246 research outputs found

    Gender Dissimilarities in Human Capital Transferability of Cuban Immigrants in the US: A Clustering Quantile Regression Coefficients Approach with Consideration of Implications for Sustainability

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    Female participation in the labor market has been increasing over time. Despite the fact that the level of education among women has also increased considerably, the wage gap has not narrowed to the same extent. This dichotomy presents an important challenge that the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals with respect to gender inequities must address. Hispanics constitute the largest minority group in the US, totaling 60.6 million people (18.5% of the total US population in 2020). Cubans make up the third largest group of Hispanic immigrants in the US, representing 5% of workers. This paper analyzes the conditional income distribution of Cuban immigrants in the US using the clustering of effects curves (CEC) technique in a quantile regression coefficients modeling (QRCM) framework to compare the transferability of human capital between women and men. The method uses a flexible quantile regression approach and hierarchical clustering to model the effect of covariates (such as years of education, English proficiency, US citizenship status, and age at time of migration) on hourly earnings. The main conclusion drawn from the QRCM estimations was that being a woman had the strongest negative impact on earnings and was associated with lower wages in all quantiles of the distribution. CEC analysis suggested that educational attainment was included in different clusters for the two groups, which may have indicated that education did not play the same role for men and women in income distribution.The research reported here has been funded by the Econometrics Research Group (Basque Government research grant IT1359-19). It has also been partially funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MCIN, Spain), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI/10.13039/501100011033/) and Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER) “Una manera de hacer Europa” (I+D+i research grant PID2020-112951GB-I00). The funders played no role in the design or implementation of the research reported here, and the analysis and conclusions are the authors’ own

    Outdoor-Indoor Atmospheric Corrosion in a Coastal Wind Farm Located in a Tropical Island

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    Atmospheric corrosion is important to consider for energy production and transmission. Important and valuable information have been accumulated in this subject; however, the application of new knowledge obtained is not completed. In order to contribute to a decrease in economic losses caused by atmospheric corrosion in wind farms, studies toward application of this knowledge should be carried out. One of the most common reasons for the failure of coastal structures and infrastructures is deterioration failure which is the result of structure deterioration and lack of project maintenance. Atmospheric corrosion was evaluated at outdoor and indoor exposure sites located at different distances from the sea in a wind farm region. Carbon and galvanized steel, copper and aluminum specimens were exposed. Main pollutants and atmospheric parameters were measured. Significant differences between outdoor corrosivity determined by dose response functions established on ISO standard respecting direct weight loss evaluation were found. Estimation carried out using dose response functions overestimate corrosivity (excepting copper). Main factors causing outdoor corrosion are different to indoor. Very high outdoor and indoor corrosivity classifications were determined.Atmospheric corrosion is important to consider for energy production and transmission. Important and valuable information have been accumulated in this subject; however, the application of new knowledge obtained is not completed. In order to contribute to a decrease in economic losses caused by atmospheric corrosion in wind farms, studies toward application of this knowledge should be carried out. One of the most common reasons for the failure of coastal structures and infrastructures is deterioration failure which is the result of structure deterioration and lack of project maintenance. Atmospheric corrosion was evaluated at outdoor and indoor exposure sites located at different distances from the sea in a wind farm region. Carbon and galvanized steel, copper and aluminum specimens were exposed. Main pollutants and atmospheric parameters were measured. Significant differences between outdoor corrosivity determined by dose response functions established on ISO standard respecting direct weight loss evaluation were found. Estimation carried out using dose response functions overestimate corrosivity (excepting copper). Main factors causing outdoor corrosion are different to indoor. Very high outdoor and indoor corrosivity classifications were determined

    Application of statistical techniques for comparing Lie algebra algorithms

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    This paper is devoted to study and compare two algebraic algorithms related to the computation of Lie algebras by using statistical techniques. These techniques allow us to decide which of them is more suitable and less costly depending on several variables, like the dimension of the considered algebra

