1,568 research outputs found
Estimating nonresponse bias and mode effects in a mixed mode survey
In mixed-mode surveys, it is difficult to separate sample selection differences from mode-effects that can occur when respondents respond in different interview settings. This paper provides a framework for separating mode-effects from selection effects by matching very similar respondents from different survey modes using propensity score matching. The answer patterns of the matched respondents are subsequently compared. We show that matching can explain differences in nonresponse and coverage in two Internet-samples. When we repeat this procedure for a telephone and Internet-sample however, differences persist between the samples after matching. This indicates the occurrence of mode-effects in telephone and Internet surveys. Mode-effects can be problematic; hence we conclude with a discussion of designs that can be used to explicitly study mode-effects
Learning lessons from evaluating eGovernment: Reflective case experiences that support transformational government
Central Government strategy of e-inclusion is being manifested in the form of eGovernment. Given that it is the public
purse that funds such investments, there is increasingly attention being paid to the evaluation of these investments, such
that value for money and organisation learning can be realised. In this paper the authors report the findings from three
interpretive in-depth organisational case studies that explore eGovernment evaluation within a UK public sector setting.
The paper elicits insights to organisational and managerial aspects with the purpose of improving knowledge and understanding
of eGovernment evaluation. The findings that are extrapolated from the case study analysis are presented in terms
of lessons that gravitate around social factors, evaluation, adoption, ownership, prioritisation sponsorship and, responsibility.
These lessons are extrapolated from the empirical enquiry to improve eGovernment evaluation practice. The paper concludes
that eGovernment evaluation is an under developed area, with most work being developmental in nature and as a
result calls for decision makers to engage with the eGovernment agenda and commission eGovernment evaluation exercises
to improve evaluation practice such that transformational Government can realise its full potential. The paper ends
by highlighting political, economic, technical and social issues as the drivers of the evaluation cycle
Relativistic Two-Body Processes in Axial-Charge Transitions
We study the contribution of two-body meson-exchange processes to axial
charge transitions for nuclei in the lead, tin and oxygen regions. We conduct
calculations in the Dirac-Hartree (the Walecka model) and the relativistic
Hartree (where the full one-nucleon-loop effects are included) approximations.
We present results indicating that one- and two-body processes enhance the
matrix elements of the axial-charge operator by some (100+-20)% in all three
regions studied. This agrees well with the fit of eighteen first-forbidden
beta-decay transitions conducted by Warburton in the lead region. We also
discuss some sensitivities present in the calculation.Comment: 23 pages, RevTeX format, 5 PostScript figures available on reques
Second-order corrections to noncommutative spacetime inflation
We investigate how the uncertainty of noncommutative spacetime affects on
inflation. For this purpose, the noncommutative parameter is taken to
be a zeroth order slow-roll parameter. We calculate the noncommutative power
spectrum up to second order using the slow-roll expansion. We find corrections
arisen from a change of the pivot scale and the presence of a variable
noncommutative parameter, when comparing with the commutative power spectrum.
