12,572 research outputs found
Inequalities of wealth distribution in a conservative economy
We analyze a conservative market model for the competition among economic
agents in a close society. A minimum dynamics ensures that the poorest agent
has a chance to improve its economic welfare. After a transient, the system
self-organizes into a critical state where the wealth distribution have a
minimum threshold, with almost no agent below this poverty line, also, very few
extremely rich agents are stable in time. Above the poverty line the
distribution follows an exponential behavior. The local solution exhibits a low
Gini index, while the mean field solution of the model generates a wealth
distribution similar to welfare states like Sweden.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Physica A, Proceedings of the VIII
LAWNP, Salvador, Brazil, 200
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Reducing Test Bias Through Dynamic Assessment Of Children's Word Learning Ability
This study examined the performance of preschool children from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds, both typically developing and with low language ability, on a word-learning task. A pretest-teach-posttest method was used to compare a mediation group to a no-mediation group. Children in the mediation group were taught naming strategies using mediated learning experience (MLE). Results indicated that typically developing and low language ability children were differentiated on the basis of pretest-posttest change and that dynamic measures (e.g., posttest scores of single-word labeling and modifiability ratings from the mediation sessions) predicted the ability groups better than static measures (e.g., pretest scores of single-word labeling, description, and academic concepts). These results suggest that dynamic assessment approaches may effectively differentiate language difference from language disorder.Communication Sciences and Disorder
Economic exchanges in a stratified society: End of the middle class?
We study the effect of the social stratification on the wealth distribution
on a system of interacting economic agents that are constrained to interact
only within their own economic class. The economical mobility of the agents is
related to its success in exchange transactions. Different wealth distributions
are obtained as a function of the width of the economic class. We find a range
of widths in which the society is divided in two classes separated by a deep
gap that prevents further exchange between poor and rich agents. As a
consequence, the middle wealth class is eliminated. The high values of the Gini
indices obtained in these cases indicate a highly unequal society. On the other
hand, lower and higher widths induce lower Gini indices and a fairer wealth
distribution.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, to appear in Physica
Modeling Two Dimensional Magnetic Domain Patterns
Two-dimensional magnetic garnets exhibit complex and fascinating magnetic
domain structures, like stripes, labyrinths, cells and mixed states of stripes
and cells. These patterns do change in a reversible way when the intensity of
an externally applied magnetic field is varied. The main objective of this
contribution is to present the results of a model that yields a rich pattern
structure that closely resembles what is observed experimentally. Our model is
a generalized two-dimensional Ising-like spin-one Hamiltonian with long-range
interactions, which also incorporates anisotropy and Zeeman terms. The model is
studied numerically, by means of Monte Carlo simulations. Changing the model
parameters stripes, labyrinth and/or cellular domain structures are generated.
For a variety of cases we display the patterns, determine the average size of
the domains, the ordering transition temperature, specific heat, magnetic
susceptibility and hysteresis cycle. Finally, we examine the reversibility of
the pattern evolution under variations of the applied magnetic field. The
results we obtain are in good qualitative agreement with experiment.Comment: 8 pages, 12 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Co-located wave and offshore wind farms: A preliminary approach to the shadow effect
In recent years, with the consolidation of offshore wind technology and the progress carried out for wave energy technology, the option of combine both technologies has arisen. This combination rest mainly in two main reasons: in one hand, to increase the sustainability of both energies by means of a more rational harnessing of the natural resources; in the other hand, to reduce the costs of both technologies by sharing some of the most important costs of an offshore project. In addition to these two powerful reasons there are a number of technology synergies between wave and wind systems which makes their combination even more suitable. Co-located projects are one of the alternatives to combine wave-wind systems, and it is specially for these project were so-called shadow effect synergy becomes meaningful. In particular, this paper deals with the co-location of Wave Energy Conversion (WEC) technologies into a conventional offshore wind farm. More specifically, an overtopping type of WEC technology was considered in this work to study the effects of its co-location with a conventional offshore wind park. This study aims to give a preliminary approach to the shadow effect and its implications for both wave and offshore wind energies
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