4,317 research outputs found
Employee Relations Ethics and the Changing Nature of the American Workforce
Much is being written today about the changing nature of the American workforce. This article summarizes 10 of these changes: (a) global competition; (b) the changing skills of work; (c) the declining impact of unions; (d) the altered human composition of the workforce; (e) the effects of continuous improvement, downsizing, and reengineering; (f) the growing use of part-time employees; (g) the widening income gap; (h) lessened employer and employee loyalty and commitment; (i) early retirement programs; and (j) telecommunications and virtual employees. Rather than just identifying and documenting these trends, this article discusses the ethical implications of such movements. In this article, employee relations ethics is defined as treating employees properly, with respect and dignity. The term employee relations ethics is used both individually and collectively to analyze the negative human results from a moral rather than an economic perspective. The age-old clash between bottom-line mentality (economics) versus higher order thinking (ethics) is revisited with a focus on employees, not owners (old theory) or customers (new theory)
A Search for Young Stars in the S0 Galaxies of a Super-Group at z=0.37
We analyze Galaxy Evolution Explorer UV data for a system of four gravitationally bound groups at z = 0.37, SG1120, which is destined to merge into a Coma-mass cluster by z = 0, to study how galaxy properties may change during cluster assembly. Of the 38 visually classified S0 galaxies, with masses ranging from log (M *)[M ☉] ≈ 10-11, we detect only one in the near-UV (NUV) channel, a strongly star-forming S0 that is the brightest UV source with a measured redshift placing it in SG1120. Stacking the undetected S0 galaxies (which generally lie on or near the optical red sequence of SG1120) still results in no NUV/far-UV (FUV) detection (\u3c2σ). Using our limit in the NUV band, we conclude that for a rapidly truncating star formation rate, star formation ceased at least ~0.1-0.7 Gyr ago, depending on the strength of the starburst prior to truncation. With an exponentially declining star formation history over a range of timescales, we rule out recent star formation over a wide range of ages. We conclude that if S0 formation involves significant star formation, it occurred well before the groups were in this current pre-assembly phase. As such, it seems that S0 formation is even more likely to be predominantly occurring outside of the cluster environment
An Overview of the Economic Performance of Texas MSAs from 2010-2021
EconomicGrowth_Development_TechnicalChangeQuestions about economic performance are some of the most frequently asked questions posed to economists. This paper illustrates the relative performance of states over 2010-2022 in terms of RGDP growth, population growth, and growth in per capita RGDP. The authors present information on trends in the performance of U.S. states over the recent 2010 - 2022 period, which followed the Global Financial Crisis and the Great Recession. During this period, some states with high RGDP growth and high population growth, like Texas, also had moderate levels of per capita RGDP growth. Other states, such as California, had high RGDP growth but moderate population growth, and yet had very high per capita RGDP growth. Additionally, states with higher levels of RGDP per capita tend to grow more slowly than states with lower levels of RGDP per capita. This tendency toward convergence is a prediction of the Solow Growth Model
Discovery of a binary icosahedral quasicrystal in ScZn
We report the discovery of a new binary icosahedral phase in a Sc-Zn alloy
obtained through solution-growth, producing millimeter-sized, facetted, single
grain, quasicrystals that exhibit different growth morphologies, pentagonal
dodecahedra and rhombic triacontahedra, under only marginally different growth
conditions. These two morphologies manifest different degrees of
quasicrystalline order, or phason strain. The discovery of i-ScZn
suggests that a reexamination of binary phase diagrams at compositions close to
crystalline approximant structures may reveal other, new binary
quasicrystalline phases.Comment: Incorrect spelling in author list resolve
Interplay between Fe and Nd magnetism in NdFeAsO single crystals
The structural and magnetic phase transitions have been studied on NdFeAsO
single crystals by neutron and x-ray diffraction complemented by resistivity
and specific heat measurements. Two low-temperature phase transitions have been
observed in addition to the tetragonal-to-orthorhombic transition at T_S = 142
K and the onset of antiferromagnetic (AFM) Fe order below T_N = 137 K. The Fe
moments order AFM in the well-known stripe-like structure in the (ab) plane,
but change from AFM to ferromagnetic (FM) arrangement along the c direction
