6,698 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Are âborn to rebelâ last-borns more likely to be self-employed?
This paper investigates birth order effects on adult self-employment. Drawing on Sullowayâs âborn to rebelâ thesis, we test whether or not last-borns whose parents have no prior self-employment experience are more likely to bear and assume the risks associated with self-employment. We also test if parental self-employment experience moderates the relationship between last-borns and self-employment. Using large-scale life-span data on 6,322 cohort members, a within-family design, and controlling for demographic confounds such as the number of siblings, we find that last-borns from non-entrepreneurial families are more likely to be self-employed than first or middle-borns. However, in families with parental experience of self-employment, we find that last-borns in three or more child families are no more likely to be self-employed than their siblings
Recommended from our members
Bank market concentration, relationship banking and small business liquidity
This paper examines two contrasting interpretations of how bank market concentration (Market Power Hypothesis) and banking relationships (Information Hypothesis) affect three sources of small firm liquidity (cash, lines of credit and trade credit). Supportive of a market power interpretation, we find that in a highly concentrated banking market, small firms hold less cash, have less access to lines of credit, and are more likely to be financially constrained, use greater amounts of more expensive trade credit and face higher penalties for trade credit late payment. We also find support for the information hypothesis: relationship banking improves small business liquidity, particularly in a concentrated banking market, thereby mitigating the adverse effects of bank market concentration derived from market power. Our results are robust to different cash, lines of credit and trade credit measures and to alternative empirical approaches
Modular and adaptable tumor niche prepared from visible light-initiated thiol-norbornene photopolymerization
Photopolymerized biomimetic hydrogels with adaptable properties have been widely used for cell and tissue engineering applications. As a widely adopted gel crosslinking method, photopolymerization provides experimenters on-demand and spatial-temporal controls in gelation kinetics. Long wavelength ultraviolet (UV) light initiated photopolymerization is among the most popular methods in the fabrication of cell-laden hydrogels owing to its rapid and relatively mild gelation conditions. The use of UV light, however, still causes concerns regarding its potential negative impacts on cells. Alternatively, visible light based photopolymerization can be used to crosslink cell-laden hydrogels. The majority of visible light based gelation schemes involve photoinitiator, co-initiator, and co-monomer. This multi-component initiation system creates added challenges for optimizing hydrogel formulations. Here, we report a co-initiator/co-monomer-free visible light initiated thiol-norbornene photopolymerization scheme to prepare modular biomimetic hydrogels suitable for in situ cell encapsulation. Eosin-Y was used as the sole initiator to initiate modular gelation between synthetic macromers (e.g., thiolated poly(vinyl alcohol) or poly(ethylene glycol)) and functionalized extracellular matrices (ECM), including norbornene-functionalized gelatin (GelNB) and/or thiolated hyaluronic acid (THA). These components are modularly crosslinked to afford bio-inert (i.e., purely synthetic), bioactive (i.e., using gelatin), and biomimetic (i.e., using gelatin and hyaluronic acid) hydrogels. The stiffness of the hydrogels can be easily tuned without affecting the contents of the bioactive components. Furthermore, the use of naturally-derived biomacromolecules (e.g., gelatin and HA) renders these hydrogels susceptible to enzyme-mediated degradation. In addition to demonstrating efficient and tunable visible light mediated gelation, we also utilized this biomimetic modular gelation system to formulate artificial tumor niche and to study the effects of cell density and gel modulus on the formation of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) spheroids.
The Hidden Inconsistencies Introduced by Predictive Algorithms in Judicial Decision Making
Algorithms, from simple automation to machine learning, have been introduced
into judicial contexts to ostensibly increase the consistency and efficiency of
legal decision making. In this paper, we describe four types of inconsistencies
introduced by risk prediction algorithms. These inconsistencies threaten to
violate the principle of treating similar cases similarly and often arise from
the need to operationalize legal concepts and human behavior into specific
measures that enable the building and evaluation of predictive algorithms.
