16,834 research outputs found
Mission oriented study of advanced nuclear system parameters, phase IV, volume I Final report, May 1965 - Dec. 1966
Guidelines and assumptions for manned Mars stopover mission planning analyses - nuclear system parameter
Do Salaries Improve Worker Performance?
We establish the effects of salaries on worker performance by exploiting a natural experiment in which some workers in a particular occupation (football referees) switch from short-term contracts to salaried contracts. Worker performance improves among those who move onto salaried contracts relative to those who do not. The finding is robust to the introduction of worker fixed effects indicating that it is not driven by better workers being awarded salary contracts. Nor is it sensitive to workers sorting into or out of the profession. Improved performance could arise from the additional effort workers exert due to career concerns, the higher income associated with career contracts (an efficiency wage effect) or improvements in worker quality arising from off-the-job training which accompanies the salaried contracts.
Color and texture associations in voice-induced synesthesia
Voice-induced synesthesia, a form of synesthesia in which synesthetic perceptions are induced by the sounds of people's voices, appears to be relatively rare and has not been systematically studied. In this study we investigated the synesthetic color and visual texture perceptions experienced in response to different types of âvoice qualityâ (e.g., nasal, whisper, falsetto). Experiences of three different groupsâself-reported voice synesthetes, phoneticians, and controlsâwere compared using both qualitative and quantitative analysis in a study conducted online. Whilst, in the qualitative analysis, synesthetes used more color and texture terms to describe voices than either phoneticians or controls, only weak differences, and many similarities, between groups were found in the quantitative analysis. Notable consistent results between groups were the matching of higher speech fundamental frequencies with lighter and redder colors, the matching of âwhisperyâ voices with smoke-like textures, and the matching of âharshâ and âcreakyâ voices with textures resembling dry cracked soil. These data are discussed in the light of current thinking about definitions and categorizations of synesthesia, especially in cases where individuals apparently have a range of different synesthetic inducers
The impacts of human resource management practices and pay inequality on workers' job satisfaction
In this paper we investigate the relationship between Human Resource Management (HRM) practices and workers' overall job satisfaction and their satisfaction with pay. To investigate these issues we use British data from the 'Changing Employment Relationships, Employment Contracts and the Future of Work Survey' and the 'Workplace Employment Relations Survey'. After controlling for personal, job and firm characteristics, it is shown that several HRM practices raise workers overall job satisfaction and their satisfaction with pay, but these effects are only significant for non-union members. Satisfaction with pay is higher where performance-related pay and seniority-based reward systems are in place. A pay structure that is perceived to be unequal is associated with a substantial reduction in both non-union members' overall job satisfaction and their satisfaction with pay. Although HRM practices can raise worker job satisfaction, if workplace pay inequality widens as a consequence then non-union members may experience reduced job satisfaction.
Custodial Symmetry, Flavor Physics, and the Triviality Bound on the Higgs Mass
The triviality of the scalar sector of the standard one-doublet Higgs model
implies that this model is only an effective low-energy theory valid below some
cut-off scale Lambda. We show that the experimental constraint on the amount of
custodial symmetry violation implies that the scale Lambda must be greater than
of order 7.5 TeV. The underlying high-energy theory must also include flavor
dynamics at a scale of order Lambda or greater in order to give rise to the
different Yukawa couplings of the Higgs to ordinary fermions. This flavor
dynamics will generically produce flavor-changing neutral currents. We show
that the experimental constraints on the neutral D-meson mass difference imply
that Lambda must be greater than of order 21 TeV. For theories defined about
the infrared-stable Gaussian fixed-point, we estimate that this lower bound on
Lambda yields an upper bound of approximately 460 GeV on the Higgs boson's
mass, independent of the regulator chosen to define the theory. We also show
that some regulator schemes, such as higher-derivative regulators, used to
define the theory about a different fixed-point are particularly dangerous
because an infinite number of custodial-isospin-violating operators become
relevant.Comment: 15 pages, 7 ps/eps embedded figures, talk presented at the 1996
International Workshop on Perspectives of Strong Coupling Gauge Theories
(SCGT 96), Nagoya, Japa
General solution of an exact correlation function factorization in conformal field theory
We discuss a correlation function factorization, which relates a three-point
function to the square root of three two-point functions. This factorization is
known to hold for certain scaling operators at the two-dimensional percolation
point and in a few other cases. The correlation functions are evaluated in the
upper half-plane (or any conformally equivalent region) with operators at two
arbitrary points on the real axis, and a third arbitrary point on either the
real axis or in the interior. This type of result is of interest because it is
both exact and universal, relates higher-order correlation functions to
lower-order ones, and has a simple interpretation in terms of cluster or loop
probabilities in several statistical models. This motivated us to use the
techniques of conformal field theory to determine the general conditions for
its validity.
Here, we discover a correlation function which factorizes in this way for any
central charge c, generalizing previous results. In particular, the
factorization holds for either FK (Fortuin-Kasteleyn) or spin clusters in the
Q-state Potts models; it also applies to either the dense or dilute phases of
the O(n) loop models. Further, only one other non-trivial set of highest-weight
operators (in an irreducible Verma module) factorizes in this way. In this case
the operators have negative dimension (for c < 1) and do not seem to have a
physical realization.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, v2 minor revision
Characterizing Boosted Dijet Resonances with Jet Energy Correlators
We show that Jet Energy Correlation variables can be used effectively to
discover and distinguish a wide variety of boosted light dijet resonances at
the LHC through sensitivity to their transverse momentum and color structures.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Vibrational Fundamentals of CF2N2 from the Ultraviolet Absorption Spectrum
Vibration fundamentals of cyclic difluorodiazirine compound from ultraviolet absorption spectru
Oscillatory Magneto-Thermopower and Resonant Phonon Drag in a High-Mobility 2D Electron Gas
Experimental and theoretical evidence is presented for new low-magnetic-field
( kG) 1/B-oscillations in the thermoelectric power of a high-mobility
GaAs/AlGaAs two-dimensional (2D) electron gas. The oscillations result from
inter-Landau-Level resonances of acoustic phonons carrying a momentum equal to
twice the Fermi wavenumber at . Numerical calculations show that both 3D
and 2D phonons can contribute to this effect.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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