1,598 research outputs found

    The impact of positivity and transparency on trust in leaders and their perceived effectiveness

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    A critical challenge facing today’s organizational leaders is gaining their followers’ trust and having them view leaders as effective in addressing turmoil and change. Using a downsizing scenario as the context, this field experiment examined how a leader’s positivity and transparency impacted followers’ perceived trust, defined in terms of willingness to be vulnerable, and effectiveness of their leader. To test the hypotheses, 304 participants were randomly assigned to one of the four conditions of high (low) leader positivity × high (low) leader transparency. Results of our mixed methods study indicated both the leader’s level of positivity and transparency impacted followers’ perceived trust and evaluations of leader effectiveness. Besides limitations and suggestions for future research, we conclude with the practical implications that positive, transparent leaders may have on building trust and perceived effectiveness among their followers

    The impact of positivity and transparency on trust in leaders and their perceived effectiveness

    Get PDF
    A critical challenge facing today’s organizational leaders is gaining their followers’ trust and having them view leaders as effective in addressing turmoil and change. Using a downsizing scenario as the context, this field experiment examined how a leader’s positivity and transparency impacted followers’ perceived trust, defined in terms of willingness to be vulnerable, and effectiveness of their leader. To test the hypotheses, 304 participants were randomly assigned to one of the four conditions of high (low) leader positivity × high (low) leader transparency. Results of our mixed methods study indicated both the leader’s level of positivity and transparency impacted followers’ perceived trust and evaluations of leader effectiveness. Besides limitations and suggestions for future research, we conclude with the practical implications that positive, transparent leaders may have on building trust and perceived effectiveness among their followers

    Transparency, Translucence of Opacity? A Field Investigation of The Mediating Role of Positive Emotions In Trustful Leader-Follower Relations

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    In this study, the relationship between transparency and trust is hypothesized and investigated. Furthermore, the positive emotions variable was hypothesized to mediate the transparency ïżœ trust relationship. Participants’ perceptions of a leader’s transparency were more predictive of trust than experimenter designed manipulations. Study limitations, implications for management, and future research directions are discussed

    Dry powder process for preparing uni-tape prepreg from polymer powder coated filamentary towpregs

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    A process for preparing uni-tape prepreg from polymer powder coated filamentary towpregs is provided. A plurality of polymer powder coated filamentary towpregs are provided. The towpregs are collimated so that each towpreg is parallel. A material is applied to each side of the towpreg to form a sandwich. The sandwich is heated to a temperature wherein the polymer flows and intimately contacts the filaments and pressure is repeatedly applied perpendicularly to the sandwich with a longitudinal oscillating action wherein the filaments move apart and the polymer wets the filaments forming a uni-tape prepreg. The uni-tape prepreg is subsequently cooled

    747-6 Myocardial Blood Flow in Aortic Regurgitation: Comparison of Global and Regional Blood Flow to Regional Wall Stresses

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    The impact of regional wall stress (WS) abnormalities on regional coronary flow (CBF) in aortic regurgitation (AR) is not known. However, the existence of such a relation is of potential importance since it might account in part for LV dysfunction and myocardial fibrosis seen in AR, and could suggest therapeutic strategies. We have previously developed and validated a method for calculating regional WS in the radial, circumferential and meridional directions from mid wall (MW) to apex (AP) and endocardium (ENDO) to epicardium (EPI) using a 4000 element model of the LV To define the relation of regional WS and CSF in AR, we applied our LV model in 5 normal (NL) and 4 AR rabbits in which regional CBF was measured using fluorescent microspheres. CBF and radial WS were as follows:CBF (ml/min/gm)Radial WS (×103dynes/cm2)MWAPMWAPNLEPI2.491.308329*ENDO2.090.74133133*AREPI1.821.82*8638*ENDO1.410.77*133133**=p<0.001 (EPI vs ENDO for CSF, EPI to ENDO gradient in AR vs NL for radial WS)Thus, in AR, transmural CBF distribution varies significantly at the apex, while this tendency is less marked and less consistent in NL. No discernable transmural variation was apparent elsewhere in either group. These differences paralleled inversely the transmural variations in radial WS in AR vs NL. In contrast, meridional WS and circumferential WS were uniformly and significantly higher in AR than NL at apex and base (all p < 0.001), a pattern which bore no relation to regional CSF pattern. Thus, regional radial WS influences regional transmural CBF pattern in AR. The importance of this relation to regional LV function and regional myocardial fibrosis in AR now must be assessed

    A Dry Powder Process for Preparing Uni-Tape Prepreg from Polymer Powder Coated Filamentary Towpregs

