8,256 research outputs found
Labor Productivity in Britain and America During the Nineteenth Century
A number of writers have recently questioned whether labor productivity or per capita incomes were ever higher in the United Kingdom than in the United States. We show that although the United States already had a substantial labor productivity lead in industry as early as 1840, especially in manufacturing, labor productivity was broadly equal in the two countries in agriculture, while the United Kingdom was ahead in services. Hence aggregate labor productivity was higher in the United Kingdom, particularly since the United States had a larger share of the labor force in low value-added agriculture. U.S. overtaking occurred decisively only during the 1890s, as labor productivity pulled ahead in services and the share of agricultural employment declined substantially. Labor force participation was lower in the United States, so that the United Kingdom's labor productivity advantage in the mid-nineteenth century translated into a larger per capita income lead.
Maximum-entropy Surrogation in Network Signal Detection
Multiple-channel detection is considered in the context of a sensor network
where raw data are shared only by nodes that have a common edge in the network
graph. Established multiple-channel detectors, such as those based on
generalized coherence or multiple coherence, use pairwise measurements from
every pair of sensors in the network and are thus directly applicable only to
networks whose graphs are completely connected. An approach introduced here
uses a maximum-entropy technique to formulate surrogate values for missing
measurements corresponding to pairs of nodes that do not share an edge in the
network graph. The broader potential merit of maximum-entropy baselines in
quantifying the value of information in sensor network applications is also
noted.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to IEEE Statistical Signal Processing Workshop,
August 201
Letter, Stephen A. Douglas to M. Lewis Clark, August 7, 1852
This handwritten letter, dated August 7, 1852, is written from Stephen A. Douglas to M. Lewis Clark requesting that Clark send Douglas a true and perfect copy of a survey of tract of land at the mouth of the Chicago River. The back of the letter contains a summary of the request and states that made out copies of field notes and plat of Falcott\u27s survey on 16 August 1852.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/fvw-manuscripts-original-manuscripts/1137/thumbnail.jp
The Luminosity Function of Galaxies in the Las Campanas Redshift Survey
We present the -band luminosity function for a sample of 18678 galaxies,
with average redshift , from the Las Campanas Redshift Survey. The
luminosity function may be fit by a Schechter function with , , and $\phi^* = 0.019 \pm 0.001 \
h^3^{-3}-23.0 \leq M - 5 \log h \leq -17.5b_J \approx 20b_J \approx 20\alpha = -0.7\alpha = -1W_{\lambda} = 5\alphaM^* =
-20.03 \pm 0.03 + 5 \log h\alpha = -0.9 \pm 0.1M^* = -20.22 \pm 0.02 + 5 \log h\alpha = -0.3
\pm 0.1$.
(abridged abstract)Comment: 41 pages, including 13 postscript figures, uses AASTEX v4.0 style
files. Important clarification of R-band definition, plus correction of
luminosity densities and updated references. Main conclusions unchanged.
Final version to appear in Ap
Driver vs. manager perceptions of commonly used safety practices in commercial motor vehicle operations
This research investigated the perceptions of Commercial Motor Vehicle Operators and Safety Professionals regarding 35 commonly implemented practices used to improve operating safety. Several differences were found in how drivers of different backgrounds rated various practices, and between the drivers and safety managers. These differences were found to be persistent even when combined with measures of safety performance and experience. Managers tended to overvalue (relative to drivers) practices related to hiring, while drivers tended to overvalue (relative to managers) practices related to company support and reward systems. Motor Carriers, insurers, and regulators could consider areas of agreement with respect to high value practices as actionable for increased investment of resources. At the same time, resources allocated toward areas of low perceived value could be reduced
Safety attitudes and behavioral intentions of municipal waste disposal drivers
The Theory of Planned Behavior was used to study factors useful for predicting Behavioral Intentions to commit unsafe acts while driving for commercial drivers working for municipal waste management operations centers. The Theory of Planned Behavior was found to be moderately effective in predicting behavioral intentions, particularly through the constructs of Attitude and Perceived Control. Driver perceptions of safety climate, self-assessed personal safety performance, risk aversion, and attitudes toward behavioral factors associated with engaging in risky behaviors while operating motor vehicles were studied. Risk aversion and driver perception of their own safety performance were also useful predictors of intention
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