These inconsistencies, however, are likely to be hidden from their end-users:
judges, parole officers, lawyers, and other decision-makers. We describe the
inconsistencies, their sources, and propose various possible indicators and
solutions. We also consider the issue of inconsistencies due to the use of
algorithms in light of current trends towards more autonomous algorithms and
less human-understandable behavioral big data. We conclude by discussing judges
and lawyers' duties of technological ("algorithmic") competence and call for
greater alignment between the evaluation of predictive algorithms and
corresponding judicial goals
Compatibility of Gauss maps with metrics
We give necessary and sufficient conditions on a smooth local map of a
Riemannian manifold into the sphere to be the Gauss map of an
isometric immersion , . We briefly discuss the case of
general as wellComment: 14 pages, no figure
Orientation of Vortices in a Superconducting Thin-Film: Quantitative Comparison of Spin-Polarized Neutron Reflectivity and Magnetization
We present a quantitative comparison of the magnetization measured by
spin-polarized neutron reflectivity (SPNR) and DC magnetometry on a 1370 \AA\
-thick Nb superconducting film. As a function of magnetic field applied in the
film plane, SPNR exhibits reversible behavior whereas the DC magnetization
shows substantial hysteresis. The difference between these measurements is
attributed to a rotation of vortex magnetic field out of the film plane as the
applied field is reduced. Since SPNR measures only the magnetization parallel
to the film plane whereas DC magnetization is strongly influenced by the
perpendicular component of magnetization when there is a slight sample tilt,
combining the two techniques allows one to distinguish two components of
magnetization in a thin film.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, It will be printed in PRB, Oct. 200
Winning the Peace Locally: UN Peacekeeping and Local Conflict
It remains contested whether peacekeeping works. The impact of peacekeepers? actions at the local (or subnational) level for overall mission success has lately received critical attention. Local peacekeeping is expected to matter because it re-assures local actors, deters resumption of armed hostilities, coerces parties to halt fighting, and makes commitment to agreements credible. Thus peacekeepers affect the relations between central and local elites and avoid the emergence of local power vacuums and areas of lawlessness. This study uses new subnational data on the deployment of United Nations peacekeepers. It uses matching and recursive bivariate probit models with exogenous variables for temporal and spatial variation to deal with possible non-random assignment of the treatment. It is demonstrated that conflict episodes last shorter when peacekeepers are deployed to conflict-prone locations inside a country, even with comparatively modest deployment. The effect of peacekeeping on the onset of local conflict is, however, less clear-cut
Spin-polarized neutron reflectivity: A probe of vortices in thin-film superconductors
URL:http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.59.14692
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevB.59.14692It is demonstrated that the specular reflectivity of spin-polarized neutrons can be used to study vortices in a thin-film superconductor. Experiments were performed on a 6000 Ă
thick c-axis film of YBa2Cu3O7-x with the magnetic field applied parallel to the surface. A magnetic hysteresis loop was observed for the spin-polarized reflection and, from these data, the average density of vortices was extracted. A model is presented which relates the specular reflectivity to the one-dimensional spatial distribution of vortices in the direction perpendicular to the surface. Unlike other techniques, neutron reflectivity observes vortices in a geometry where they are parallel to the interface.Support ~P.F.M., S.W.H.! from the Midwest Superconductivity Consortium ~MISCON! under the U.S. DOE Grant No. DE-FG02-90ER45427, the NSF DMR Grant No. 96-23827, and ~L.H.G., E.P.! from the NSF DMR Grant No. 94-21957, and ONR Grant No. N-00014-95-1-0831 is gratefully acknowledged. We thank E. Fullerton for useful discussions and D.H. Lowndes for help in understanding the surface
roughness of oxide superconductors
Health Links: Who Acts as a Source of Health Information in a Social Network?
Background: Members of a social network can influence the preventive health choices and cancer screening behaviors of other network members.
Study Design: We conducted in-person interviews with 438 insured adults ages 40-70 in Massachusetts, Hawaii, and Georgia. We gathered information on social network communication regarding routine health topics and cancer screening. Participants reported whether family members and friends ask them for information or advice on health topics. Characteristics of each respondentâs social network were explored, including number of people with whom the participant has discussed colorectal cancer (CRC) screening. Participants were asked whether communication with social network members had ever led them to seek cancer screening.
Principal Findings:80% of respondents in our group described themselves as a source of health information or advice for others in their social network (89% of women vs. 68% of men, p
Conclusions: People who identified themselves as a source of health information within their social network were more likely to have discussed CRC screening with others and communicated with more people. Further study is necessary to understand the roles played by these individuals. As âhealth information ambassadors,â they may be effective targets for interventions that promote preventive screening
The Supersymmetric Effective Action of the Heterotic String in Ten Dimensions
We construct the supersymmetric completion of quartic -actions in the
ten-dimensional effective action of the heterotic string. Two invariants, of
which the bosonic parts are known from one-loop string amplitude calculations,
are obtained. One of these invariants can be generalized to an
-invariant for supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory coupled to
supergravity.
Supersymmetry requires the presence of -terms, ( for
Yang-Mills) which correspond to counterterms in the Green-Schwarz anomaly
cancellation. Within the context of our calculation the -term from
the tree-level string effective action does not allow supersymmetrization.Comment: 42 pages, UG-9/9
- âŠ