532 research outputs found

    Who Wants To Be Healthy?

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    Intraempreendedorismo social: perspectivas para o desenvolvimento social nas organizaçÔes

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    Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro TecnolĂłgico. Programa de PĂłs-Graduação em Engenharia de Produção.O objetivo desta tese Ă© descrever a ação dos empreendedores sociais dentro das organizaçÔes. Definir o Intraempreendedorismo Social, indicando seus constructos fundamentais e seu modelo, validando-o em um caso real. Os elementos que compĂ”em o modelo sĂŁo de natureza geral e servem como instrumento de reflexĂŁo sobre a realidade. A abordagem deste estudo Ă© de natureza qualitativa e descritiva e se fundamenta nas bases conceituais do empreendedorismo, na responsabilidade social corporativa e nas teorias organizacionais modernas. AtravĂ©s do empreendedorismo social, ampliam-se os recursos e competĂȘncias necessĂĄrios para o enfrentamento de desafios, como o combate Ă  pobreza e a incorporação dos excluĂ­dos aos direitos bĂĄsicos de cidadania; por outro lado, no microambiente organizacional, percebemos desafios semelhantes, tais quais, a busca da melhora da qualidade profissional, da promoção social e da qualidade de vida, alĂ©m de problemas como estresse, insatisfação, absenteĂ­smo, etc. O presente estudo relaciona-se a este contexto, ao associar novos conceitos e reflexĂ”es ao tema e apresentar um modelo que evidencia elementos dos processos de açÔes sociais nas organizaçÔes

    Barriers to Physical Activity and Healthy Eating in Children as Perceived by Low-Income Parents: A Case Study

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    During the past three decades the prevalence of childhood obesity has steadily increased in the United States. Causes of childhood obesity are complex and include numerous individual and environmental factors. The purpose of this study was to determine parent perceptions on the social-ecological barriers (community, school, and family) to physical activity and healthy eating, perceived specific to their children. Self-reported data gathered from a 50-item questionnaire and six focus groups were conducted with parents (n=43) enrolled in the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) Program. Participants (16 to 67 years old) were predominately female (88.4%), Hispanic (67%), low income, and living in or near Lompoc in Santa Barbara County, CA. The social-ecological model (family, school, and community) was utilized to create focus group questions and provide recommendations as part of the Lompoc Community Health Improvement Project (2006-to-the-present). Popular community barriers for physical activity were: disconnected sidewalks, lack of safe bike routes to school, lack of recreational programming at an affordable cost, and language barriers (lack of marketing physical activity programs in Spanish). Two safety barriers involved parks; fear of injury (dilapidated equipment) and fear of gangs (violence). Common school barriers were: teachers do not lead-by-example, lack of healthy food in school cafeteria, and insufficient time for children to purchase food and eat. Family barriers included: grandparents sabotaging healthy eating environments (e.g., spoilingchildren), insufficient nutrition knowledge (both children and parents), and economics (not being able to afford healthy food and a recreation/gym membership)

    Quantum Degenerate Exciton-Polaritons in Thermal Equilibrium

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    We study the momentum distribution and relaxation dynamics of semiconductor microcavity polaritons by angle-resolved and time-resolved spectroscopy. Above a critical pump level, the thermalization time of polaritons at positive detunings becomes shorter than their lifetime, and the polaritons form a quantum degenerate Bose-Einstein distribution in thermal equilibrium with the lattice.Comment: Updated with the published versio

    Adaptive evolution is substantially impeded by Hill–Robertson interference in Drosophila

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    Hill–Robertson interference (HRi) is expected to reduce the efficiency of natural selection when two or more linked selected sites do not segregate freely, but no attempt has been done so far to quantify the overall impact of HRi on the rate of adaptive evolution for any given genome. In this work, we estimate how much HRi impedes the rate of adaptive evolution in the coding genome of Drosophila melanogaster. We compiled a data set of 6,141 autosomal protein-coding genes from Drosophila, from which polymorphism levels in D. melanogaster and divergence out to D. yakuba were estimated. The rate of adaptive evolution was calculated using a derivative of the McDonald–Kreitman test that controls for slightly deleterious mutations. We find that the rate of adaptive amino acid substitution at a given position of the genome is positively correlated to both the rate of recombination and the mutation rate, and negatively correlated to the gene density of the region. These correlations are robust to controlling for each other, for synonymous codon bias and for gene functions related to immune response and testes. We show that HRi diminishes the rate of adaptive evolution by approximately 27%. Interestingly, genes with low mutation rates embedded in gene poor regions lose approximately 17% of their adaptive substitutions whereas genes with high mutation rates embedded in gene rich regions lose approximately 60%. We conclude that HRi hampers the rate of adaptive evolution in Drosophila and that the variation in recombination, mutation, and gene density along the genome affects the HRi effect

