5,154 research outputs found

    Gender bias in China, the Republic of Korea, and India 1920-90 - effects of war, famine, and fertility decline

    Get PDF
    Kinship systems in China, the Republic of Korea, and North India have similar features that generate discrimination against girls, and these countries have some of the highest proportions of girls"missing"in the world. The authors document how the excess mortality of girls was increased by war, famine, and fertility decline - all of which constrained household resources - between 1920 and 1990. Of the three countries, China experienced the most crises during this period (with civil war, invasion, and famine). The resulting excess mortality of girls in China offset the demographic forces making for a surplus of wives as overall mortality rates declined. India had the quietest history during this period, and consequently followed the expected pattern of a growing surplus of available wives. These changes in sex ratios had substantial social ramifications. The authors hypothesize that these demographic factors: 1) Encourages the continuation of bride-price in China, while in India there was a shift to dowry. 2) Influenced the extent and manifestations of violence against women. An oversupply of women is the worst scenario for women, as there are fewer constraints to domestic violence. A shortage of women leads to better treatment of wives, as people become more careful not to lose a wife. However in situations of shortage, a small proportion of women may be subject to new types of violence such as being kidnapped for marriage. Ironically, then, higher levels of discrimination against girls can help reduce violence against women. When women are in short supply, their treatment improves. But their autonomy can increase only with fundamental changes in their family position, changes that are taking place only slowly.Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Public Health Promotion,Population&Development,Anthropology,Demographics,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Population&Development,Anthropology,Demographics,Adolescent Health

    Traces and Extensions of Bounded Divergence-Measure Fields on Rough Open Sets

    Full text link
    We prove that an open set ΩRn\Omega \subset \mathbb{R}^n can be approximated by smooth sets of uniformly bounded perimeter from the interior if and only if the open set Ω\Omega satisfies \begin{align*} &\qquad \qquad\qquad\qquad\qquad\qquad\qquad \mathscr{H}^{n-1}(\partial \Omega \setminus \Omega^0)<\infty, \qquad &&\quad\qquad\qquad \qquad\qquad (*) \end{align*} where Ω0\Omega^0 is the measure-theoretic exterior of Ω\Omega. Furthermore, we show that condition (*) implies that the open set Ω\Omega is an extension domain for bounded divergence-measure fields, which improves the previous results that require a strong condition that Hn1(Ω)<\mathscr{H}^{n-1}(\partial \Omega)<\infty. As an application, we establish a Gauss-Green formula up to the boundary on any open set Ω\Omega satisfying condition (*) for bounded divergence-measure fields, for which the corresponding normal trace is shown to be a bounded function concentrated on ΩΩ0\partial \Omega \setminus \Omega^0. This new formula does not require the set of integration to be compactly contained in the domain where the vector field is defined. In addition, we also analyze the solvability of the divergence equation on a rough domain with prescribed trace on the boundary, as well as the extension domains for bounded BVBV functions.Comment: 29 page

    Subphonemic Sensitivity in Low Literacy Adults

    Get PDF
    The link between phonological abilities and reading skills has been well-established in both typical and atypical language development. However, the nature of the phonological deficits in poor readers remains a debated topic. While poor readers have been mostly assumed to have underspecified or “fuzzy” phonological representations (Tallal et al., 1998), the opposite alternative, over-specified phonological representations, has also been hypothesized (Serniclaes, 2006). To examine the two phonological hypotheses, the current study used the eye-tracking paradigm in the study of Dahan et al. (2001) to investigate individuals’ sensitivity to subphonemic information in young adults with a wide range of reading abilities. Our findings suggested a trend of higher sensitivity to subphonemic information in lower-ability readers, consistent with the over-specification hypothesis. In addition, our sample with a lower range of socio-economic status highlighted the need to take environmental factors into consideration for theoretical and practical purposes in reading acquisition

    Modeling styrene-styrene interactions

    Get PDF
    This study is the first step in the systematic investigation of substituted (carboxyl) polystyrene nanoparticles. Understanding the fundamental interactions between the p-carboxyl styrene monomers, where an ethyl group is used instead of a vinyl group (referenced, for convenience, as p-carboxyl styrene ), provides the basic information needed to construct potentials for nanoparticles composed of these monomers. In this work, low-energy isomers of p-carboxyl styrene dimer were studied. The dimer structures and their relative and binding energies were determined using both Møller-Plesset second-order perturbation theory (MP2) and the general effective fragment potential (EFP2) method. Sections of the intermolecular potential energy surface (PES) of the p-carboxylated styrene dimer in its global minimum orientation were also determined. As expected, double hydrogen bonding between the two carboxylic groups provides the strongest interaction in this system, followed by isomers with a single H-bond and strong benzene ring-benzene ring (π-π) type interactions. Generally, the EFP2 method reproduces the MP2 geometries and relative energies with good accuracy, so it appears to be an efficient alternative to the correlated ab initio methods, which are too computationally demanding to be routinely used in the study of the more-complex polymeric systems of interest

    Why is son preference so persistent in East and South Asia? a cross-country study of China, India, and the Republic of Korea

    Get PDF
    Son preference has persisted in the face of sweeping economic and social changes in China, India, and the Republic of Korea. The authors attribute this to their similar family systems, which generate strong disincentives to raise daughters while valuing adult women's contributions to the household. Urbanization, female education, and employment can only slowly change these incentives without more direct efforts by the state and civil society to increase the flexibility of the kinship system such that daughters and sons can be perceived as being more equally valuable. Much can be done to this end through social movements, legislation, and the mass media.Gender and Development,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Anthropology,Public Health Promotion,Population&Development,Adolescent Health,Anthropology,Life Sciences&Biotechnology,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Population&Development

    Endocide-Induced Abnormal Growth Forms of Invasive Giant Salvinia (Salvinia molesta)

    Get PDF
    Giant salvinia (Salvinia molesta) is one of the most noxious invasive species in the world. The fern is known to have primary, secondary, and tertiary growth forms, which are also commonly hypothesized as growth stages. The identification of these forms is primarily based on the size and folding status of the floating leaves. However, we identified 12 forms in the greenhouse and the field. Our experiments showed that the folding of floating leaves is a reversible trait dependent on water access. The floating leaves quickly fold in response to water shortage, reducing water loss and needs, decreasing growth, and avoiding trichome damage. The leaves re-open to allow trichomes repel water and enhance growth when having adequate water supply. Larger secondary or tertiary forms do not produce small-leaf primary forms without high intensity stress. These results do not support the hypothesis that three growth forms represent sequential growth stages. The abnormal small-leaf forms are the result of endocide-induced autotoxicity and some of them never grow into other forms. The development of abnormal forms and reversible leaf folding strategy in response to high stress along with rapid asexual reproduction are major adaptive traits contributing to the invasiveness of S. molesta

    R^2 Corrections for 5D Black Holes and Rings

    Full text link
    We study higher-order corrections to two BPS solutions of 5D supergravity, namely the supersymmetric black ring and the spinning black hole. Due in part to our current relatively limited understanding of F-type terms in 5D supergravity, the nature of these corrections is less clear than that of their 4D cousins. Effects of certain R2R^2 terms found in Calabi-Yau compactification of M-theory are specifically considered. For the case of the black ring, for which the microscopic origin of the entropy is generally known, the corresponding higher order macroscopic correction to the entropy is found to match a microscopic correction, while for the spinning black hole the corrections are partially matched to those of a 4D D0D2D6D0-D2-D6 black hole.Comment: 9 page
    corecore