1,138 research outputs found

    Earnings Mobility in Argentina, Mexico, and Venezuela: Testing the Divergence of Earnings and the Symmetry of Mobility Hypotheses

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    This paper examines changes in individual earnings during positive and negative growth periods in three Latin American economies: Argentina, Mexico, and Venezuela. We ask whether those individuals who start in the best economic position are those who experience the largest earnings gains or the smallest earnings losses; this is the “divergent mobility” hypothesis. We also compare periods of positive economic growth with those of negative economic growth, asking whether those groups of individuals that experience large positive earnings gains when the economy is growing are the same as those that experience large earnings losses when the economy is contracting; this is the “symmetry of mobility” hypothesis. We find very occasional support for the divergent mobility hypothesis in scattered years in the cases of Mexico and Venezuela, and no support at all in the case of Argentina. Rather, earnings mobility is most frequently convergent or neutral in all three countries. As for the symmetry of mobility hypothesis, we find that it is rejected in most cases; rather, those groups that gain the most when the economy is growing are also the ones that gain the most when the economy is contracting. Furthermore, we explain how the absence of divergence is compatible with rising inequality in the countries under study

    Income Mobility in Latin America

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    [Excerpt] In the last decades Latin American countries have experienced substantial macroeconomic instability. While the region as a whole experienced economic growth during most of the 1990’s and 2000’s, there were also years of stagnation as well as economic decline

    Effects of heating menstrua, spore age, and suspension preparation on the heat activation of Bacillus coagulans spores.

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    This research bulletin reports on Department of Horticulture research project 434, Thermal Activation of Bacterial Spores in Processed Foods--P. [2].Digitized 2007 AES.Includes bibliographical references (pages 11-12)

    Effects of Odium lactis on thermal activation and recovery of Bacillus coagulans spores.

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    This research bulletin reports on Department of Horticulture research project 434, Thermal Activation of Bacterial spores in Processed Foods--P. [2].Digitized 2007 AES.Includes bibliographical references (page 10)

    The 2017 ACC/AHA Hypertension Guidelines: Should they have included proven nonpharmacological blood pressure‐lowering strategies such as Transcendental Meditation?

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    Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/148410/1/jch13488_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/148410/2/jch13488.pd

    Floxed-Cassette Allelic Exchange Mutagenesis Enables Markerless Gene Deletion in \u3cem\u3eChlamydia trachomatis\u3c/em\u3e and Can Reverse Cassette-Induced Polar Effects

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    As obligate intracellular bacteria, Chlamydia spp. have evolved numerous, likely intricate, mechanisms to create and maintain a privileged intracellular niche. Recent progress in elucidating and characterizing these processes has been bolstered by the development of techniques enabling basic genetic tractability. Florescence-reported allelic exchange mutagenesis (FRAEM) couples chromosomal gene deletion with the insertion of a selection cassette encoding antibiotic resistance and green fluorescent protein (GFP). Similar to other bacteria, many chlamydial genes exist within polycistronic operons, raising the possibility of polar effects mediated by insertion cassettes. Indeed, FRAEM-mediated deletion of Chlamydia trachomatis tmeA negatively impacts the expression of tmeB. We have adapted FRAEM technology by employing a gfp-bla cassette flanked by loxP sites. Conditional expression of Cre recombinase in Chlamydia tmeA containing a floxed cassette resulted in deletion of the marker and restoration of tmeB expression

    Ariel - Volume 5 Number 2

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    Editors Mark Dembert J.D. Kanofsky Entertainment Editor Robert Breckenridge Gary Kaskey Overseas Editor Mike Sinason Photographer Scott Kastner Staff Ken Jaffe Bob Sklaroff Joseph Sassani Janet Weis

    Ray Tracing on Topographic Rossby Waves

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    Topographic Rossby Waves (TRWs) have been identified with the largest variability in deep current meter records along the continental slope in the Mid-Atlantic Bight (MAB). Ray tracing theory is applied to TRWs using the real bottom topography of the MAB and the observed stratification. The dispersion relation for TRWs is derived and various wavenumber limits are discussed. A computational method for tracing the waves is presented, including the necessity of smoothing the bathymetry. In the examples shown, TRW with periods of 24-48 days generally propagate southwestward, changing their wavelengths from 400 to 100 kilometers in response to the change in bottom slope. TRW paths are shown that connect from the SYNOP Central Array near 68oW to the SYNOP Inlet Array near Cape Hatteras

    Critical Issues for Cu(InGa)Se2 Solar Cells on Flexible Polymer Web

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    Elemental in-line evaporation on glass substrates has been a viable process for the large-area manufacture of CuInSe2-based photovoltaics, with module efficiencies as high as 12.7% [1]. However, lightweight, flexible CuInSe2-based modules are attractive in a number of applications, such as space power sources. In addition, flexible substrates have an inherent advantage in manufacturability in that they can be deposited in a roll-to-roll configuration allowing continuous, high yield, and ultimately lower cost production. As a result, high-temperature polymers have been used as substrates in depositing CuInSe2 films [2]. Recently, efficiency of 14.1% has been reported for a Cu(InGa)Se2-based solar cell on a polyimide substrate [3]. Both metal foil and polymer webs have been used as substrates for Cu(InGa)Se2-based photovoltaics in a roll-to-roll configuration with reasonable success [4,5]. Both of these substrates do not allow, readily, the incorporation of Na into the Cu(InGa)Se2 film which is necessary for high efficiency devices [3]. In addition, polymer substrates, can not be used at temperatures that are optimum for Cu(InGa)Se2 deposition. However, unlike metal foils, they are electrically insulating, simplifying monolithically-integrated module fabrication and are not a source of impurities diffusing into the growing film. The Institute of Energy Conversion (IEC) has modified its in-line evaporation system [6] from deposition onto glass substrates to roll-to-roll deposition onto polyimide (PI) film in order to investigate key issues in the deposition of large-area Cu(InGa)Se2 films on flexible polymer substrates. This transition presented unexpected challenges that had to be resolved. In this paper, two major problems, spitting from the Cu source and the cracking of Mo back contact film, will be discussed and the solution to each will be presented
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