The power-law inflation is chosen to obtain explicit forms for the power
spectrum, spectral index, and running spectral index. In cases of the power
spectrum and spectral index, the noncommutative effect of higher-order
corrections compensates for a loss of higher-order corrections in the
commutative case. However, for the running spectral index, all higher-order
corrections to the commutative case always provide negative spectral indexes,
which could explain the recent WMAP data.Comment: 15 pages, no figure, version published in PR
Hot electron relaxation in the heavy-fermion Yb1−xLuxAl3 compound using femtosecond optical pump-probe spectroscopy
Hot electron relaxation in the heavy-fermion Yb1−xLuxAl3 compound using femtosecond optical pump-probe spectroscop
Second-order corrections to slow-roll inflation in the brane cosmology
We calculate the power spectrum, spectral index, and running spectral index
for the RS-II brane inflation in the high-energy regime using the slow-roll
expansion. There exist several modifications. As an example, we take the
power-law inflation by choosing an inverse power-law potential. When comparing
these with those arisen in the standard inflation, we find that the power
spectrum is enhanced and the spectral index is suppressed, while the running
spectral index becomes zero as in the standard inflation. However, since
second-order corrections are rather small, these could not play a role of
distinguishing between standard and brane inflations.Comment: 6 page
Books
Medical audit Audit in Action. Ed. by Richard Smith. Pp. xiv + 245. Illustrated. £10,95. London: British Medical Journal. 1992. Available from Libriger Book Distributors, Bloemfontein.Rheumatology Bailliere's Clinical Rheumatology: Giant Cell Arteritis and Polymyalgia RheuIDatica. Guest eds B. L. Hazleman and B.-A. Bengtsson. Pp. xi + 507. illustrated. £27,50. London: Bailliere Tindall. 1991.AIDS, drugs and sexual risk AIDS, Drugs and Sexual Risk. By N. McKeganey and M. Bamard. Johannesburg: Random Century. 1992.Radiation When is a Dose Not a Dose? By Victor P. Bond. Pp. 39. Illustrated. Bethesda: National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements. 1992.Autoimmune disease Clinical and Molecular Aspects of Autoimmune Diseases. Vol. 8. Ed. by J. M. Cruse and R. E. Lewis. Pp. x + 258. Illustrated. SFr. 248. Basel: Karger. 1992.Biochemical toxicology Principles of Biochemical Toxicology. 2nd ed. By J. A. Timbrel!. Illustrated. Pp. 415. RI53,73. London: Taylor & Frands. 1991.Advances in pineal research Advances in Pineal Research. Vol. 6. Ed. by Andrew Foldes and R. J. Reiter. pp. viii + 286. illustrated. £32,50. London: John Libbey. 1991.Health care for the future The Future of Health Care. Pp. 83. Illustrated. London: British Medical Journal. 1992.STDs and AIDS School Health Education to Prevent AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Disease. Pp. 79. SFr. 18. Geneva: World Health Organisation. 1992
Moving constraints as stabilizing controls in classical mechanics
The paper analyzes a Lagrangian system which is controlled by directly
assigning some of the coordinates as functions of time, by means of
frictionless constraints. In a natural system of coordinates, the equations of
motions contain terms which are linear or quadratic w.r.t.time derivatives of
the control functions. After reviewing the basic equations, we explain the
significance of the quadratic terms, related to geodesics orthogonal to a given
foliation. We then study the problem of stabilization of the system to a given
point, by means of oscillating controls. This problem is first reduced to the
weak stability for a related convex-valued differential inclusion, then studied
by Lyapunov functions methods. In the last sections, we illustrate the results
by means of various mechanical examples.Comment: 52 pages, 4 figure
First normal stress difference and crystallization in a dense sheared granular fluid
The first normal stress difference () and the microstructure
in a dense sheared granular fluid of smooth inelastic hard-disks are probed
using event-driven simulations. While the anisotropy in the second moment of
fluctuation velocity, which is a Burnett-order effect, is known to be the
progenitor of normal stress differences in {\it dilute} granular fluids, we
show here that the collisional anisotropies are responsible for the normal
stress behaviour in the {\it dense} limit. As in the elastic hard-sphere
fluids, remains {\it positive} (if the stress is defined in
the {\it compressive} sense) for dilute and moderately dense flows, but becomes
{\it negative} above a critical density, depending on the restitution
coefficient. This sign-reversal of occurs due to the {\it
microstructural} reorganization of the particles, which can be correlated with
a preferred value of the {\it average} collision angle in the direction opposing the shear. We also report on the shear-induced
{\it crystal}-formation, signalling the onset of fluid-solid coexistence in
dense granular fluids. Different approaches to take into account the normal
stress differences are discussed in the framework of the relaxation-type
rheological models.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figure
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