1,120 research outputs found

    RESERV: An Instrument for Measuring Real Estate Brokerage Service Quality

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    By applying the process utilized in the development of a generic service quality measurement instrument (SERVQUAL), an instrument to measure perceived levels of satisfaction with real estate brokerage service quality (RESERV) is developed. The RESERV instrument contains thirty-one items in seven dimensions and exhibits both high internal consistency and convergent validity. The findings, based upon a survey of home sellers, supports the notion that the real estate brokerage industry is not unique and, as a result, can benefit from the extensive body of knowledge available in other service industries.

    Bosonization in d=2 from finite chiral determinants with a Gauss decomposition

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    We show how to bosonize two-dimensional non-abelian models using finite chiral determinants calculated from a Gauss decomposition. The calculation is quite straightforward and hardly more involved than for the abelian case. In particular, the counterterm AAˉA\bar A, which is normally motivated from gauge invariance and then added by hand, appears naturally in this approach.Comment: 4 pages, Revte

    Patterns of Striped order in the Classical Lattice Coulomb Gas

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    We obtain via Monte Carlo simulations the low temperature charge configurations in the lattice Coulomb gas on square lattices for charge filling ratio ff in the range 1/3<f<1/21/3 < f < 1/2 . We find a simple regularity in the low temperature charge configurations which consist of a suitable periodic combination of a few basic striped patterns characterized by the existence of partially filled diagonal channels. In general there exist two separate transitions where the lower temperature transition (TpT_p) corresponds to the freezing of charges within the partially filled channels. TpT_p is found to be sensitively dependent on ff through the charge number density ν=p1/q1\nu = p_{1}/q_{1} within the channels.Comment: 4 pages, 8 figure

    Northern Bobwhite Survival and Productivity in Relation to Food Supplementation

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    Northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus; hereafter, bobwhite) populations have experienced a 3.4% decline annually nation-wide from 1966 to 2018. Limitations on resources, such as food, can regulate population growth. Supplemental food could alleviate resource limitation by raising carrying capacity, leading to increased survival and breeding productivity. Studies have shown higher survival rates and higher nest production when food is supplemented; however, repeating experiments in different contexts allows for strong inference. Our objectives were to assess how supplemental food influenced survival and breeding productivity of resident and translocated bobwhite during a 2-year study on public lands in Leon County, Florida, USA within the Apalachicola National Forest. In accordance with the food limitation hypothesis, we predicted that provisioning of supplemental food would have a positive influence on survival rates and nest productivity. We split the study site into 4 approximately 400-ha zones and randomly assigned 2 treatment (fed) and 2 control (unfed) replicates. Treatment and control zones were flipped during the second field season. Treatments received approximately 1.75 bushels of milo (Sorghum bicolor)/acre 2 times/month year-round via broadcast spreader. We radio-marked 205 bobwhites (102 treatment, 103 control) from February 2019 through October 2020. Individuals were tracked 3–4 times/week for location and survival via radio-telemetry to estimate the breeding season survival and reproduction rates. We estimated survival rates using the Kaplan-Meier product limit estimator. The survival rate during the breeding seasons was higher on average for treatment zones (x̄ = 0.38, standard error [SE] = 0.040) than for control zones (x̄ = 0.29, SE = 0.045). We also observed that 79% of nests found were located in treatment zones compared to 21% in control zones. Our results suggest that food supplementation can improve survival rates and nest production of bobwhite in a food-limited landscape

    Scheduling with genetic algorithms

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    In many domains, scheduling a sequence of jobs is an important function contributing to the overall efficiency of the operation. At Boeing, we develop schedules for many different domains, including assembly of military and commercial aircraft, weapons systems, and space vehicles. Boeing is under contract to develop scheduling systems for the Space Station Payload Planning System (PPS) and Payload Operations and Integration Center (POIC). These applications require that we respect certain sequencing restrictions among the jobs to be scheduled while at the same time assigning resources to the jobs. We call this general problem scheduling and resource allocation. Genetic algorithms (GA's) offer a search method that uses a population of solutions and benefits from intrinsic parallelism to search the problem space rapidly, producing near-optimal solutions. Good intermediate solutions are probabalistically recombined to produce better offspring (based upon some application specific measure of solution fitness, e.g., minimum flowtime, or schedule completeness). Also, at any point in the search, any intermediate solution can be accepted as a final solution; allowing the search to proceed longer usually produces a better solution while terminating the search at virtually any time may yield an acceptable solution. Many processes are constrained by restrictions of sequence among the individual jobs. For a specific job, other jobs must be completed beforehand. While there are obviously many other constraints on processes, it is these on which we focussed for this research: how to allocate crews to jobs while satisfying job precedence requirements and personnel, and tooling and fixture (or, more generally, resource) requirements

    Driving Aptitude of CCC Enrollees as Compared with a Similar Age Group from the General Population

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    Two groups of individuals were compared on characteristics pertaining to sensory, motor and central processes, assumed to be necessary to efficiency in driving an automobile, to determine the degree of similarity between traits of 44 CCC enrollees and an unselected sample of 70 youths from the same age groups. The only significant differences found were: (1) CCC enrollees were shorter in stature and (2) less active than the .general population. (3) The vision of the CCC enrollees was also poorer and (4) they lacked experience with automobiles as compared with the average youth
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