419 research outputs found
Do investments in human capital lead to employee share ownership? Evidence from French establishments.
Investments in human capital can create a hold-up problem whereby both employers and employees exploit the bargaining weaknesses of the other. Employee share ownership (ESO) can mitigate this hold-up problem because it can align interests, develop loyalty, signal good-will and lock in employees. Previous studies have shown positive relationships between company investments in human capital and the use of ESO consistent with this argument but have been unable to identify the direction of causality. Using panel data from the French REPONSE survey, the findings indicate that significant and continuous investments in human capital take place prior to the implementation of ESO
Do investments in human capital lead to employee share ownership? Evidence from French establishments
Investments in human capital can create a hold-up problem whereby both employers and employees exploit the bargaining weaknesses of the other. Employee share ownership (ESO) can mitigate this hold-up problem because it can align interests, develop loyalty, signal good-will and lock in employees. Previous studies have shown positive relationships between company investments in human capital and the use of ESO consistent with this argument but have been unable to identify the direction of causality. Using panel data from the French REPONSE survey, the findings indicate that significant and continuous investments in human capital take place prior to the implementation of ESO
Clostridioides difficile Infection, Still a Long Way to Go.
Clostridioides difficile is an increasingly common pathogen both within and outside the hospital and is responsible for a large clinical spectrum from asymptomatic carriage to complicated infection associated with a high mortality. While diagnostic methods have considerably progressed over the years, the optimal diagnostic algorithm is still debated and there is no single diagnostic test that can be used as a standalone test. More importantly, the heterogeneity in diagnostic practices between centers along with the lack of robust surveillance systems in all countries and an important degree of underdiagnosis due to lack of clinical suspicion in the community, hinder a more accurate evaluation of the burden of disease. Our improved understanding of the physiopathology of CDI has allowed some significant progress in the treatment of CDI, including a broader use of fidaxomicine, the use of fecal microbiota transplantation for multiples recurrences and newer approaches including antibodies, vaccines and new molecules, already developed or in the pipeline. However, the management of CDI recurrences and severe infections remain challenging and the main question remains: how to best target these often expensive treatments to the right population. In this review we discuss current diagnostic approaches, treatment and potential prevention strategies, with a special focus on recent advances in the field as well as areas of uncertainty and unmet needs and how to address them
Lead in the marine environment: concentrations and effects on invertebrates
Lead (Pb) is a non-essential metal naturally present in the environment and often complexed with other elements (e.g., copper, selenium, zinc). This metal has been used since ancient Egypt and its extraction has grown in the last centuries. It has been used until recently as a fuel additive and is currently used in the production of vehicle batteries, paint, and plumbing. Marine ecosystems are sinks of terrestrial contaminations; consequently, lead is detected in oceans and seas. Furthermore, lead is not biodegradable. It remains in soil, atmosphere, and water inducing multiple negative impacts on marine invertebrates (key species in trophic chain) disturbing ecological ecosystems. This review established our knowledge on lead accumulation and its effects on marine invertebrates (Annelida, Cnidaria, Crustacea, Echinodermata, and Mollusca). Lead may affect different stages of development from fertilization to larval development and can also lead to disturbance in reproduction and mortality. Furthermore, we discussed changes in the seawater chemistry due to Ocean Acidification, which can affect the solubility, speciation, and distribution of the lead, increasing potentially its toxicity to marine invertebrates
Frequencies and Damping rates of a 2D Deformed Trapped Bose gas above the Critical Temperature
We derive the equation of motion for the velocity fluctuations of a 2D
deformed trapped Bose gas above the critical temperature in the hydrodynamical
regime. From this equation, we calculate the eigenfrequencies for a few
low-lying excitation modes. Using the method of averages, we derive a
dispersion relation in a deformed trap that interpolates between the
collisionless and hydrodynamic regimes. We make use of this dispersion relation
to calculate the frequencies and the damping rates for monopole and quadrupole
mode in both the regimes. We also discuss the time evolution of the wave packet
width of a Bose gas in a time dependent as well as time independent trap.Comment: 13 pages, latex fil
Oscillations of rotating trapped Bose-Einstein condensates
The tensor-virial method is applied for a study of oscillation modes of
uniformly rotating Bose-Einstein condensed gases, whose rigid body rotation is
supported by an vortex array. The second order virial equations are derived in
the hydrodynamic regime for an arbitrary external harmonic trapping potential
assuming that the condensate is a superfluid at zero temperature. The
axisymmetric equilibrium shape of the condensate is determined as a function of
the deformation of the trap; its domain of stability is bounded by the
constraint on the rotation rate (measured in units of the trap
frequency .) The oscillations of the axisymmetric condensate are
stable with respect to the transverse-shear, toroidal and quasi-radial modes of
oscillations, corresponding to the , surface
deformations. In non-axisymmetric traps, the equilibrium constrains the
(dimensionless) deformation in the plane orthogonal to the rotation to the
domain with . The second harmonic oscillation modes
in non-axisymmetric traps separate into two classes which have even or odd
parity with respect to the direction of the rotation axis. Numerical solutions
show that these modes are stable in the parameter domain where equilibrium
figures exist.Comment: 16 pages, including 4 figures, uses Revtex; v2 includes a treatment
of modes in unisotropic traps; PRA in pres
Finite-temperature simulations of the scissors mode in Bose-Einstein condensed gases
The dynamics of a trapped Bose-condensed gas at finite temperatures is
described by a generalized Gross-Pitaevskii equation for the condensate order
parameter and a semi-classical kinetic equation for the thermal cloud, solved
using -body simulations. The two components are coupled by mean fields as
well as collisional processes that transfer atoms between the two. We use this
scheme to investigate scissors modes in anisotropic traps as a function of
temperature. Frequency shifts and damping rates of the condensate mode are
extracted, and are found to be in good agreement with recent experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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