2,852 research outputs found
An Incomes Policy for the Professions: the Dutch Experience
In 1951 the United States began moving toward an incomes policy, an attempt to end postwar wage and price inflation by linking changes in these prices to gains in productivity. Other countries later followed suit; some countries had already adopted wage and price control policies. The Netherlands moved toward an incomes policy immediately after World War II. Initially, the Dutch program involved wages only, but in the 1970s it became an accepted principle that private professional income should be comparable with the salaries of government officials and civil servants with comparable training and responsibilities. In the Netherlands (as in the United States and, before medicine was socialized, the United Kingdom) health professionals operate on a fee-for-service basis and their incomes escalated as a result of both inflation and monopoly power. So they were subjected to the incomes policy. The policy's effectiveness in curbing income escalation cannot be determined with certainty—reliable data are lacking. However, the evidence indicates that the policy failed to achieve its original purpose.Incomes policy, Netherlands
Potential and Constraints for Animal Feed as an Objective of Poor Farmers in Participatory Research with Multipurpose Forage Crops in Central-America
Multipurpose forage crops can play an important role in improving the environmental and socio- economic sustainability of smallholder production systems in fragile environments. However, since the forage technology development framework has not been sufficiently applicable for poor farmers, adoption of especially legumes has been generally low (Peters et al., 2001). In a participatory research effort with smallholder farmers in Honduras focused at forage based technologies, food security turned out to be the main selection criterion whereas animal feed was secondary. Since animal feed related activities (farmer-led forage seed systems, production of dry season feed) have been identified as promising income generating options for poor farmers in the hillsides of Central-America, a further analysis was carried out to identify the (mainly household related) factors inducing or inhibiting farmers to opt for production of animal feed
Investigation of Hamamatsu H8500 phototubes as single photon detectors
We have investigated the response of a significant sample of Hamamatsu H8500
MultiAnode PhotoMultiplier Tubes (MAPMTs) as single photon detectors, in view
of their use in a ring imaging Cherenkov counter for the CLAS12 spectrometer at
the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility. For this, a laser working
at 407.2nm wavelength was employed. The sample is divided equally into standard
window type, with a spectral response in the visible light region, and
UV-enhanced window type MAPMTs. The studies confirm the suitability of these
MAPMTs for single photon detection in such a Cherenkov imaging application
An Incomes Policy for the Professions: the Dutch Experience
In 1951 the United States began moving toward an incomes policy, an attempt to end postwar wage and price inflation by linking changes in these prices to gains in productivity. Other countries later followed suit; some countries had already adopted wage and price control policies. The Netherlands moved toward an incomes policy immediately after World War II. Initially, the Dutch program involved wages only, but in the 1970s it became an accepted principle that private professional income should be comparable with the salaries of government officials and civil servants with comparable training and responsibilities. In the Netherlands (as in the United States and, before medicine was socialized, the United Kingdom) health professionals operate on a fee-for-service basis and their incomes escalated as a result of both inflation and monopoly power. So they were subjected to the incomes policy. The policy's effectiveness in curbing income escalation cannot be determined with certainty—reliable data are lacking. However, the evidence indicates that the policy failed to achieve its original purpose
Aanzet tot een codering van de Nederlandse aquatische macrofauna
Dit rapport is een verslag van het tot stand komen van een database met naamlijst en codering van Nederlandse aquatische organismen. De codering richt zich op de zoete en brakke (semi-)aquatische macrofauna. Ten behoeve van deze categorie van organismen zijn activiteiten beschreven die leiden tot de inhoudelijke invulling van de beoogde database. De naamlijst omvat zowel taxonomische namen als namen van macrofauna zoals die in de praktijk gebruikt worden door waterbeherende instanties. De lijst is, uitgezonderd een aantal taxonomische groepen, gecontroleerd door specialisten. Tevens bevat het rapport een verklaring van werkbladen en velden van de database
Testing feasibility of scalar-tensor gravity by scale dependent mass and coupling to matter
We investigate whether there are any cosmological evidences for a scalar
field with a mass and coupling to matter which change accordingly to the
properties of the astrophysical system it "lives in", without directly focusing
on the underlying mechanism that drives the scalar field scale-dependent
properties. We assume a Yukawa type of coupling between the field and matter
and also that the scalar field mass grows with density, in order to overcome
all gravity constraints within the solar system. We analyse three different
gravitational systems assumed as "cosmological indicators": supernovae type Ia,
low surface brightness spiral galaxies and clusters of galaxies. Results show
that: a) a quite good fit to the rotation curves of low surface brightness
galaxies only using visible stellar and gas mass components is obtained; b) a
scalar field can fairly well reproduce the matter profile in clusters of
galaxies, estimated by X-ray observations and without the need of any
additional dark matter; c) there is an intrinsic difficulty in extracting
information about the possibility of a scale-dependent massive scalar field (or
more generally about a varying gravitational constant) from supernovae type Ia.Comment: 30 pages, 15 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Complexity and Expressivity of Branching- and Alternating-Time Temporal Logics with Finitely Many Variables
We show that Branching-time temporal logics CTL and CTL*, as well as
Alternating-time temporal logics ATL and ATL*, are as semantically expressive
in the language with a single propositional variable as they are in the full
language, i.e., with an unlimited supply of propositional variables. It follows
that satisfiability for CTL, as well as for ATL, with a single variable is
EXPTIME-complete, while satisfiability for CTL*, as well as for ATL*, with a
single variable is 2EXPTIME-complete,--i.e., for these logics, the
satisfiability for formulas with only one variable is as hard as satisfiability
for arbitrary formulas.Comment: Prefinal version of the published pape
Reasoning about actions meets strategic logics (LORI 2013)
International audienceWe introduce ATLEA, a novel extension of Alternating-time Temporal Logic with explicit actions in the object language. ATLEA allows to reason about abilities of agents under commitments to play certain actions. Pre- and postconditions as well as availability and unavailability of actions can be expressed. We show that the multiagent extension of Reiter’s solution to the frame problem can be encoded into ATLEA. We also consider an epistemic extension of ATLEA. We demonstrate that the resulting logic is sufficiently expressive to reason about uniform choices of actions. Complexity results for the satisfiability problem of ATLEA and its epistemic extension are given in the paper
Test of the CLAS12 RICH large scale prototype in the direct proximity focusing configuration
A large area ring-imaging Cherenkov detector has been designed to provide
clean hadron identification capability in the momentum range from 3 GeV/c up to
8 GeV/c for the CLAS12 experiments at the upgraded 12 GeV continuous electron
beam accelerator facility of Jefferson Laboratory. The adopted solution
foresees a novel hybrid optics design based on aerogel radiator, composite
mirrors and high-packed and high-segmented photon detectors. Cherenkov light
will either be imaged directly (forward tracks) or after two mirror reflections
(large angle tracks). We report here the results of the tests of a large scale
prototype of the RICH detector performed with the hadron beam of the CERN T9
experimental hall for the direct detection configuration. The tests
demonstrated that the proposed design provides the required pion-to-kaon
rejection factor of 1:500 in the whole momentum range.Comment: 15 pages, 23 figures, to appear on EPJ
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