    First demonstration of a 12 DFB fiber laser array on a 100 GHz ITU grid, for underwater acoustic sensing application

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    International audienceWe report for the first time a multiplexed array of 12 distributed feedback fiber lasers (DFB FLs) on a single optical fiber, separated by only 100 GHz (0.8 nm) in the C-band. These lasers are pumped by a 200 mW laser diode at 1480 nm with no apparent impact on the sensor noise floor despite the fact that the residual reflections from adjacent gratings may be enhanced due to the smaller wavelength separation. Each DFB FL, especially developed for serial multiplexing, exhibits low lasing threshold typically between 1 and 2 mW, low intensity noise and very low frequency noise (less than 30 dB re 1 HzÂČ/Hz at 1 kHz from optical carrier). From these experimental results, extension to 32 DFB FLs array (on 100 GHz ITU grid) multiplexed on one fiber will be discussed

    Effets d'une faible contre-réaction optique sur des lasers à fibre DFB pour applications capteurs

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    National audienceNous étudions l'effet d'une faible réflection externe sur des lasers à fibre à contre-réaction répartie (DFB FLs). Nous démontrons expérimentalement que la phase optique accumulée sur un aller-retour dans la cavité étendue et la réflectivité associée au miroir externe modifient la puissance de sortie et la fréquence d'émission d'un DFB FL. Comme pour un laser à semiconducteurs (SC) contre-réactionné, à réflectivité externe donnée, l'amplitude des variations est constante pour ces deux paramÚtres quelle que soit la longueur de la cavité externe

    Learning Design through the Lens of Service: A Qualitative Study

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    Twenty-four senior-level capstone engineering design projects were completed at a large, public, primarily undergraduate university involving 85 students (70 male and 15 female). All projects involved the design of equipment to facilitate physical activity for people with disabilities. The effects on: i) learning design, ii) attitude towards people with disabilities, iii) motivation to complete team design projects and iv) interdisciplinary collaboration were analyzed through 24 one-hour focus groups. We explored the student experience using a constructivist approach and grounded theory. Four major themes (with associated sub-themes) emerged from our data analysis: learning design (project management, iterative design process, and user-centered design), motivation to complete design (engineering, disabilities, user), perceptions of people with disabilities (previous experience, changed attitudes and beliefs), and multidisciplinary collaboration (etiquette presentation, communication between disciplines, defining roles and expectations). Students completing these projects were shown to appreciate user-centered design, exhibit greater motivation when able to meet and develop a relationship with their client in person, discuss altruistic factors regarding their capstone experience, and were able to develop strong multidisciplinary skills

    6 mW and 30 mW laser threshold for respectively 1st and 2nd Brillouin Stokes order in a Ge10As24Se68 chalcogenide fiber

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    International audienceA compact second-order Stokes Brillouin ïŹber laser made of microstructured chalcogenide glass is reported for the ïŹrst time. This laser has very low optical pump-power threshold for Stokes conversion: 6 mW for ïŹrst order and only 30 mW for second order with nonresonant pumping

    Towards More Coherent Sources Using a Microstructured Chalcogenide Brillouin Fiber Laser

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    International audienceUp to 16 dB frequency noise reduction and a linewidth 8 times narrower that of the pump source is reported for the Stokes component in a compact Brillouin ïŹber laser made of chalcogenide microstructured ïŹber. Since the pump wave is not resonant in the ring cavity, an active stabilization of the laser is not primordial thus making the system simpler and cheaper. Although only a 3 metre-long microstructured chalcogenide ïŹber was used as gain medium, a very low laser threshold power of 6 mW was obtained for nonresonant pumping. The linewidth-narrowing effect achieved in our BFL cavity is also discussed
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