6,632 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
"If We Don't Produce, Bring Another:" Work Organization and Tomato Worker Health.
Objectives: Specific work processes and management structures that contribute to high rates of occupational illness and injury in agricultural industries are not well described in academic literature. This qualitative study of work organization in the U.S. fresh tomato industry investigates how work processes and management structures impact tomato workers' occupational health. Methods: After conducting literature review and key informant interviews, semi-structured interviews and focus groups were conducted with 36 individuals with experience working in the U.S. fresh tomato industry. Interviews and focus groups were audio-recorded, transcribed, coded, and analyzed using a modified grounded theory approach. Results: These data indicate that participants endured income insecurity and hazardous supervisory practices, including wage theft, retaliation, intimidation, and humiliation, that put them at risk of preventable illness and injury. Support from workers' organizations and health-conscious supervisory practices helped mitigate some of these occupational hazards. Conclusion: Participants' adverse work experiences may be considered sequelae of workers' lack of job control and positions of socioeconomic structural vulnerability. Other aspects of tomato work organization, including health-conscious supervisory practices and the involvement of workers' organizations, indicate that modifying work organization to better safeguard health is possible. Such modifications present compelling opportunities for employers, employees, organizations, community and government leaders, and health care professionals to help create healthier occupational environments for tomato workers
San Jacinto Intrusive Complex: 2. Geochemistry
Rocks from three large (>100^2 km) tonalitic intrusions exposed in the San Jacinto Mountains of southern California show a restricted compositional range of between 63 and 68 wt % SiO_2 for all but volumetrically minor felsic differentiates (with Si0_2≈70 wt %). All rocks with less than 65.5 wt % SiO_2 show linear element-element covariation. Felsic differentiates have characteristics (higher SiO_2, K_2O, Rb, Ba, U; higher and variable rare earth elements) consistent with derivation by in situ fractionation; rocks with between 65.5 and 70 wt % SiO_2 have intermediate characteristics and are interpreted as derived from liquids formed by mixing “primitive” liquids with fractionated liquids within an intermittently recharged, continuously solidifying magma chamber. Mafic inclusions extend the compositional trends of the mafic tonalites to 55 wt % SiO_2. The chemical variations of both inclusions and more mafic tonalites are interpreted as resulting from processes acting before injection of their parental liquids into the observed crustal magma chambers. Effects of chamber processes are minor for all but the most felsic rocks. The major effect of recharge is to buffer the thermal and chemical properties of liquids within the magma chambers, yielding large volumes of relatively homogeneous tonalite. For those elements where the bulk distribution coefficient is between about 0.5 and 2, concurrent recharge and solidification produces rocks that closely approximate the composition of the added liquids. Estimated Rayleigh numbers for these liquids are high (>10^(10)), implying convection throughout much of the solidification history of each chamber. Existence of trace element variations within analyzed rocks imply that convection was not totally efficient at homogenizing the various batches of liquid added to each chamber
Many-body theory interpretation of deep inelastic scattering
We analyze data on deep inelastic scattering of electrons from the proton
using ideas from standard many-body theory involving {\em bound} constituents
subject to {\em interactions}. This leads us to expect, at large three-momentum
transfer , scaling in terms of the variable . The response at constant scales well in this variable.
Interaction effects are manifestly displayed in this approach. They are
illustrated in two examples.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
The Effects of Absent Father Figures on the Social Functioning of Teens
Problem: In America, children under the age of 18 are being negatively affected by the absence of a father in the home. This is important because fatherlessness is on the rise (Census Bureau, 2016) and can harm a child’s future opportunities (Snyder, McLaughlin, & Findeis, 2006). Specifically, depressive symptoms and delinquent behavior have been recognized as two tangible outcomes of growing up without a father. Trending research suggests that delinquency and depressive symptoms are linked to a lack of parental monitoring (Markowitz & Ryan, 2016), yet the aspects of socialization (early father departure) and emotional distress (late father departure) should be further researched. Research Question: How does the level of social functioning in teens without father figures compare to teens with father figures? Design/sample: We will use a cross-sectional descriptive research design. Teens between the ages of 13-19 in enrolled in education, juvenile court/detention center, and local service agencies located in Miami Valley, Ohio will be studied using multistage cluster random sample. Collection/Analysis: A voluntary mobile-online survey will be sent out to the teachers, social workers in the court system and social workers at the social service agencies to distribute to their teenage students and clients. Three statistical tests will be run using SPSS software. Frequency distribution and Chi-square will compare teens living with a biological father, a father figure, or no father figure. One-way ANOVA will examine the differences in social functioning among teens with a biological father, father figure, or no father figure. Expected Findings: We expect to find higher social function in teens with an involved biological father who lives in the home. We also expect to find teens with father figures to have lower social functioning than those with biological fathers living in the home, while having higher social functioning than those with no biological father or father figure. Keywords: Father-figure, social functioning, teens, fatherless, biological fathe
Parkinson\u27s Disease, Amantadine Hydrochloride Therapy and Dopa Metabolites
In an attempt to clarify the effect of amantadine hydrochloride therapy in Parkinson\u27s disease, dopa metabolites were measured in the urine of 15 patients who were taking this medication. The results indicated that patients on amantadine therapy had lower urinary levels of epinephrine plus norepinephrine than either normal individuals or parkinsonian patients not receiving amantadine. Patients who developed livedo reticularis during amantadine therapy showed a small but significant increase in urinary dopamine levels and a similar decrease in dopac levels, when compared to other patients on amantadine who did not develop livedo reticularis
Calculation of Densities of States and Spectral Functions by Chebyshev Recursion and Maximum Entropy
We present an efficient algorithm for calculating spectral properties of
large sparse Hamiltonian matrices such as densities of states and spectral
functions. The combination of Chebyshev recursion and maximum entropy achieves
high energy resolution without significant roundoff error, machine precision or
numerical instability limitations. If controlled statistical or systematic
errors are acceptable, cpu and memory requirements scale linearly in the number
of states. The inference of spectral properties from moments is much better
conditioned for Chebyshev moments than for power moments. We adapt concepts
from the kernel polynomial approximation, a linear Chebyshev approximation with
optimized Gibbs damping, to control the accuracy of Fourier integrals of
positive non-analytic functions. We compare the performance of kernel
polynomial and maximum entropy algorithms for an electronic structure example.Comment: 8 pages RevTex, 3 postscript figure
- …