2,493 research outputs found
The young, the old, and the restless: demographics and business cycle volatility
We investigate the consequences of demographic change for business cycle analysis. We find that changes in the age composition of the labor force account for a significant fraction of the variation in business cycle volatility observed in the U.S. and other G7 economies. During the postwar period, these countries experienced dramatic demographic change, although details regarding extent and timing differ from place to place. Using panel-data methods, we exploit this variation to show that the age composition of the workforce has a large and statistically significant effect on cyclical volatility. We conclude by relating these findings to the recent decline in U.S. business cycle volatility. Using both simple accounting exercises and a quantitative general equilibrium model, we find that demographic change accounts for a significant part of this moderation.Business cycles - Econometric models ; Demography
Reduction of voluntary dehydration during effort in hot environments
During an experimental marching trip the daily positive fluid balance was preserved by providing a wide choice of beverages during the hours of the day. It was found that the beverage most suitable for drinking in large quantities during periods of effort was a cold drink with sweetened (citrus) fruit taste. Carbonated drinks, including beer, but milk also, were found unsuitable for this purpose
Balancing speed and accuracy of polyclonal T cell activation: a role for extracellular feedback
Background: Extracellular feedback is an abundant module of intercellular communication networks, yet a detailed
understanding of its role is still lacking. Here, we study interactions between polyclonal activated T cells that are
mediated by IL-2 extracellular feedback as a model system.
Results: Using mathematical modeling we show that extracellular feedback can give rise to opposite outcomes:
competition or cooperation between interacting T cells, depending on their relative levels of activation.
Furthermore, the outcome of the interaction also depends on the relative timing of activation of the cells. A critical
time window exists after which a cell that has been more strongly activated nevertheless cannot exclude an inferior
competitor.
Conclusions: In a number of experimental studies of polyclonal T-cell systems, outcomes ranging from cooperation
to competition as well as time dependent competition were observed. Our model suggests that extracellular
feedback can contribute to these observed behaviors as it translates quantitative differences in T cellsâ activation
strength and in their relative activation time into qualitatively different outcomes. We propose extracellular
feedback as a general mechanism that can balance speed and accuracy â choosing the most suitable responders
out of a polyclonal population under the clock of an escalating threat
A possible supersymmetric solution to the discrepancy between B -> \phi K_S and B -> \eta' K_S CP asymmetries
We present a possible supersymmetric solution to the discrepancy between the
observed mixing CP asymmetries in B -> \phi K_S and B -> \eta' K_S. We show
that due to the different parity in the final states of these processes, their
supersymmetric contributions from the R-sector have an opposite sign, which
naturally explain the large deviation between S_{\phi K_S} and S_{\eta' K_S}.
We also consider the proposed mechanisms to solve the puzzle of the observed
large branching ratio of B -> \eta' K and study their impact on S_{eta' K_S}.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
On Higgs and sphaleron effects during the leptogenesis era
We discuss the effects of various processes that can be active during the
leptogenesis era, and present the Boltzmann equations that take them into
account appropriately. A non-vanishing Higgs number asymmetry is always
present, enhancing the washout of the lepton asymmetry. This is the main new
effect when leptogenesis takes place at GeV, reducing the final
baryon asymmetry and tightening the leptogenesis bound on the neutrino masses.
If leptogenesis occurs at lower temperatures, electroweak sphalerons partially
transfer the lepton asymmetry to a baryonic one, while Yukawa interactions and
QCD sphalerons partially transfer the asymmetries of the left-handed fields to
the right-handed ones, suppressing the washout processes. Depending on the
specific temperature range in which leptogenesis occurs, the final baryon
asymmetry can be enhanced or suppressed by factors of order 20%--40% with
respect to the case when these effects are altogether ignored.Comment: one reference adde
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