964 research outputs found
The Influence of Position Type and Generational Grouping on Job Satisfaction of Milwaukee County\u27s Public Health Workforce
Nationally, the public health workforce (PHW) consists of 155,000 staff (NACCHO, 2010). It is projected that half of the PHW will soon retire. Health departments must find ways to retain its diverse workforce.
Job Satisfaction is a critical variable that impacts a sustained PHW. Job Satisfaction assessments can promote sustainability of the workforce because the data assembled from the assessments can inform research, policy, and practice. Public health workers that report high Job Satisfaction are less likely to quit as well as delay retirement (RWJF, 2013).
The purpose of this study is to examine the influence of position type and generational grouping on Job Satisfaction of the PHW in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin. Two research questions were answered: Does position type and generational grouping influence Job Satisfaction? Position type is categorized into nine distinct roles including Public Health Nursing (PHN) and Health Educators (PHE). Generational grouping is categorized into four classes by year of birth.
The self-administered Job Satisfaction Survey (JSS; Spector, 1994) was disseminated via email to all 336 staff employed at various health departments in Milwaukee County; participation was voluntary. Study power was achieved (n = 145). The response was 45% and completion was 97%. The JSS included 19 socio-demographic and 36 Job Satisfaction items grouped in nine subscales graded on a six-point Likert scale. Higher scores represent greater Job Satisfaction when compared to the national baseline.
In this study, Job Satisfaction levels varied. When overall Job Satisfaction was assessed by generational grouping, the Milwaukee County PHW sample was more satisfied than the baseline; this was statistically significant. Traditionalists and Generation X were least satisfied compared to Generation Y, which was most satisfied, beyond the baseline.
Overall Job Satisfaction was not statistically significant by position type. Environmental Health Professionals were least satisfied compared to PHE, which reported the greatest satisfaction far beyond the baseline. However, four sub-scales were statistically significant among groups of public health workers. Administrators reported the greatest satisfaction for contingent rewards, promotion, and operating procedures. Other Professional Staff reported the greatest satisfaction for their coworkers. PHNs reported lower satisfaction for promotion and operating procedures
Single spin optical read-out in CdTe/ZnTe quantum dot studied by photon correlation spectroscopy
Spin dynamics of a single electron and an exciton confined in CdTe/ZnTe
quantum dot is investigated by polarization-resolved correlation spectroscopy.
Spin memory effects extending over at least a few tens of nanoseconds have been
directly observed in magnetic field and described quantitatively in terms of a
simple rate equation model. We demonstrate an effective (68%) all-optical
read-out of the single carrier spin state through probing the degree of
circular polarization of exciton emission after capture of an oppositely
charged carrier. The perturbation introduced by the pulsed optical excitation
serving to study the spin dynamics has been found to be the main source of the
polarization loss in the read-out process. In the limit of low laser power the
read-out efficiency extrapolates to a value close to 100%. The measurements
allowed us as well to determine neutral exciton spin relaxation time ranging
from 3.4 +/- 0.1 ns at B = 0 T to 16 +/- 3 ns at B = 5 T.Comment: to appear in Phys. Rev.
A 7/9 - Approximation Algorithm for the Maximum Traveling Salesman Problem
We give a 7/9 - Approximation Algorithm for the Maximum Traveling Salesman
Problem.Comment: 6 figure
Circularly Polarized Resonant Rayleigh Scattering and Skyrmions in the = 1 Quantum Hall Ferromagnet
We use the circularly polarized resonant Rayleigh scattering (RRS) to study
the quantum Hall ferromagnet at = 1. At this filling factor we observe a
right handed copolarized RRS which probes the Skyrmion spin texture of the
electrons in the photoexcited grounds state. The resonant scattering is not
present in the left handed copolarization, and this can be related to the
correlation between Skymionic effects, screening and spin wave excitations.
