606 research outputs found
Techno-organizational change and skill formation: Evidence from Italian manufacturing firms
This paper emphasizes the role of labour demand as a determinant of working skill formation. In particular, we study the relationship between techno-organizational innovation and skill formation from a labour demand perspective. In this respect, we investigate if activities aimed at increasing the international commitment and the technological and organizational change do have an effect on both the propensity of firms to train and on the intensity of training. On this purpose, by relying on a job-competition-like framework about the operation of the labour market in allocating skills, we first estimate which factors do affect the propensity of firms to invest in work-based training activities, and, secondly, we estimate if the same factors do also play a role in determining the degree of intensity of such a training activity. Relying on a new dataset on Italian manufacturing firms active over the period 2001-2006, we first estimate a probit model on the probability for a firm to train; then we employ a Heckman two-stage selection model on the share of trainees with which we can control for selectivity bias. Our results point to a positive and significant effect of both firms’ characteristics, like size, specialization and capital intensity, and firms' techno-organisational activities on both training incidence and on training intensity. A particularly significant role, in this respect, is played by the combination of process innovation and the adoption of new organizational practices.human capital, international commitment, labour demand, organizational change, skill, technological innovation, work-based training
Organizational Change, Skill Formation, Human Capital Measurement: Evidence From Italian Manufacturing Firms
Basing on a job competition approach, in this paper we provide a labour demand-oriented measure of human
capital as defined by the amount of specific skills a firm generates through work-based training (WBT)
activities.
By merging three rich firm-level datasets, we estimate the impact of a set of variables that are supposed to affect
both the propensity to invest in WBT and the intensity of training within the Italian manufacturing industry over
the period 2001-2005.The estimates show that the effects of innovation on WBT is higher when the introduction
of new technologies is supported by organizational innovations. When looking at the nature of WBT, we
investigate the different determinants of the firms' propensity to provide both in-house and outside training.
Finally, we estimate training intensity in terms, respectively, of the number of training activities provided,
private and total training costs and the share of trainees
Testing Core Membership in Public Goods Economies
This paper develops a recent line of economic theory seeking to understand
public goods economies using methods of topological analysis. Our first main
result is a very clean characterization of the economy's core (the standard
solution concept in public goods). Specifically, we prove that a point is in
the core iff it is Pareto efficient, individually rational, and the set of
points it dominates is path connected.
While this structural theorem has a few interesting implications in economic
theory, the main focus of the second part of this paper is on a particular
algorithmic application that demonstrates its utility. Since the 1960s,
economists have looked for an efficient computational process that decides
whether or not a given point is in the core. All known algorithms so far run in
exponential time (except in some artificially restricted settings). By heavily
exploiting our new structure, we propose a new algorithm for testing core
membership whose computational bottleneck is the solution of convex
optimization problems on the utility function governing the economy. It is
fairly natural to assume that convex optimization should be feasible, as it is
needed even for very basic economic computational tasks such as testing Pareto
efficiency. Nevertheless, even without this assumption, our work implies for
the first time that core membership can be efficiently tested on (e.g.) utility
functions that admit "nice" analytic expressions, or that appropriately defined
-approximate versions of the problem are tractable (by using
modern black-box -approximate convex optimization algorithms).Comment: To appear in ICALP 201
Space Flight Effects on Antioxidant Molecules in Dry Tardigrades: The TARDIKISS Experiment
The TARDIKISS (Tardigrades in Space) experiment was part of the Biokon in Space (BIOKIS) payload, a set of multidisciplinary experiments performed during the DAMA (Dark Matter) mission organized by Italian Space Agency and Italian Air Force in 2011. This mission supported the execution of experiments in short duration (16 days) taking the advantage of the microgravity environment on board of the Space Shuttle Endeavour (its last mission STS-134) docked to the International Space Station. TARDIKISS was composed of three sample sets: one flight sample and two ground control samples. These samples provided the biological material used to test as space stressors, including microgravity, affected animal survivability, life cycle, DNA integrity, and pathways of molecules working as antioxidants. In this paper we compared the molecular pathways of some antioxidant molecules, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances, and fatty acid composition between flight and control samples in two tardigrade species, namely, Paramacrobiotus richtersi and Ramazzottius oberhaeuseri. In both species, the activities of ROS scavenging enzymes, the total content of glutathione, and the fatty acids composition between flight and control samples showed few significant differences. TARDIKISS experiment, together with a previous space experiment (TARSE), further confirms that both desiccated and hydrated tardigrades represent useful animal tool for space research
Evolution of egg deposition strategies, exaptations of exuvia, and thanatochresis in tardigrades
The cuticle is the tardigrade exoskeleton that, limiting animal growth, needs to be periodically shed. New cuticles must be
formed (within the old ones) before getting rid of the obsolete exoskeletons at the end of moulting process. After ecdysis
(the release of the old cuticle), the exuvia has different destinies according to tardigrade evolutionary lines. In the marine
tardigrades (Heterotardigrada), the exuvia is lost and useless, while in the other taxa, it acquires interesting uses to be considered
exaptations, since the cuticle previously shaped by natural selection for a function (i.e. as exoskeleton) is coopted
for new adaptive scopes. These are related to egg deposition, parental care, mating, and diapause. Egg deposition within
the exuvia is one of the three different egg deposition strategies developed by tardigrades: smooth eggs can be laid freely or
within the exuvia, while ornamented eggs are laid freely. A new scenario for the evolution of such egg deposition strategies
is characterised by five schematic steps: smooth eggs laid freely (ancestral state), synchronization of egg maturation with
moulting (developed in tardigrade ancestor in sea), use of the exuvia for oviposition (for enhanced mechanical and physiological
egg protection), acquisition of egg ornamentation, and ornamented eggs laid freely (related to a risk-spreading strategy).
