2,267 research outputs found

    From: Chester L. Foy

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    From/To: Foy L. Smith (Chalk\u27s reply filed first)

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    Test report for Pressure Transducer Giannini Controls Corporation part number 461319 NASA drawing number 75M51731-8-2000

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    Environment and function testing of pressure transducer used for hydraulic accumulator pressure indicato

    Skin in the Game: Colorism and the Subtle Operation of Stereotypes in Men’s College Basketball

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    Colorism research often suffers from endogeneity issues related to human capital outcomes and researchers’ inability to compare the effects of skin tone to those of racial classification. Furthermore, colorism research focuses on intraracial differences in skin tone inequality while insufficiently considering skin tone inequality across racial groups. Using data from video broadcasts of the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s annual, single-elimination Men’s Division I Basketball Tournament for the years 2000–2010, we quantitatively examine comments made by announcers about the performance, physical characteristics, and mental characteristics of players across various skin tones. Controlling for objective measures of performance, we find that announcers are more likely to discuss the performance and mental abilities of lighter-skinned players and the physical characteristics of darker-skinned players. We argue that, although the two concepts are related, skin tone is not simply a proxy for racial classification. Rather, skin tone inequality transcends traditional racial boundaries

    Triaxial Acceleration Analysis Applied to the Evaluation of Pavement Riding Qualities

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    Traditionally the riding qualities of a pavement are expressed as some function of localized irregularities in the contour of the pavement surface. This is predicated on the fact that the portion of passenger comfort or discomfort imparted by all features of the pavement surface can not be isolated and determined separately from other influences such as vehicle characteristics or psychological and physiological aspects of the passenger himself. Measurements of riding qualities have dealt almost exclusively with vehicle displacements in the vertical direction only, these having been and still being the most prominent and most amenable to measurement. By this procedure displacements in other directions have been ignored, although their relative influence on riding comfort as determined by comfort research is known to be great. During the past few years certain features of highway construction and use have emphasized surface irregularities that cause significant amounts of combined transverse and longitudinal motion. In response to this developing need for determination of riding qualities on the basis of component motions, an instrument for measuring and recording induced accelerations in the three principal directions was developed and adapted to a passenger vehicle. This paper describes the equipment and its use in evaluating riding qualities of various pavements in Kentucky

    The Shade of a Criminal Record: Colorist, Incarceration, and External Racial Classification

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    Recent high-profile research suggests that social indicators like incarceration influence racial categorization. Yet, this research has largely ignored colorism—intraracial differences in skin tone that matter for stratification outcomes. In two experiments, we address how skin tone interacts with criminal background to produce external racial classification and skin tone attributions. We find no evidence that criminal history affects external racial classification or skin tone attribution. However, we find that skin tone is a strong and consistent predictor of external racial classification and skin tone attribution

    The Shade of a Criminal Record: Colorism, Incarceration, and External Racial Classification

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    Recent high-profile research suggests that social indicators like incarceration influence racial categorization. Yet, this research has largely ignored colorism—intraracial differences in skin tone that matter for stratification outcomes. In two experiments, we address how skin tone interacts with criminal background to produce external racial classification and skin tone attributions. We find no evidence that criminal history affects external racial classification or skin tone attribution. However, we find that skin tone is a strong and consistent predictor of external racial classification and skin tone attribution

    Beyond America: Cross-national Context and the Impact of Religious Versus Secular Organizational Membership on Self-rated Health

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    Studies using data from the United States suggest religious organizational involvement is more beneficial for health than secular organizational involvement. Extending beyond the United States, we assess the relative impacts of religious and secular organizational involvement on self-rated health cross-nationally, accounting for national-level religious context. Analyses of data from 33 predominantly Christian countries from the 2005–2008 World Values Survey reveal that active membership in religious organizations is positively associated with self-rated health. This association’s magnitude is higher than the magnitude of associations between many memberships in secular organizations and health. The positive association between involvement in religious organization and self-rated health is moderated by national levels of religious pluralism such that positive associations are primarily found in nations high in religious diversity. These results replicated in a sample of 21 majority-Christian nations from the 2010–2014 World Values Survey

    Information requirements for guidance and control systems

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    Control or guidance system performance dependency on information handling by subsystem
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