32,564 research outputs found
Unlocking inhibitors to women’s expatriate careers: can job-related training provide a key?
Purpose
The purpose of this study is to examine what job-related training interventions female expatriates seek and can access in order to build necessary knowledge and skills to progress into further career-enhancing expatriate positions.
Design/methodology/approach
This study uses a cross-sectional qualitative research approach, drawing upon semi-structured interviews in respect of organisational training practice with 26 current female expatriates and nine Human Resource, International Assignments and Training Managers in two oil and gas exploration firms.
Findings
Budgets, time and travel restrictions, and competitive business pressures constrain on-the-job training provision for expatriates. Assignees require specific knowledge and skills ahead of appointment to subsequent expatriate positions. HR personnel believe training provides appropriate knowledge and capability development supporting women expatriates’ career ambitions. Women assignees view training available within their current roles as insufficient or irrelevant to building human capital for future expatriate posts.
Research limitations/implications
Longitudinal research across a wider spectrum of industries is needed to help understand the effects of training interventions on women’s access to future career-enhancing expatriation and senior management/leadership positions.
Practical implications
Organisations should ensure relevant technical skills training, clear responsibility for training provision, transparent and fair training allocation, positive communication regarding human capital outcomes, and an inclusive culture that promotes expatriate gender diversity.
Originality/value
Set within the framework of human capital theory, this study identifies the challenges that female expatriates experience when seeking relevant job-related training to further their expatriate careers. It identifies clear mismatches between the views of HR and female assignees in relation to the value of job-related training offered and women’s access to it
The Language of Bias: A Linguistic Approach to Understanding Intergroup Relations
[Excerpt] This chapter explores the role of language in the relationship between diversity and team performance. Specifically, we consider how a linguistic approach to social categorization may be used to study the social psychological mechanisms that underlie diversity effects. Using the results of a study examining the effects of gender, ethnicity and tenure on language abstraction, we consider the potential implications for team processes and effectiveness. In addition, we propose a revised team input-process-output model that highlights the potential effects of language on team processes. We conclude by suggesting directions for future research linking diversity, linguistic categorization and team effectiveness
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Suicide and self-harm in Britain: researching risk and resilience using UK surveys
Aim The main aim of this study was to raise awareness of surveys that could be used to inform self-harm and suicide prevention work. We asked:
What UK survey datasets are available for research?
What aspects of people’s lives are associated with self-harm and attempted suicide?
How do statistical findings resonate with people’s lived experience? What implications do they see?
Findings Survey analyses revealed that risk factors for self-harm are wide ranging and include:
Mental health
Physical health and health behaviours
Social relationships
Stressful events
Employment and financial circumstances
Identity and demographics
Many different factors are independently associated with self-harm. There is a dose relationship, with more exposure to a factor linked with increased risk. Risks are cumulative that is, exposure to multiple factors is associated with greater risk.
Through facilitated consultation, men with lived experience, bereaved family members, and practitioners identified recommendations for responding to suicidal distress in men. These related to the following three main areas:
1. Recognising need: who is ‘ill enough’?
Permission - men said that they often did not know they were entitled to help
Ask - people who outwardly appear to be functioning may not be
Persistence - ask and offer help more than once.
2. Facilitating access: right words, time and place
What is available - support is needed with ongoing stress as well as for crises
Find the words - men wanted examples of how to ask for help
Allow time - employers expect recovery to be swift, some men felt rushed to come off medications or were discharged from services they still needed.
3. Adjusting delivery: equal engagement
Power - some were uncomfortable with service dynamics, preferring peer support
Every service contact counts - negative contacts had particular impact
Safe spaces - may be different for men and women.
