5,269 research outputs found

    The Bill Chill: Safe Harbors in the Medicare and Medicaid Fraud and Abuse Statutes

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    This Note will determine whether the safe harbor regulations, intended to advise hospitals of permissible conduct, have instead created a chilling effect on the competitive market place. Have governmental regulations, in the form of safe harbors, failed to produce clear answers and guidance to hospitals? It would appear that instead of clarifying the issues, these new proposed safe harbor regulations have, in fact, prevented hospitals from offering patients and the federal government cost savings in the form of discounts and rebates

    Assessing the Influence of Smart Mobile Devices on How Employees Work

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    The smart mobile device market penetration reached 50% and has been increasing an average of 39% per year in the United States. More than 70% of the smart mobile device owners use such devices for personal and work activities. The problem was the lack of management\u27s understanding of the effect smart mobile device use has on how employees work when they are in the office, while traveling, or during the off-hours to improve productivity and customer service. The purpose of this phenomenological study was to understand why, when, and how employees used smart mobile devices. The transformational technology conceptual framework was based on Charan\u27s and Welch\u27s theory that new technologies and how people work is critical to productivity. The sample consisted of 21 anonymous participants from randomly selected mid-level and senior management working for Fortune 1000 companies within the U.S. An open-ended questionnaire was designed for collecting lived experiences from the participants. Data were coded using open and axial techniques to identify themes and patterns to understand the way employees use smart mobile devices. Findings showed that smart mobile devices became an inseparable part of employees\u27 life and created the always on culture erasing the boundaries between professional and personal life. Employees perform work and personal activities in the office, while traveling for business or leisure, and during time-off. Implications for social change include helping companies improve the workplace and for employees to improve their productivity through mobile technologies thus potentially developing better products and services for the public

    The angular power spectrum of radio emission at 2.3 GHz

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    We have analysed the Rhodes/HartRAO survey at 2326 MHz and derived the global angular power spectrum of Galactic continuum emission. In order to measure the angular power spectrum of the diffuse component, point sources were removed from the map by median filtering. A least-square fit to the angular power spectrum of the entire survey with a power law spectrum C_l proportional to l^{-alpha}, gives alpha = 2.43 +/- 0.01 for l = 2-100. The angular power spectrum of radio emission appears to steepen at high Galactic latitudes and for observed regions with |b| > 20 deg, the fitted spectral index is alpha = 2.92 +/- 0.07. We have extrapolated this result to 30 GHz (the lowest frequency channel of Planck) and estimate that no significant contribution to the sky temperature fluctuation is likely to come from synchrotron at degree-angular scalesComment: 10 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication by Astronomy & Astrophysic

    Goodness-of-Fit Tests to study the Gaussianity of the MAXIMA data

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    Goodness-of-Fit tests, including Smooth ones, are introduced and applied to detect non-Gaussianity in Cosmic Microwave Background simulations. We study the power of three different tests: the Shapiro-Francia test (1972), the uncategorised smooth test developed by Rayner and Best(1990) and the Neyman's Smooth Goodness-of-fit test for composite hypotheses (Thomas and Pierce 1979). The Smooth Goodness-of-Fit tests are designed to be sensitive to the presence of ``smooth'' deviations from a given distribution. We study the power of these tests based on the discrimination between Gaussian and non-Gaussian simulations. Non-Gaussian cases are simulated using the Edgeworth expansion and assuming pixel-to-pixel independence. Results show these tests behave similarly and are more powerful than tests directly based on cumulants of order 3, 4, 5 and 6. We have applied these tests to the released MAXIMA data. The applied tests are built to be powerful against detecting deviations from univariate Gaussianity. The Cholesky matrix corresponding to signal (based on an assumed cosmological model) plus noise is used to decorrelate the observations previous to the analysis. Results indicate that the MAXIMA data are compatible with Gaussianity.Comment: MNRAS, in pres

    Sr0.9_{0.9}K0.1_{0.1}Zn1.8_{1.8}Mn0.2_{0.2}As2_{2}: a ferromagnetic semiconductor with colossal magnetoresistance

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    A bulk diluted magnetic semiconductor (Sr,K)(Zn,Mn)2_{2}As2_{2} was synthesized with decoupled charge and spin doping. It has a hexagonal CaAl2_{2}Si2_{2}-type structure with the (Zn,Mn)2_{2}As2_{2} layer forming a honeycomb-like network. Magnetization measurements show that the sample undergoes a ferromagnetic transition with a Curie temperature of 12 K and \revision{magnetic moment reaches about 1.5 μB\mu_{B}/Mn under μ0H\mu_0H = 5 T and TT = 2 K}. Surprisingly, a colossal negative magnetoresistance, defined as [ρ(H)ρ(0)]/ρ(0)[\rho(H)-\rho(0)]/\rho(0), up to -38\% under a low field of μ0H\mu_0H = 0.1 T and to -99.8\% under μ0H\mu_0H = 5 T, was observed at TT = 2 K. The colossal magnetoresistance can be explained based on the Anderson localization theory.Comment: Accepted for publication in EP
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