1,940 research outputs found

    An Assessment Of A Practical Experience Requirement For Undergraduate Business Majors

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    Approximately five years ago, the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor added a unique, practical work experience requirement to the customary graduation requirements for an undergraduate business degree.  This paper examines the perceived value of this requirement from the perspective of the students (now alumni) who have been subject to the requirement and the full-time faculty who advise undergraduates. 90% of the responding alumni believe that this practical requirement is a good idea, has been valuable to them and should be enhanced and continued

    The relative age effect in European elite soccer: A practical guide to Poisson regression modelling

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    <div><p>Many disciplines of scholarship are interested in the Relative Age Effect (RAE), whereby age-banding confers advantages on older members of the cohort over younger ones. Most research does not test this relationship in a manner consistent with theory (which requires a decline in frequency across the cohort year), instead resorting to non-parametric, non-directional approaches. In this article, the authors address this disconnect, provide an overview of the benefits associated with Poisson regression modelling, and two managerially useful measures for quantifying RAE bias, namely the Indices of Discrimination and Wastage. In a tutorial-like exposition, applications and extensions of this approach are illustrated using data on professional soccer players competing in the top two tiers of the “Big Five” European football leagues in the search to identify paragon clubs, leagues, and countries from which others may learn to mitigate this form of age-discrimination in the talent identification process. As with OLS regression, Poisson regression may include more than one independent variable. In this way we test competing explanations of RAE; control for unwanted sources of covariation; model interaction effects (that different clubs and countries may not all be subject to RAE to the same degree); and test for non-monotonic versions of RAE suggested in the literature.</p></div

    A Multicriteria Assessment of Forage or Concentrate-Based Finishing Diets for Temperate Pasture-Based Suckler Beef Production Systems

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    This study evaluated the effect of contrasting ‘finishing’ diets on animal performance, meat nutritional value, land use, food-feed competition, farm economics and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in temperate pasture-based suckler weanling-to-steer beef systems. Post-weaning, eight-month-old, spring-born, late-maturing breed steers (333 kg) were assigned to one of three systems: (1) Grass silage + 1.2 kg concentrate DM (148 days), followed by pasture (123 days) and finished on ad libitum concentrates (120 days) - slaughter age, 21 months (GRAIN); (2) as per (1) but pasture (196 days) and finished on grass silage ad libitum + 3.5 kg concentrate DM (124 days) - slaughter age, 24 months (SIL+GRAIN); and (3) grass silage-only (148 days), pasture (196 days), silage-only (140 days) and finished on pasture (97 days) - slaughter age, 28 months (FORAGE). The mean target carcass weight was 390 kg for each system. Data generated was used to parameterise a farm-level beef systems model. Measured concentrate DM intake was 1187, 606 and 0 kg/head, and average daily gain was 0.83, 0.72 and 0.62 kg for GRAIN, SIL+GRAIN and FORAGE, respectively. Direct (pasture) land use was lowest for GRAIN. FORAGE was more profitable and was the only net producer of human edible protein and energy/ha. GRAIN produced the lowest GHG emissions per animal and meat essential amino acid concentration. FORAGE was more favourable for GHG emissions per kg of net (produced vs. consumed) production of human edible protein. Muscle amino acid and saturated fatty acid concentrations did not differ between the production systems, but FORAGE had the highest muscle concentration of omega-3 poly-unsaturated fatty acids. Differences in muscle mineral concentration were small. In conclusion, there are inverse relationships between food-feed competition, land-use, economics and GHG emissions per unit of product among different systems

    Preclinical/subclinical rheumatoid arthritis-associated interstitial lung disease: misleading terms with potentially deleterious consequences

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    Interstitial lung disease (ILD) is a leading cause of mortality in patients with rheumatic diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis. The 5-year mortality rate is twice as high in patients with rheumatoid arthritis-associated ILD than in patients with rheumatoid arthritis without ILD. Moreover, a report showed that mortality rates in patients with disease codes for rheumatoid arthritis-associated ILD remained unchanged from 2005–18, even though the overall rheumatoid arthritis mortality rate declined during this time period. Despite the evidence that ILD contributes to premature death in rheumatoid arthritis, screening for ILD in patients with rheumatoid arthritis is not routinely performed in clinical practice and numerous questions remain regarding the management of rheumatoid arthritis-associated ILD

    Social Imaginaries in Debate

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    A collaborative article by the Editorial Collective of Social Imaginaries. Investigations into social imaginaries have burgeoned in recent years. From ‘the capitalist imaginary’ to the ‘democratic imaginary’, from the ‘ecological imaginary’ to ‘the global imaginary’ – and beyond – the social imaginaries field has expanded across disciplines and beyond the academy. The recent debates on social imaginaries and potential new imaginaries reveal a recognisable field and paradigm-in-the-making. We argue that Castoriadis, Ricoeur, and Taylor have articulated the most important theoretical frameworks for understanding social imaginaries, although the field as a whole remains heterogeneous. We further argue that the notion of social imaginaries draws on the modern understanding of the imagination as authentically creative. We contend that an elaboration of social imaginaries involves a significant, qualitative shift in the understanding of societies as collectively and politically-instituted formations that are irreducible to inter-subjectivity or systemic logics. After marking out the contours of the field and recounting a philosophical history of the imagination, the essay turns to debates on social imaginaries in more concrete contexts, specifically political-economic imaginaries, the ecological imaginary, multiple modernities and their inter-civilisational encounters. The social imaginaries field imparts powerful messages for the human sciences and wider publics. In particular, social imaginaries hold significant implications for ontological, phenomenological and philosophical anthropological questions; for the cultural, social, and political horizons of contemporary worlds; and for ecological and economic phenomena. The essay concludes with the argument that social imaginaries as a paradigm-in-the-making offers valuable means by which movements towards social change can be elucidated as well providing an open horizon for the critiques of existing social practice

    Getting It on Record: Issues and Strategies for Ethnographic Practice in Recording Studios

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    The recording studio has been somewhat neglected as a site for ethnographic fieldwork in the field of ethno-musicology and, moreover, the majority of published studies tend to overlook the specific concerns faced by the researcher within these contexts. Music recording studios can be places of creativity, artistry, and collaboration, but they often also involve challenging, intimidating, and fractious relations. Given that recording studios are, first and foremost, concerned with documenting musicians’ performances, we discuss the concerns of getting studio interactions “on record” in terms of access, social relations, and methods of data collection. This article reflects on some of the issues we faced when conducting our fieldwork within British music recording facilities and makes suggestions based on strategies that we employed to address these issues
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