Methods
There were three strands of work:
Secondary analysis of nine survey series, spanning more than twenty years
Linkage of 144,000 survey participants to information on whether they were alive in 2013 and whether they had taken their own life
Facilitated consultation, through depth interviews with people with lived experience
A Theory of Errors in Quantum Measurement
It is common to model random errors in a classical measurement by the normal
(Gaussian) distribution, because of the central limit theorem. In the quantum
theory, the analogous hypothesis is that the matrix elements of the error in an
observable are distributed normally. We obtain the probability distribution
this implies for the outcome of a measurement, exactly for the case of 2x2
matrices and in the steepest descent approximation in general. Due to the
phenomenon of `level repulsion', the probability distributions obtained are
quite different from the Gaussian.Comment: Based on talk at "Spacetime and Fundamental Interactions: Quantum
Aspects" A conference to honor A. P. Balachandran's 65th Birthda
Long-term material compatibility testing system
System includes procedure for hermetically sealing solid materials and fluids in glass ampoule and use of temperature-controlled facility containing sample holder, which permits sample containers to be retrieved safely and conveniently. Solid material and fluid are sealed within chemically-clean glass ampoule according to highly detailed procedure
Discrete Breathers in One-Dimensional Diatomic Granular Crystals
We report the experimental observation of discrete breathers in a
one-dimensional diatomic granular crystal composed of compressed elastic beads
that interact via Hertzian contact. We first characterize their effective
linear spectrum both theoretically and experimentally. We then illustrate
theoretically and numerically the modulational instability of the lower edge of
the optical band. This leads to the dynamical formation of long-lived breather
structures, whose families of solutions we compute throughout the linear
spectral gap. Finally, we observe experimentally such localized breathing modes
with quantitative characteristics that agree with our numerical results.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Shuttle STS-2 mission communication systems RF coverage and performance predictions. Volume 1: Ascent
The RF communications capabilities and nominally expected performance for the ascent phase of the second orbital flight of the shuttle are provided. Predicted performance is given mainly in the form of plots of signal strength versus elapsed mission time for the STDN (downlink) and shuttle orbiter (uplink) receivers for the S-band PM and FM, and UHF systems. Performance of the NAV and landing RF systems is treated for RTLS abort, since in this case the spacecraft will loop around and return to the launch site. NAV and landing RF systems include TACAN, MSBLS, and C-band altimeter. Signal strength plots were produced by a computer program which combines the spacecraft trajectory, antenna patterns, transmit and receive performance characteristics, and system mathematical models. When available, measured spacecraft parameters were used in the predictions; otherwise, specified values were used. Specified ground station parameter values were also used. Thresholds and other criteria on the graphs are explained
A Deep Multicolor Survey I. Imaging Observations and Catalog of Stellar Objects
We have used the KPNO 4-meter Mayall telescope to image 0.83 square degrees
of sky in six fields at high galactic latitude in six filters spanning
3000-10000\AA\ to magnitude limits ranging from 22.1 to 23.8. We have assembled
a catalog of 21,375 stellar objects detected in the fields for use primarily in
conducting a multicolor search for quasars. This paper describes the data
reduction techniques used on the CCD data, the methods used to construct the
stellar object catalog, and the simulations performed to understand its
completeness and contamination.Comment: To Appear in ApJ Supplement, 1996. 168k uuencoded gunzipped tarred
tex file (requires aas2pp4.sty and tighten.sty) and 4 PostScript figures.
Also available at http://astro.as.arizona.edu/~pathall/astro.html#preprint
A New Template Family For The Detection Of Gravitational Waves From Comparable Mass Black Hole Binaries
In order to improve the phasing of the comparable-mass waveform as we
approach the last stable orbit for a system, various re-summation methods have
been used to improve the standard post-Newtonian waveforms. In this work we
present a new family of templates for the detection of gravitational waves from
the inspiral of two comparable-mass black hole binaries. These new adiabatic
templates are based on re-expressing the derivative of the binding energy and
the gravitational wave flux functions in terms of shifted Chebyshev
polynomials. The Chebyshev polynomials are a useful tool in numerical methods
as they display the fastest convergence of any of the orthogonal polynomials.
In this case they are also particularly useful as they eliminate one of the
features that plagues the post-Newtonian expansion. The Chebyshev binding
energy now has information at all post-Newtonian orders, compared to the
post-Newtonian templates which only have information at full integer orders. In
this work, we compare both the post-Newtonian and Chebyshev templates against a
fiducially exact waveform. This waveform is constructed from a hybrid method of
using the test-mass results combined with the mass dependent parts of the
post-Newtonian expansions for the binding energy and flux functions. Our
results show that the Chebyshev templates achieve extremely high fitting
factors at all PN orders and provide excellent parameter extraction. We also
show that this new template family has a faster Cauchy convergence, gives a
better prediction of the position of the Last Stable Orbit and in general
recovers higher Signal-to-Noise ratios than the post-Newtonian templates.Comment: Final published version. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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