4,842 research outputs found

    Joseph R. Quinn

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    Policy Reform in the Tobacco Industry: Producers Adapt to a Changing Market

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    The Fair and Equitable Tobacco Reform Act of 2004 eliminated tobacco quotas and tobacco price supports and allowed producers to plant any amount or type of tobacco regardless of geographic location. The authors found that flue-cured tobacco producers made greater adjustments to their operations after the buyout than did burley tobacco producers. Flue-cured tobacco producers were more likely to increase tobacco acres per farm, pushing up the tobacco acreage per farm at a faster rate compared with burley tobacco producers. Flue-cured producers also were more likely to invest in their tobacco enterprises and invested more per farm after 2004. As a result of increased acreage, tobacco operations became more sensitive to changes in labor costs. With over 75 percent of tobacco farms using hired or contract labor in 2008, the availability and cost of workers have become increasingly important to tobacco producers. This report is based on data collected from the tobacco version of the 2008 Agricultural Resource Management Survey (ARMS), which focused on U.S. producers of burley and flue-cure tobacco in 2008 and how their tobacco operations have changed since 2000 and 2004.Tobacco, structural change, farm adjustments, adaptations, Agricultural Resources Management Survey (ARMS) Acknowledgments, Agricultural and Food Policy, Crop Production/Industries, Farm Management,

    Predicting the Effects of Longitudinal Variables on Cost Schedule Performance

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    Determining accurate cost and schedule is a crucial step to planning acquisition expenditures but history has shown that estimates are routinely low. Several researchers have attempted to forecast cost and schedule growth; we pick up this stream of research with a new approach. Our data collection and analysis focused on bringing in new data sources and added longitudinal variables to account for changes that took place over time. We assessed cost and schedule parameters for 37 major acquisition programs between Milestones II and III, resulting in 172 input variables and 5 regression models, 2 for schedule slippage and 3 for cost growth. All five models passed statistical scrutiny and exhibited an Adjusted r2 in excess of 0.80. The primary discriminator was the inclusion of strictly qualitative variables, taken from Selected Acquisition Report narratives and change justifications. We called these soft variables and coded them on a scale of 1 to 5 in the categories of funding problems, political problems, technical challenges, and contractor cost growth. Models with and without soft variables are presented to demonstrate their relative benefit. Finally, implications and implementation examples provide users a path to what-if analysis and decision-making

    Order automorphisms on the lattice of residuated maps of some special nondistributive lattices.

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    The residuated maps from a lattice L to itself form their own lattice, which we denote Res(L). In this dissertation, we explore the order automorphisms on the lattice Res(L) where L is a finite nondistributive lattice. It is known that left and right composition of f ∈ Res(L) with automorphisms of L yields an order automorphism of Res(L). It begs the question, then, if all order automorphisms of Res(L) can be classified as such

    What do gas-rich galaxies actually tell us about modified Newtonian dynamics?

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    It has recently been claimed that measurements of the baryonic Tully-Fisher relation (BTFR), a power-law relationship between the observed baryonic masses and outer rotation velocities of galaxies, support the predictions of modified Newtonian dynamics for the slope and scatter in the relation, while challenging the cold dark matter (CDM) paradigm. We investigate these claims, and find that: 1) the scatter in the data used to determine the BTFR is in conflict with observational uncertainties on the data; 2) these data do not make strong distinctions regarding the best-fit BTFR parameters; 3) the literature contains a wide variety of measurements of the BTFR, many of which are discrepant with the recent results; and 4) the claimed CDM "prediction" for the BTFR is a gross oversimplification of the complex galaxy-scale physics involved. We conclude that the BTFR is currently untrustworthy as a test of CDM.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; minor revisions to match published versio

    Splenunculi mimicking metastases in a patient with locally advanced prostate cancer

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    Published online: November 24, 2016A 61-year-old man with locally advanced prostate cancer was found to have multiple solid intra-abdominal solid lesions during staging investigations. While some were in the pelvis, they were not located in the common landing sites for prostate cancer metastases, and his prostate specific antigen was not significantly elevated to suggest a high burden of metastatic disease. He reported a history of a blunt abdominal trauma due to a motor vehicle accident more than forty years ago which had been conservatively managed. His staging imaging revealed a lack of a discrete spleen in his left upper abdomen and this raised the suspicion that these solid lesions may represent ectopic splenic tissue. Imaging with nuclear medicine scintigraphy confirmed the lesions in his upper abdomen and pelvis to be splenunculi. He proceeded with a combination of androgen deprivation therapy and external beam radiotherapy for locally advanced, non-metastatic prostate cancer. Although it has been described in patients with low risk prostate cancer, this is the first case report of splenunculi mimicking metastases in a patient with locally advanced prostate cancer.Darren Foreman, Sophie A Plagaki

    Urban growth drivers in a Europe of sticky people and implicit boundaries

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    We investigate urban GDP pc growth across the EU12 using data for functionally defined cities - rather than administrative regions. We test hypotheses on the role of human capital, EU integration and fragmentation of urban government and explore spatial dependence and mechanisms of spatial interaction. Results are acceptable on standard econometric tests without measures of spatial interaction but there is spatial dependence. If variables reflecting spatial adjustment are included, they are statistically significant and eliminate spatial dependence. Not only do the results now provide consistent estimates of parameters, they also support relevant theoretical insights and show national borders are still significant barriers to economic adjustment. People in Europe are sticky so it is unreasonable to assume spatial disparities will disappear. Our findings also imply that cities in Europe form national rather than a single continental system

    Positional Verbs in Colonial Valley Zapotec

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    This paper describes the system of positional verbs (e.g., ‘be standing’ and ‘be lying’) in Colonial Valley Zapotec (CVZ), a historical form of Valley Zapotec preserved in archival documents written during the Mexican colonial period. We provide data showing that positional verbs in CVZ have unique morphological properties and participate in a defined set of syntactic constructions, showing that positional verbs formed a formal class of verbs in Valley Zapotec as early as the mid-1500s. This work contributes to the typological literature on positional verbs, demonstrating the type of morphosyntactic work that can be done with a corpus of CVZ texts, and contributes to our understanding of the structure and development of the modern Zapotec positional verb system with implications for the larger Zapotec locative system
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