156 research outputs found
Visiting the iron cage: Bureaucracy and the contemporary workplace
Bureaucracy as an organizational form has always been a controversial issue and placed at the very heart of most discussions within organizational theory. One side of this prolonged discussion praises this administrative form as the ‘rational’ way to run an organization. It provides needed guidance and clarifies responsibilities, which enables employees to become more efficient. However, the opposition claims that in a non-linear world, where industrial organizations are forced to confront the challenging task of sensing and responding to unpredictable, novel situations of highly competitive markets, such an organizational form stifles creativity, fosters de-motivation and causes pressure on employees. Dealing with a bureaucratic form of organization and its consequences begs for a context. It would be appropriate to quit ‘taking sides’ and develop a sound analysis of this phenomenon under the conditions of today’s global workplace environment. This chapter intends to delineate the conditions under which bureaucracy has emerged and the way it has been interpreted since its inception and develop a sound and appropriate analytical approach to its functioning given the prevailing conditions of the contemporary workplace.Publisher's VersionAuthor Post Prin
Risk Factors, Molecular Epidemiology and Outcomes of Ertapenem-Resistant, Carbapenem-Susceptible Enterobacteriaceae: A Case-Case-Control Study
Background: Increasing prevalence of ertapenem-resistant, carbapenem-susceptible Enterobacteriaceae (ERE) in Singapore presents a major therapeutic problem. Our objective was to determine risk factors associated with the acquisition of ERE in hospitalized patients; to assess associated patient outcomes; and to describe the molecular characteristics of ERE. Methods: A retrospective case-case-control study was conducted in 2009 at a tertiary care hospital. Hospitalized patients with ERE and those with ertapenem-sensitive Enterobacteriaceae (ESE) were compared with a common control group consisting of patients with no prior gram-negative infections. Risk factors analyzed included demographics; co-morbidities; instrumentation and antibiotic exposures. Two parallel multivariate logistic regression models were performed to identify independent variables associated with ERE and ESE acquisition respectively. Clinical outcomes were compared between ERE and ESE patients. Results: Twenty-nine ERE cases, 29 ESE cases and 87 controls were analyzed. Multivariate logistic regression showed that previous hospitalization (Odds ratio [OR], 10.40; 95 % confidence interval [CI], 2.19–49.20) and duration of fluoroquinolones exposure (OR, 1.18 per day increase; 95 % CI, 1.05–1.34) were unique independent predictors for acquiring ERE. Duration of 4 th-generation cephalosporin exposure was found to predict for ESE acquisition (OR, 1.63 per day increase; 95 % CI, 1.05– 2.54). In-hospital mortality rates and clinical response rates were significantly different between ERE and ESE groups
Network Centrality of Metro Systems
Whilst being hailed as the remedy to the world’s ills, cities will need to adapt in the 21st century. In particular, the role of public transport is likely to increase significantly, and new methods and technics to better plan transit systems are in dire need. This paper examines one fundamental aspect of transit: network centrality. By applying the notion of betweenness centrality to 28 worldwide metro systems, the main goal of this paper is to study the emergence of global trends in the evolution of centrality with network size and examine several individual systems in more detail. Betweenness was notably found to consistently become more evenly distributed with size (i.e. no “winner takes all”) unlike other complex network properties. Two distinct regimes were also observed that are representative of their structure. Moreover, the share of betweenness was found to decrease in a power law with size (with exponent 1 for the average node), but the share of most central nodes decreases much slower than least central nodes (0.87 vs. 2.48). Finally the betweenness of individual stations in several systems were examined, which can be useful to locate stations where passengers can be redistributed to relieve pressure from overcrowded stations. Overall, this study offers significant insights that can help planners in their task to design the systems of tomorrow, and similar undertakings can easily be imagined to other urban infrastructure systems (e.g., electricity grid, water/wastewater system, etc.) to develop more sustainable cities
The regional and global significance of nitrogen removal in lakes and reservoirs
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2008. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Biogeochemistry 93 (2009): 143-157, doi:10.1007/s10533-008-9272-x.Human activities have greatly increased the transport of biologically available N through
watersheds to potentially sensitive coastal ecosystems. Lentic water bodies (lakes and
reservoirs) have the potential to act as important sinks for this reactive N as it is
transported across the landscape because they offer ideal conditions for N burial in
sediments or permanent loss via denitrification. However, the patterns and controls on
lentic N removal have not been explored in great detail at large regional to global scales.
In this paper we describe, evaluate, and apply a new, spatially explicit, annual-scale,
global model of lentic N removal called NiRReLa (Nitrogen Retention in Reservoirs and
Lakes). The NiRReLa model incorporates small lakes and reservoirs than have been
included in previous global analyses, and also allows for separate treatment and analysis
of reservoirs and natural lakes. Model runs for the mid-1990s indicate that lentic systems
are indeed important sinks for N and are conservatively estimated to remove 19.7 Tg N
yr-1 from watersheds globally. Small lakes (< 50 km2) were critical in the analysis,
retaining almost half (9.3 Tg N yr-1) of the global total. In model runs, capacity of lakes
and reservoirs to remove watershed N varied substantially (0-100%) both as a function of
climate and the density of lentic systems. Although reservoirs occupy just 6% of the
global lentic surface area, we estimate they retain approximately 33% of the total N
removed by lentic systems, due to a combination of higher drainage ratios (catchment
surface area : lake or reservoir surface area), higher apparent settling velocities for N, and
greater N loading rates in reservoirs than in lakes. Finally, a sensitivity analysis of
NiRReLa suggests that, on-average, N removal within lentic systems will respond more
strongly to changes in land use and N loading than to changes in climate at the global
scale.The NSF26 Research Coordination Network on denitrification for support for collaboration
(award number DEB0443439 to S.P. Seitzinger and E.A. Davidson). This project was
also supported by grants to J.A. Harrison from California Sea Grant (award number
RSF8) and from the U.S. Geological Survey 104b program and R. Maranger (FQRNT
Strategic Professor)
Phylogenomic analysis sheds light on the evolutionary pathways towards acoustic communication in Orthoptera
Acoustic communication is enabled by the evolution of specialised hearing and sound producing organs. In this study, we performed a large-scale macroevolutionary study to understand how both hearing and sound production evolved and affected diversification in the insect order Orthoptera, which includes many familiar singing insects, such as crickets, katydids, and grasshoppers. Using phylogenomic data, we firmly establish phylogenetic relationships among the major lineages and divergence time estimates within Orthoptera, as well as the lineage-specific and dynamic patterns of evolution for hearing and sound producing organs. In the suborder Ensifera, we infer that forewing-based stridulation and tibial tympanal ears co-evolved, but in the suborder Caelifera, abdominal tympanal ears first evolved in a non-sexual context, and later co-opted for sexual signalling when sound producing organs evolved. However, we find little evidence that the evolution of hearing and sound producing organs increased diversification rates in those lineages with known acoustic communication
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