These results evidence that RRS is a valid method for the study of the spin
texture of the quantum Hall states
RobustSPAM for Inference from Noisy Longitudinal Data and Preservation of Privacy
The availability of complex temporal datasets in social, health and consumer contexts has driven the development of pattern mining techniques that enable the use of classical machine learning tools for model building. In this work we introduce a robust temporal pattern mining framework for finding predictive patterns in complex timestamped multivariate and noisy data. We design an algorithm RobustSPAM that enables mining of temporal patterns from data with noisy timestamps. We apply our algorithm to social care data from a local government body and investigate how the efficiency and accuracy of the method depends on the level of noise. We further explore the trade-off between the loss of predictivity due to perturbation of timestamps and the risk of person re-identification
Forming and confining of dipolar excitons by quantizing magnetic fields
We show that a magnetic field perpendicular to an AlGaAs/GaAs coupled quantum
well efficiently traps dipolar excitons and leads to the stabilization of the
excitonic formation and confinement in the illumination area. Hereby, the
density of dipolar excitons is remarkably enhanced up to . By means of Landau level spectroscopy we study the density of excess
holes in the illuminated region. Depending on the excitation power and the
applied electric field, the hole density can be tuned over one order of
magnitude up to - a value comparable with typical
carrier densities in modulation-doped structures.Comment: 4.3 Pages, 4 Figure
Human Cytomegalovirus Intrahost Evolution--A New Avenue for Understanding and Controlling Herpesvirus Infections [preprint]
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is exquisitely adapted to the human host, and much research has focused on its evolution over long timescales spanning millennia. Here, we review recent data exploring the evolution of the virus on much shorter timescales, on the order of days or months. We describe the intrahost genetic diversity of the virus isolated from humans, and how this diversity contributes to HCMV spatiotemporal evolution. We propose mechanisms to explain the high levels of intrahost diversity and discuss how this new information may shed light on HCMV infection and pathogenesis
Vertex-Coloring with Star-Defects
Defective coloring is a variant of traditional vertex-coloring, according to
which adjacent vertices are allowed to have the same color, as long as the
monochromatic components induced by the corresponding edges have a certain
structure. Due to its important applications, as for example in the
bipartisation of graphs, this type of coloring has been extensively studied,
mainly with respect to the size, degree, and acyclicity of the monochromatic
components.
In this paper we focus on defective colorings in which the monochromatic
components are acyclic and have small diameter, namely, they form stars. For
outerplanar graphs, we give a linear-time algorithm to decide if such a
defective coloring exists with two colors and, in the positive case, to
construct one. Also, we prove that an outerpath (i.e., an outerplanar graph
whose weak-dual is a path) always admits such a two-coloring. Finally, we
present NP-completeness results for non-planar and planar graphs of bounded
degree for the cases of two and three colors
Linear-Space Approximate Distance Oracles for Planar, Bounded-Genus, and Minor-Free Graphs
A (1 + eps)-approximate distance oracle for a graph is a data structure that
supports approximate point-to-point shortest-path-distance queries. The most
relevant measures for a distance-oracle construction are: space, query time,
and preprocessing time. There are strong distance-oracle constructions known
for planar graphs (Thorup, JACM'04) and, subsequently, minor-excluded graphs
(Abraham and Gavoille, PODC'06). However, these require Omega(eps^{-1} n lg n)
space for n-node graphs. We argue that a very low space requirement is
essential. Since modern computer architectures involve hierarchical memory
(caches, primary memory, secondary memory), a high memory requirement in effect
may greatly increase the actual running time. Moreover, we would like data
structures that can be deployed on small mobile devices, such as handhelds,
which have relatively small primary memory. In this paper, for planar graphs,
bounded-genus graphs, and minor-excluded graphs we give distance-oracle
constructions that require only O(n) space. The big O hides only a fixed
constant, independent of \epsilon and independent of genus or size of an
excluded minor. The preprocessing times for our distance oracle are also faster
than those for the previously known constructions. For planar graphs, the
preprocessing time is O(n lg^2 n). However, our constructions have slower query
times. For planar graphs, the query time is O(eps^{-2} lg^2 n). For our
linear-space results, we can in fact ensure, for any delta > 0, that the space
required is only 1 + delta times the space required just to represent the graph
itself
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