1,870 research outputs found

    Social media, social capital, and seniors: The impact of Facebook on bonding and bridging social capital of individuals over 65.

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    Online social networks may be important avenues for building and maintaining social capital as adult’s age. However, fewstudies have explicitly examined the role online communities play in the lives of seniors. In this exploratory study, U.S.seniors were interviewed to assess the impact of Facebook on social capital. Interpretive thematic analysis reveals Facebookfacilitates connections to loved ones and may indirectly facilitate bonding social capital. Awareness generated via Facebookoften lead to the sharing and receipt of emotional support via other channels. As such, Facebook acted as a catalyst forincreasing social capital. The implication of “awareness” as a new dimension of social capital theory is discussed.Additionally, Facebook was found to have potential negative impacts on seniors’ current relationships due to open access topersonal information. Finally, common concerns related to privacy, comfort with technology, and inappropriate content wererevealed

    Narrowing the Innovation Gap: Factors Influencing Outcomes of Industry-University Collaborations

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    Universities have played a continued role in facilitating and enhancing the innovative potential of U.S. companies. Key tothese relationships is the transfer of knowledge both from university to industry as well as from industry to university. But,few researchers have explored how different relationships necessitate specific cultural orientations, absorptive capacityabilities, and management tasks. As industry and universities engage in relationships designed to accelerate innovation it iscritical to understand the factors that impact the outcomes of these relationships. Based on literature related to openinnovation and industry-university relationships, an integrative explanatory theoretical framework is proposed for identifyingkey factors shown to play a role in the success of industry-university relationships. Applying data from a study of knowledgeexchange between university and industry partners, the applicability of the framework in identifying key factors related tosuccessful outcomes is illustrated

    Effects of “emotional text” on Online Customer Service Chat

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    With the increasing popularity of online shopping, interests in online customer service chat used on e-commerce websites has grown significantly. As one type of computer-mediated communication (CMC), online customer service chat is mainly text-based communication. While CMC may not allow us to hone in on a facial expression or hand gesture, there are subtle cues to perception of character traits embedded within our text communications. This study examined the effects of “emotional text” (defined as use of emoticons, capitalization, exclamation points, and “lol”) on perceptions of service agents’ socialibility and reliability. Results demonstrated that emotional text does have an impact on customers’ perceptions of service agents and generally in a positive direction. Service agents who use emotional text during an online service encounter were perceived to be more social. However, customers’ did not report any differences in terms of perception of reliability. Further, emotional response was demonstrated to be a significant mediator that impacts the relationship between emotional text and perception of character traits

    Accelerated cosmological expansion due to a scalar field whose potential has a positive lower bound

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    In many cases a nonlinear scalar field with potential VV can lead to accelerated expansion in cosmological models. This paper contains mathematical results on this subject for homogeneous spacetimes. It is shown that, under the assumption that VV has a strictly positive minimum, Wald's theorem on spacetimes with positive cosmological constant can be generalized to a wide class of potentials. In some cases detailed information on late-time asymptotics is obtained. Results on the behaviour in the past time direction are also presented.Comment: 16 page

    Operator product expansion of higher rank Wilson loops from D-branes and matrix models

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    In this paper we study correlation functions of circular Wilson loops in higher dimensional representations with chiral primary operators of N=4 super Yang-Mills theory. This is done using the recently established relation between higher rank Wilson loops in gauge theory and D-branes with electric fluxes in supergravity. We verify our results with a matrix model computation, finding perfect agreement in both the symmetric and the antisymmetric case.Comment: 28 pages, latex; v2: minor misprints corrected, references adde

    A Wide Field Survey of Satellite Galaxies around the Spiral Galaxy M106

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    We present a wide field survey of satellite galaxies in M106 (NGC 4258) covering a 1.7\degr \times 2\degr field around M106 using Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope/MegaCam. We find 16 satellite galaxy candidates of M106. Eight of these galaxies are found to be dwarf galaxies that are much smaller and fainter than the remaining galaxies. Four of these galaxies are new findings. Surface brightness profiles of 15 out of 16 satellite galaxies can be represented well by an exponential disk profile with varying scale length. We derive the surface number density distribution of these satellite galaxies. The central number density profile (d <100<100 kpc) is well fitted by a power-law with a power index of 2.1±0.5-2.1\pm0.5, similar to the expected power index of isothermal distribution. The luminosity function of these satellites is represented well by the Schechter function with a faint end slope of 1.190.06+0.03-1.19^{+0.03}_{-0.06}. Integrated photometric properties (total luminosity, total colour, and disk scale length) and the spatial distribution of these satellite galaxies are found to be roughly similar to those of the Milky Way and M31.Comment: Accepted by MNRA