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    A process for preparing uni-tape prepreg from polymer powder coated filamentary towpregs is provided. A plurality of polymer powder coated filamentary towpregs are provided. The towpregs are collimated so that each towpreg is parallel. The sandwich is heated to a temperature wherein the polymer flows and intimately contacts the filaments and pressure is repeatedly applied perpendicularly to the sandwich with a longitudinal oscillating action wherein the filaments move apart and the polymer wets the filaments forming a uni-tape prepreg. The uni-tape prepreg is subsequently cooled

    Quantum Logic between Remote Quantum Registers

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    We analyze two approaches to quantum state transfer in solid-state spin systems. First, we consider unpolarized spin-chains and extend previous analysis to various experimentally relevant imperfections, including quenched disorder, dynamical decoherence, and uncompensated long range coupling. In finite-length chains, the interplay between disorder-induced localization and decoherence yields a natural optimal channel fidelity, which we calculate. Long-range dipolar couplings induce a finite intrinsic lifetime for the mediating eigenmode; extensive numerical simulations of dipolar chains of lengths up to L=12 show remarkably high fidelity despite these decay processes. We further consider the extension of the protocol to bosonic systems of coupled oscillators. Second, we introduce a quantum mirror based architecture for universal quantum computing which exploits all of the spins in the system as potential qubits. While this dramatically increases the number of qubits available, the composite operations required to manipulate "dark" spin qubits significantly raise the error threshold for robust operation. Finally, as an example, we demonstrate that eigenmode-mediated state transfer can enable robust long-range logic between spatially separated Nitrogen-Vacancy registers in diamond; numerical simulations confirm that high fidelity gates are achievable even in the presence of moderate disorder.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figure

    Effects of Dust Geometry in Lyman Alpha Galaxies at z = 4.4

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    Equivalent widths (EWs) observed in high-redshift Lyman alpha galaxies could be stronger than the EW intrinsic to the stellar population if dust is present residing in clumps in the inter-stellar medium (ISM). In this scenario, continuum photons could be extinguished while the Lyman alpha photons would be resonantly scattered by the clumps, eventually escaping the galaxy. We investigate this radiative transfer scenario with a new sample of six Lyman alpha galaxy candidates in the GOODS CDF-S, selected at z = 4.4 with ground-based narrow-band imaging obtained at CTIO. Grism spectra from the HST PEARS survey confirm that three objects are at z = 4.4, and that another object contains an active galactic nuclei (AGN). If we assume the other five (non-AGN) objects are at z = 4.4, they have rest-frame EWs from 47 -- 190 A. We present results of stellar population studies of these objects, constraining their rest-frame UV with HST and their rest-frame optical with Spitzer. Out of the four objects which we analyzed, three objects were best-fit to contain stellar populations with ages on the order of 1 Myr and stellar masses from 3 - 10 x 10^8 solar masses, with dust in the amount of A_1200 = 0.9 - 1.8 residing in a quasi-homogeneous distribution. However, one object (with a rest EW ~ 150 A) was best fit by an 800 Myr, 6.6 x 10^9 solar mass stellar population with a smaller amount of dust (A_1200 = 0.4) attenuating the continuum only. In this object, the EW was enhanced ~ 50% due to this dust. This suggests that large EW Lyman alpha galaxies are a diverse population. Preferential extinction of the continuum in a clumpy ISM deserves further investigation as a possible cause of the overabundance of large-EW objects that have been seen in narrow-band surveys in recent years.Comment: Submitted to the Astrophysical Journal. 35 pages, 7 figures and 4 table

    Cytogenomic array detects a subset of myelodysplastic syndrome with increased risk that is invisible to conventional karyotype

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    Conventional karyotyping is essential standard practice in the initial evaluation of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and is the most impactful single component of the Revised International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS‐R). While single nucleotide polymorphism array (SNP‐A) has demonstrated the ability to detect chromosomal defects with greater sensitivity than conventional karyotype, widespread adoption is limited by the unknown additional prognostic impact of SNP‐A analysis. Here, we investigate the significance of additional SNP‐A abnormalities in the setting of MDS and demonstrate differences in survival of patients with additional abnormalities, even those initially characterized as relatively lower risk either by cytogenetic score or IPSS‐R. Our findings identify specific abnormalities, particularly KMT2A partial tandem duplication, that are invisible to conventional karyotype and potentially contribute to the poor prognosis of MDS patients. Furthermore, these results demonstrate the added value of SNP‐A analysis in identifying patients who may benefit from more aggressive therapy, particularly those who would otherwise be classified into lower risk categories.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151357/1/gcc22783_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151357/2/gcc22783.pd
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