below T* = 15 K accompanied by the onset of Nd AFM order below T_Nd = 6 K with
this same AFM configuration. The iron magnetic order-order transition in
NdFeAsO accentuates the Nd-Fe interaction and the delicate balance of c-axis
exchange couplings that results in AFM in LaFeAsO and FM in CeFeAsO and
PrFeAsO.Comment: revised; 4 pages, 3 figures; accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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Vitamin A Metabolism by Dendritic Cells Triggers an Antimicrobial Response against Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Epidemiological evidence correlates low serum vitamin A (retinol) levels with increased susceptibility to active tuberculosis (TB); however, retinol is biologically inactive and must be converted into its bioactive form, all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA). Given that ATRA triggers a Niemann-Pick type C2 (NPC2)-dependent antimicrobial response against Mycobacterium tuberculosis, we investigated the mechanism by which the immune system converts retinol into ATRA at the site of infection. We demonstrate that granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF)-derived dendritic cells (DCs), but not macrophages, express enzymes in the vitamin A metabolic pathway, including aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 family, member a2 (ALDH1A2) and short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase family, member 9 (DHRS9), enzymes capable of the two-step conversion of retinol into ATRA, which is subsequently released from the cell. Additionally, mRNA and protein expression levels of ALDH1A2 and DC marker CD1B were lower in tuberculosis lung tissues than in normal lung. The conditioned medium from DCs cultured with retinol stimulated antimicrobial activity from M. tuberculosis-infected macrophages, as well as the expression of NPC2 in monocytes, which was blocked by specific inhibitors, including retinoic acid receptor inhibitor (RARi) or N,N-diethylaminobenzaldehyde (DEAB), an ALDH1A2 inhibitor. These results indicate that metabolism of vitamin A by DCs transactivates macrophage antimicrobial responses.IMPORTANCE Tuberculosis (TB) is the leading cause of death by a single infectious agent worldwide. One factor that contributes to the success of the microbe is the deficiency in immunomodulatory nutrients, such as vitamin A (retinol), which are prevalent in areas where TB is endemic. Clinical trials show that restoration of systemic retinol levels in active TB patients is ineffective in mitigating the disease; however, laboratory studies demonstrate that activation of the vitamin A pathway in Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected macrophages triggers an antimicrobial response. Therefore, the goal of this study was to determine the link between host retinol levels and retinoic acid-mediated antimicrobial responses against M. tuberculosis By combining established in vitro models with in situ studies of lung tissue from TB patients, this study demonstrates that the innate immune system utilizes transcellular metabolism leading to activation between dendritic cells and macrophages as a means to combat the pathogen
Hispanic maternal and children's perceptions of neighborhood safety related to walking and cycling
AbstractThis study examined neighborhood safety as perceived by children (mean age=10 years) and their mothers, and its association with children's physical activity. For all eight safety items examined, children perceived their environment as less dangerous than mothers (p<0.05). None of the multiple regression models predicting children's physical activity by safety perceptions were significant (p>0.10). The maternal perception model explained the highest percentage of variance (R2=0.26), compared to the children's perception model (R2=0.22). Findings suggest that future studies should explore relations between self-reported and objectively measured safety barriers to Hispanic youth walking and cycling
Hispanic Maternal and Children\u27s Perceptions of Neighborhood Safety Related to Walking and Cycling
This study examined neighborhood safety as perceived by children (mean age=10 years) and their mothers, and its association with children\u27s physical activity. For all eight safety items examined, children perceived their environment as less dangerous than mothers (p\u3c0.05). None of the multiple regression models predicting children\u27s physical activity by safety perceptions were significant (p\u3e0.10). The maternal perception model explained the highest percentage of variance (R2=0.26), compared to the children\u27s perception model (R2=0.22). Findings suggest that future studies should explore relations between self-reported and objectively measured safety barriers to Hispanic youth walking and cycling
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