876 research outputs found
Do Higher Wages Pay for Themselves? An Intra-firm Test of the Effect of Wages on Employee Performance
Conference: AAA 2015 Management Accounting Section (MAS) Meeting, AAA 2015 Annual meeting, Volume: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2482829This study uses field data from 490 hotels in a single lodging chain to investigate three questions
related to the efficiency-wage hypothesis. (1) Does paying workers higher relative wages ex ante
result in better ex post actual performance, either by motivating workers to exert greater effort or
by attracting higher quality workers? (2) Is the magnitude of the relation between performance
and wages the same when workers are overpaid versus underpaid? (3) Do the overall benefits of
paying higher wages outweigh the costs? The data enable us to perform powerful tests of wageperformance
relations because exogenous factors that likely affect employee behavior are
standardized across hotels. Our results suggest that actual performance (measured by customer
satisfaction, revenues, and profit) is increasing in the relative wage, and that higher performance
is the result, and not the cause, of higher wages. We find that the magnitude of the wageperformance
relation is at least as large for workers who are overpaid compared to those who are
underpaid. This result, which differs from the results of experimental studies, suggests that
overpaid workers do not rationalize away wage premiums. Finally, our results indicate that
increases in wages do, in fact, pay for themselves. A 1,080 increase in profit for the mean hotel. This research contributes
to a series of studies that investigates the extent to which wages influence performance (e.g.,
Levine, 1992; Fehr and Falk, 1999; Hannan, Kagal, and Moser, 2002; Hannan, 2005), and
whether the marginal benefit of wage increases justifies their costs (Levin, 1993)
Two-fermion relativistic bound states in Light-Front Dynamics
In the Light-Front Dynamics, the wave function equations and their numerical
solutions, for two fermion bound systems, are presented. Analytical expressions
for the ladder one-boson exchange interaction kernels corresponding to scalar,
pseudoscalar, pseudovector and vector exchanges are given. Different couplings
are analyzed separately and each of them is found to exhibit special features.
The results are compared with the non relativistic solutions.Comment: 40 pages, to be published in Phys. Rev. C, .tar.gz fil
Ferromagnetic resonance study of sputtered Co|Ni multilayers
We report on room temperature ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) studies of [
Co Ni]N sputtered films, where nm. Two
series of films were investigated: films with same number of CoNi bilayer
repeats (N=12), and samples in which the overall magnetic layer thickness is
kept constant at 3.6 nm (N=1.2/). The FMR measurements were conducted with a
high frequency broadband coplanar waveguide up to 50 GHz using a flip-chip
method. The resonance field and the full width at half maximum were measured as
a function of frequency for the field in-plane and field normal to the plane,
and as a function of angle to the plane for several frequencies. For both sets
of films, we find evidence for the presence of first and second order
anisotropy constants, and . The anisotropy constants are strongly
dependent on the thickness , and to a lesser extent on the total thickness
of the magnetic multilayer. The Land\'e g-factor increases with decreasing
and is practically independent of the multilayer thickness. The magnetic
damping parameter , estimated from the linear dependence of the
linewidth, , on frequency, in the field in-plane geometry,
increases with decreasing . This behaviour is attributed to an enhancement
of spin-orbit interactions with decreasing and in thinner films, to a
spin-pumping contribution to the damping.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figure
To , or not to : Recent developments and comparisons of regularization schemes
We give an introduction to several regularization schemes that deal with
ultraviolet and infrared singularities appearing in higher-order computations
in quantum field theories. Comparing the computation of simple quantities in
the various schemes, we point out similarities and differences between them.Comment: 61 pages, 12 figures; version sent to EPJC, references update
Ultrafast single-pulse all-optical switching in synthetic ferrimagnetic Tb/Co/Gd multilayers
In this work, we investigate single-shot all-optical switching (AOS) in
Tb/Co/Gd/Co/Tb multilayers in an attempt to establish AOS in synthetic
ferrimagnets with high magnetic anisotropy. In particular, we study the effect
of varying Tb thicknesses to disentangle the role of the two rare earth
elements. Even though the role of magnetic compensation has been considered to
be crucial, we find that the threshold fluence for switching is largely
independent of the Tb content. Moreover, we identify the timescale for the
magnetization to cross zero to be within the first ps after laser excitation
using time-resolved MOKE. We conclude that the switching is governed mostly by
interactions between Co and Gd
The Drug Burden Index and Level of Frailty as Determinants of Healthcare Costs in a Cohort of Older Frail Adults in New Zealand
OBJECTIVES: Frailty is common in older people and is associated with increased use of healthcare services and ongoing use of multiple medications. This study provides insights into the healthcare cost structure of a frail group of older adults in Aotearoa, New Zealand. Furthermore, we investigated the relationship between participants' anticholinergic and sedative medication burden and their total healthcare costs to explore the viability of deprescribing interventions within this cohort.METHODS: Healthcare cost analysis was conducted using data collected during a randomized controlled trial within a frail, older cohort. The collected information included participant demographics, medications used, frailty, cost of service use of aged residential care and outpatient hospital services, hospital admissions, and dispensed medications.RESULTS: Data from 338 study participants recruited between 25 September 2018 and 30 October 2020 with a mean age of 80 years were analyzed. The total cost of healthcare per participant ranged from New Zealand 10) to New Zealand 175 943) over 6 months postrecruitment into the study. Four individuals accounted for 26% of this cohort's total healthcare cost. We found frailty to be associated with increased healthcare costs, whereas the drug burden was only associated with increased pharmaceutical costs, not overall healthcare costs.CONCLUSIONS: With no relationship found between a patient's anticholinergic and sedative medication burden and their total healthcare costs, more research is required to understand how and where to unlock healthcare cost savings within frail, older populations.</p
Fundamental Physics with the Laser Astrometric Test Of Relativity
The Laser Astrometric Test Of Relativity (LATOR) is a joint European-U.S.
Michelson-Morley-type experiment designed to test the pure tensor metric nature
of gravitation - a fundamental postulate of Einstein's theory of general
relativity. By using a combination of independent time-series of highly
accurate gravitational deflection of light in the immediate proximity to the
Sun, along with measurements of the Shapiro time delay on interplanetary scales
(to a precision respectively better than 0.1 picoradians and 1 cm), LATOR will
significantly improve our knowledge of relativistic gravity. The primary
mission objective is to i) measure the key post-Newtonian Eddington parameter
\gamma with accuracy of a part in 10^9. (1-\gamma) is a direct measure for
presence of a new interaction in gravitational theory, and, in its search,
LATOR goes a factor 30,000 beyond the present best result, Cassini's 2003 test.
The mission will also provide: ii) first measurement of gravity's non-linear
effects on light to ~0.01% accuracy; including both the Eddington \beta
parameter and also the spatial metric's 2nd order potential contribution (never
measured before); iii) direct measurement of the solar quadrupole moment J2
(currently unavailable) to accuracy of a part in 200 of its expected size; iv)
direct measurement of the "frame-dragging" effect on light by the Sun's
gravitomagnetic field, to 1% accuracy. LATOR's primary measurement pushes to
unprecedented accuracy the search for cosmologically relevant scalar-tensor
theories of gravity by looking for a remnant scalar field in today's solar
system. We discuss the mission design of this proposed experiment.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures; invited talk given at the 2005 ESLAB Symposium
"Trends in Space Science and Cosmic Vision 2020," 19-21 April 2005, ESTEC,
Noodrwijk, The Netherland
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