    Human Head Natural Protection Against Electromagnetic Fields

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    In this paper we provide concluding evidence that the human skull acts as a dynamic barrier to electromagnetic fields (EMF) and temperature flow at 1800 MHz. This natural helmet e®ectively and dynamically protects brain tissue against safety-de¯ned threshold temperature increase due to external EMF induction. A half-wavelength dipole antenna has been employed as the EMF source. The human head is modelled by several coronal planes extracted from the Visible Human Project. Results described here have a great importance should thermal e®ects be directly used to derive basic restrictions to EM fields safety limits for human exposure.FUNDACIÓN SENECA. Plan de Ciencia y Tecnología de la Región de Murcia. Código: 05746/PI/07

    Lie theory: applications to problems in Mathematical Finance and Economics

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    This paper is devoted to show and explain some applications of Lie theory to solve some problems in Economics and Mathematical Finance. So we put forward and discuss mathematical aspects and approaches for several economic problems which have been previously considered in the literature. Besides we also show our advances on this topic, mentioning some open problems for future research

    Gain-Reconfigurable Hybrid Metal-Graphene Printed Yagi Antenna for Energy Harvesting Applications

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    This paper presents a hybrid metal-graphene printed Yagi antenna with reconfigurable gain that operates in the 5.5-GHz band. The balun and the driven elements are made of copper, while the directors are made of graphene. The graphene acts as a tunable material in the design. By switching the conductivity of the graphene, it is achieved a similar effect to adding or subtracting directors in the antenna. Hence the gain of the printed Yagi can be easily controlled. This could be of special interest in RF energy harvesting in the design of reconfigurable harvesting elements.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech

    The role of polarization diversity for MIMO systems under rayleigh-fading environments

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    Polarization diversity techniques have not received as much attention as others due to the significant difference in mean signal level between copolarized and cross-polarized branches when one polarization is transmitted. However, multiple- input–multiple-output (MIMO) systems where the multipath fading is only partially correlated could use polarization diversity to provide a high diversity gain. Hence there is a need to fully understand the role of true polarization diversity in such systems. In this letter, progressive (true) polarization diversity performance for 3 3 MIMO systems under Rayleigh-fading environments is evaluated through simulations and measurements. True polarization diversity was found to be as significant as spatial diversity at improving diversity gain, and hence MIMO system capacity.This work was supported in part by Fundación Séneca, the R&D coordinating unit of the Autonomous Region of Murcia (Spain) under project reference 2I05SU0033. The authors wish to thank Bluetest AB for its generous educational discounting

    Tunable dual-band printed tab monopole antennas for wireless communications

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    The advance of communication systems requires new antenna designs to comply with the ever-increasing demands of the wireless market. The antenna designs are being conditioned by miniaturization and migration to new frequencies (IEEE 802.11a/g), while keeping compatibility with other systems poses yet additional constrains. This contribution presents a novel monopole multi-band printed antenna design for WiFi systems, featuring the use of a spur-line filter to obtain dual-frequency operation. Design constrains are discussed, along with simulated and measured resultsThe authors would like to thank Bluetest AB for their generous educational discounting. This research work has been partially funded by The Spanish National R&D Programme under the FIT-330210-2005-2 project

    The influence of efficiency on receive diversity and MIMO capacity for rayleigh-fading channels

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    A previously published guideline for MIMO antenna arrays is refuted. The influence of radiation efficiency on diversity gain and MIMO capacity of wireless communications systems is investigated through simulations and measurements using a reverberation chamber. Integrated antennas on a portable device have efficiencies low enough to disallow typical inter-element correlation assumptions. Both diversity gain and MIMO capacity depend on the number of antennas, SNR and efficiency in a complex way. When the efficiency of antennas is considered, certain system capacity losses are predicted and measured. These losses may be recovered through using more receive elements than commonly recommended or through the addition of a smaller number of more efficient antennas.This work was supported in part by the Fundación Séneca, the R&D unit of the Autonomous Region of Murcia (Spain) under project references TIC-TEC 06/01-0003, 07/02-0005 and 05746/PI/07, and in part by the Spanish National R&D Programme through TEC2007/63470/TCM
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