles. That infrastructure, in turn, depends upon education and training of the public health workforce, development that creates novel or adapts existing infrastructure, and research that evaluates the success of the infrastructure. Finally, the persistence and growth of infrastructure depends on financial sustainability.
Conclusions
Public health informatics is a field that is growing in breadth, depth, and complexity. Several Essential Services have benefited from informatics, notably, “Monitor Health,” “Diagnose & Investigate,” and “Evaluate.” Yet many Essential Services still have not yet benefited from advances such as maturing electronic health record systems, interoperability amongst health information systems, analytics for population health management, use of social media among consumers, and educational certification in clinical informatics. There is much work to be done to further advance the science of PHI as well as its impact on public health practice
Classical String in Curved Backgrounds
The Mathisson-Papapetrou method is originally used for derivation of the
particle world line equation from the covariant conservation of its
stress-energy tensor. We generalize this method to extended objects, such as a
string. Without specifying the type of matter the string is made of, we obtain
both the equations of motion and boundary conditions of the string. The world
sheet equations turn out to be more general than the familiar minimal surface
equations. In particular, they depend on the internal structure of the string.
The relevant cases are classified by examining canonical forms of the effective
2-dimensional stress-energy tensor. The case of homogeneously distributed
matter with the tension that equals its mass density is shown to define the
familiar Nambu-Goto dynamics. The other three cases include physically relevant
massive and massless strings, and unphysical tahyonic strings.Comment: 12 pages, REVTeX 4. Added a note and one referenc
A hydrous melting and fractionation model for mid-ocean ridge basalts: Application to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge near the Azores
The major element, trace element, and isotopic composition of mid-ocean ridge basalt glasses affected by the Azores hotspot are strongly correlated with H2O content of the glass. Distinguishing the relative importance of source chemistry and potential temperature in ridge-hotspot interaction therefore requires a comprehensive model that accounts for the effect of H2O in the source on melting behavior and for the effect of H2O in primitive liquids on the fractionation path. We develop such a model by coupling the latest version of the MELTS algorithm to a model for partitioning of water among silicate melts and nominally anhydrous minerals. We find that much of the variation in all major oxides except TiO2 and a significant fraction of the crustal thickness anomaly at the Azores platform are explained by the combined effects on melting and fractionation of up to ~700 ppm H2O in the source with only a small thermal anomaly, particularly if there is a small component of buoyantly driven active flow associated with the more H2O-rich melting regimes. An on-axis thermal anomaly of ~35°C in potential temperature explains the full crustal thickness increase of ~4 km approaching the Azores platform, whereas a ≥75°C thermal anomaly would be required in the absence of water or active flow. The polybaric hydrous melting and fractionation model allows us to solve for the TiO2, trace element and isotopic composition of the H2O-rich component in a way that self-consistently accounts for the changes in the melting and fractionation regimes resulting from enrichment, although the presence and concentration in the enriched component of elements more compatible than Dy cannot be resolved
Generalizing Boolean Satisfiability I: Background and Survey of Existing Work
This is the first of three planned papers describing ZAP, a satisfiability
engine that substantially generalizes existing tools while retaining the
performance characteristics of modern high-performance solvers. The fundamental
idea underlying ZAP is that many problems passed to such engines contain rich
internal structure that is obscured by the Boolean representation used; our
goal is to define a representation in which this structure is apparent and can
easily be exploited to improve computational performance. This paper is a
survey of the work underlying ZAP, and discusses previous attempts to improve
the performance of the Davis-Putnam-Logemann-Loveland algorithm by exploiting
the structure of the problem being solved. We examine existing ideas including
extensions of the Boolean language to allow cardinality constraints,
pseudo-Boolean representations, symmetry, and a limited form of quantification.
While this paper is intended as a survey, our research results are contained in
the two subsequent articles, with the theoretical structure of ZAP described in
the second paper in this series, and ZAP's implementation described in the
third
Asymmetric Non-Abelian Orbifolds and Model Building
The rules for the free fermionic string model construction are extended to
include general non-abelian orbifold constructions that go beyond the real
fermionic approach. This generalization is also applied to the asymmetric
orbifold rules recently introduced. These non-abelian orbifold rules are quite
easy to use. Examples are given to illustrate their applications.Comment: 30 pages, Revtex 3.
Evidence for GeV emission from the Galactic Center Fountain
The region near the Galactic center may have experienced recurrent episodes
of injection of energy in excess of 10 ergs due to repeated
starbursts involving more than 10 supernovae. This hypothesis can be
tested by measurements of -ray lines produced by the decay of
radioactive isotopes and positron annihilation, or by searches for pulsars
produced during starbursts. Recent OSSE observations of 511 keV emission
extending above the Galactic center led to the suggestion of a starburst driven
fountain from the Galactic center. We present EGRET observations that might
support this picture.Comment: 5 pages, 1 embedded Postscript figure. To appear in the Proceedings
of the Fourth Compton Symposiu
New relations for scattering amplitudes in Yang-Mills theory at loop level
The calculation of scattering amplitudes in Yang-Mills theory at loop level
is important for the analysis of background processes at particle colliders as
well as our understanding of perturbation theory at the quantum level. We
present tools to derive relations for especially one loop amplitudes, as well
as several explicit examples for gauge theory coupled to a wide variety of
matter. These tools originate in certain scaling behavior of permutation and
cyclic sums of Yang-Mills tree amplitudes and loop integrands. In the latter
case evidence exists for relations at all loop orders.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures. v3: typos corrected, figures and clarifications
adde
QCD and QED Corrections to Light-by-Light Scattering
We present the QCD and QED corrections to the fermion-loop contributions to
light-by-light scattering, gamma gamma to gamma gamma, in the ultrarelativistic
limit where the kinematic invariants are much larger than the masses of the
charged fermions.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figure files, JHEP styl
- …