5,499 research outputs found
The Relationship Between HR Practices and Firm Performance: Examining Causal Order
Significant research attention has been devoted to examining the relationship between HR practices and firm performance, and the research support has assumed HR as the causal variable. Using data from 45 business units (with 62 data points), this study examines how measures of HR practices correlate with past, concurrent, and future operational performance measures. The results indicate that correlations with performance measures at all three times are both high and invariant, and that controlling for past or concurrent performance virtually eliminates the correlation of HR with future performance. Implications are discussed
How to find an attractive solution to the liar paradox
The general thesis of this paper is that metasemantic theories can play a central role in determining the correct solution to the liar paradox. I argue for the thesis by providing a specific example. I show how Lewis’s reference-magnetic metasemantic theory may decide between two of the most influential solutions to the liar paradox: Kripke’s minimal fixed point theory of truth and Gupta and Belnap’s revision theory of truth. In particular, I suggest that Lewis’s metasemantic theory favours Kripke’s solution to the paradox over Gupta and Belnap’s. I then sketch how other standard criteria for assessing solutions to the liar paradox, such as whether a solution faces a so-called revenge paradox, fit into this picture. While the discussion of the specific example is itself important, the underlying lesson is that we have an unused strategy for resolving one of the hardest problems in philosophy
Yielding and irreversible deformation below the microscale: Surface effects and non-mean-field plastic avalanches
Nanoindentation techniques recently developed to measure the mechanical
response of crystals under external loading conditions reveal new phenomena
upon decreasing sample size below the microscale. At small length scales,
material resistance to irreversible deformation depends on sample morphology.
Here we study the mechanisms of yield and plastic flow in inherently small
crystals under uniaxial compression. Discrete structural rearrangements emerge
as series of abrupt discontinuities in stress-strain curves. We obtain the
theoretical dependence of the yield stress on system size and geometry and
elucidate the statistical properties of plastic deformation at such scales. Our
results show that the absence of dislocation storage leads to crucial effects
on the statistics of plastic events, ultimately affecting the universal scaling
behavior observed at larger scales.Comment: Supporting Videos available at
http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.002041
The Architectural Design Rules of Solar Systems based on the New Perspective
On the basis of the Lunar Laser Ranging Data released by NASA on the Silver
Jubilee Celebration of Man Landing on Moon on 21st July 1969-1994, theoretical
formulation of Earth-Moon tidal interaction was carried out and Planetary
Satellite Dynamics was established. It was found that this mathematical
analysis could as well be applied to Star and Planets system and since every
star could potentially contain an extra-solar system, hence we have a large
ensemble of exoplanets to test our new perspective on the birth and evolution
of solar systems. Till date 403 exoplanets have been discovered in 390
extra-solar systems. I have taken 12 single planet systems, 4 Brown Dwarf -
Star systems and 2 Brown Dwarf pairs. Following architectural design rules are
corroborated through this study of exoplanets. All planets are born at inner
Clarke Orbit what we refer to as inner geo-synchronous orbit in case of
Earth-Moon System. By any perturbative force such as cosmic particles or
radiation pressure, the planet gets tipped long of aG1 or short of aG1. Here
aG1 is inner Clarke Orbit. The exoplanet can either be launched on death spiral
as CLOSE HOT JUPITERS or can be launched on an expanding spiral path as the
planets in our Solar System are. It was also found that if the exo-planet are
significant fraction of the host star then those exo-planets rapidly migrate
from aG1 to aG2 and have very short Time Constant of Evolution as Brown Dwarfs
have. This vindicates our basic premise that planets are always born at inner
Clarke Orbit. This study vindicates the design rules which had been postulated
at 35th COSPAR Scientific Assembly in 2004 at Paris, France, under the title
,New Perspective on the Birth & Evolution of Solar Systems.Comment: This paper has been reported to Earth,Moon and Planets Journal as
MOON-S-09-0007
Randomised trials of 6 % tetrastarch (hydroxyethyl starch 130/0.4 or 0.42) for severe sepsis reporting mortality: systematic review and meta-analysis.
Investigations on the Peach 4 Debrite, a Late Pleistocene Mass Movement on the Northwest British Continental Margin
The Peach 4 debrite is the most recent in a series of large scale Pleistocene MTDs within the Barra fan on the northwest British continental margin. Geophysical data indicate that Peach 4 was formed through a combination of blocky and muddy debris flows and affects an area of ~ 700 km2. BGS core sample 56 -10 36, located directly over the Peach 4 debrite, provides a minimum age of 14.68 ka cal BP for the last major failure. An upwards fining turbidite sequence in BGS core sample 56 -10 239 is associ-ated with increased As and S concentrations, indicators of diagenetic pyrite which forms under anoxic conditions. It is proposed that As and S concentrations may pro-vide a method of distinguishing between contourite and turbidite sedimentation, though further research is required
Anti-Allergic Cromones Inhibit Histamine and Eicosanoid Release from Activated Human and Murine Mast Cells by Releasing Annexin A1
PMCID: PMC3601088This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
Recommended from our members
Optimization using multiple dominance criteria for aerospace design under uncertainty
In optimization under uncertainty for aerospace design, statistical moments of the quantity of interest are often treated as separate objectives and are traded off in a multi-objective optimization formulation.
However, in many design problems the trade-off between statistical moments can be large and the Pareto front representing this trade-off can include designs with undesirable behavior, such as being robust but
being guaranteed to give a worse performance than another design. When a simulation of a system is computationally expensive, obtaining the full Pareto front is infeasible and so spending optimization time
obtaining such undesirable designs wastes time that could be spent obtaining more desirable alternatives. As a remedy, we propose an optimization formulation that can use multiple dominance criteria to avoid
generating potentially inferior designs. We consider various orders of stochastic dominance as criteria to use alongside statistical moment based Pareto dominance, and illustrate how this gives rise to improved
designs using a limited computational budget in an acoustic horn design problem and a transonic airfoil design problem.This work is part funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) UK, under
grant number EP/L504920/1, with support from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) MURI
on managing multiple information sources of multi-physics systems, Program Manager Jean-Luc Cambier,
Award Number FA9550-15-1-003
Recommended from our members
Using Stochastic Dominance in Multi-Objective Optimizers for Aerospace Design Under Uncertainty
In optimization under uncertainty for aerospace design, statistical moments of the quan-
tity of interest are often treated as separate objectives and are traded off in a multi-objective
optimization formulation. However, in many design problems the trade-off between sta-
tistical moments can be large and the Pareto front representing this trade-off can include
designs with undesirable behavior, such as being robust but being guaranteed to give a
worse performance than another design. When a simulation of a system is computation-
ally expensive, obtaining the full Pareto front is unfeasible and so spending optimization
time obtaining such undesirable designs wastes time that could be spent obtaining more
desirable alternatives. As a remedy, we propose an optimization formulation that can use
multiple dominance criteria to avoid generating potentially inferior designs. We consider
various orders of stochastic dominance as criteria to use alongside statistical moment based
Pareto dominance, and illustrate how this gives rise to improved designs using a limited
computational budget in an acoustic horn design problem and a transonic airfoil design
problem.EPSRC DTA grant, grant number EP/L504920/
Efficient solution of the non-linear Reynolds equation for compressible fluid using the finite element method
- …