An interesting thanatochresis case related to the release of free eggs in crustaceans exuviae, convergently developed in two
distant taxa of eu- and heterotardigrades, is presented and discussed
Preoccupano le infestazioni della cimice asiatica
2015-Anno caldo delle cimici. Nel corso dell’estate le infestazioni di Halyomorpha halys hanno investito un territorio sempre più ampio, con gravi percentuali di danno su numerose colture. A esse si sono sovrapposti gli attacchi di altri pentatomidi, accomunati anch’essi dalla caratteristica di pungere e deprezzare i frutti. Il malessere degli agricoltori è crescente e la situazione in alcuni contesti ha assunto le dimensioni di un’autentica emergenza
Actual checklist of Tardigrada species
More than one thousand Tardigrada species were included in the published checklist (Guidetti, R. & Bertolani, R. 2005. Tardigrade taxonomy: an updated check list of the taxa and a list of characters for their identification. Zootaxa, 845, 1–46.) plus the additions and corrections to this checklist (Degma, P. & Guidetti, R. 2007. Notes to the current checklist of Tardigrada. Zootaxa, 1579, 41–53.). For practical reasons, we have joined these two papers (without comments added to particular taxa as well as without references published in these papers) into an accurate combined version of the checklists. We incorporated all taxonomical novelties in the current edition of the Checklist even if they were published just online. Then, following the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, we corrected the year of a taxon description according to its print edition. This checklist is free for all users, but utilization of it requires the citation of the two original papers. This checklist is the platform for occasional upgrades (date of latest upgrade is in the title). The changings respect to the previous version of the checklist have yellow background.
If you also use these changes, please also cite this checklist (please also cite this checklist (Degma, P. & Guidetti, R. Actual checklist of Tardigrada species. DOI: 10.25431/11380_1178608. Accessed date).
Please write us if you find any mistake or missing data in this checklist. Your help in its improvement will be acknowledged
Halyomorpha halys in Emilia, prime risposte dal monitoraggio
OSSERVAZIONI IN CAMPO CONDOTTE NEL 2013-2014. Dopo la sua comparsa in Italia, accertata nel 2012, è stato attivato nella zona di ritrovamento un programma di monitoraggio teso a studiare l’insetto e il suo comportamento nell’ambiente. La specie desta maggiori preoccupazioni nel settore frutticolo, dove il danno rappresentato dalle tipiche deformazioni può giungere al 100
Halyomorpha halys in Italy: first results of field monitoring in fruit orchards
The invasive pest Brown Marmorated Stink Bug (BMSB) Halyomorpha halys (Heteroptera, Pentatomidae) was detected for the first time in Italy in September 2012 in Modena province (Northern Italy) during an insect collection for educational purposes. A survey performed in 2013 allowed to detect its presence in Emilia Romagna, Lombardy and Piedmont regions. In 2014, in the provinces of Modena, Reggio Emilia and Bologna a periodical active field monitoring was performed using tree beating, sweep-net and visual observations in selected orchards and vineyards, recording numbers of BMSB adults and nymphs, and of other Heteroptera. Besides, fruit injury and crop loss were recorded at harvest. Partial results from field data obtained between April and July 2014 are presented, indicating that BMSB is already becoming an important pest of fruit orchards and that special attention should be deserved to monitor its spread all over the region and the whole Italian country
- …