    Ferric Leghemoglobin in Plant-Attached Leguminous Nodules

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    Interactions in vivo between the Vif protein of HIV-1 and the precursor (Pr55GAG) of the virion nucleocapsid proteins

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    The abnormality of viral core structure seen in vif-defective HIV-1 grown in PBMCs has suggested a role for Vif in viral morphogenesis. Using an in vivo mammalian two-hybrid assay, the interaction between Vif and the precursor (Pr55GAG) of the virion nucleocapsid proteins has been analysed. This revealed the amino-terminal (aa 1–22) and central (aa 70–100) regions of Vif to be essential for its interaction with Pr55GAG, but deletion of the carboxy-terminal (aa 158–192) region of the protein had only a minor effect on its interaction. Initial deletion studies carried out on Pr55GAG showed that a 35-amino-acid region of the protein bridging the MA(p17)–CA(p24) junction was essential for its ability to interact with Vif. Site-directed mutagenesis of a conserved tryptophan (Trp21) near the amino terminus of Vif showed it to be important for the interaction with Pr55GAG. By contrast, mutagenesis of the highly conserved YLAL residues forming part of the BC-box motif, shown to be important in Vif promoting degradation of APOBEC3G/3F, had little or no effect on the Vif–Pr55GAG interaction

    Semiclassical Analysis of M2-brane in AdS_4 x S^7 / Z_k

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    We start from the classical action describing a single M2-brane on AdS_4 x S^7/ Z_k and consider semiclassical fluctuaitions around a static, 1/2 BPS configuration whose shape is AdS_2 x S^1. The internal manifold S^7/ Z_k is described as a U(1) fibration over CP^3 and the static configuration is wrapped on the U(1) fiber. Then the configuration is reduced to an AdS_2 world-sheet of type IIA string on AdS_4 x CP^3 through the Kaluza-Klein reduction on the S^1. It is shown that the fluctuations form an infinite set of N=1 supermultiplets on AdS_2, for k=1,2. The set is invariant under SO(8) which may be consistent with N=8 supersymmetry on AdS_2. We discuss the behavior of the fluctuations around the boundary of AdS_2 and its relation to deformations of Wilson loop operator.Comment: 27 pages, v2: references added, v3: major revision including the clarification of k=2 case, references added, version to appear in JHE

    Spontaneous symmetry breaking in a two-lane model for bidirectional overtaking traffic

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    First we consider a unidirectional flux \omega_bar of vehicles each of which is characterized by its `natural' velocity v drawn from a distribution P(v). The traffic flow is modeled as a collection of straight `world lines' in the time-space plane, with overtaking events represented by a fixed queuing time tau imposed on the overtaking vehicle. This geometrical model exhibits platoon formation and allows, among many other things, for the calculation of the effective average velocity w=\phi(v) of a vehicle of natural velocity v. Secondly, we extend the model to two opposite lanes, A and B. We argue that the queuing time \tau in one lane is determined by the traffic density in the opposite lane. On the basis of reasonable additional assumptions we establish a set of equations that couple the two lanes and can be solved numerically. It appears that above a critical value \omega_bar_c of the control parameter \omega_bar the symmetry between the lanes is spontaneously broken: there is a slow lane where long platoons form behind the slowest vehicles, and a fast lane where overtaking is easy due to the wide spacing between the platoons in the opposite direction. A variant of the model is studied in which the spatial vehicle density \rho_bar rather than the flux \omega_bar is the control parameter. Unequal fluxes \omega_bar_A and \omega_bar_B in the two lanes are also considered. The symmetry breaking phenomenon exhibited by this model, even though no doubt hard to observe in pure form in real-life traffic, nevertheless indicates a tendency of such traffic.Comment: 50 pages, 16 figures; extra references adde
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