1,359 research outputs found
Structuring reality through the faultlines lens: the effects of structure, fairness, and status conflict on the activated faultlines-performance relationship
We investigate how activated team faultlines represent an informal sensemaking structure through which teammates interpret their social reality. Constructed from inter-subgroup comparisons, activated faultlines likely result in status perceptions that are ambiguous or illegitimate. Thus, activated faultlines threaten the justice climate within the team, which drives status conflict, impairing team performance. We explore the effects of team structure clarity in providing certainty or legitimacy around status and structure, ameliorating the negative effect of activated faultlines on team justice climate. We tested our model using a multi-source (three sources), multi-wave cross-lagged design (four waves) on a sample of 271 employees and 41 leaders in 41 teams. We found that the negative relationship between activated faultlines and team performance was mediated by the team justice climate—status conflict causal chain. We also found that team structure clarity reduced activated faultlines negative effect on team justice climate. The results highlight the value of using team faultlines, the social identity approach, and justice theories to understand how diverse teams interpret their social reality that influences their performance. Furthermore, our research provides practical guidance to managers in building clear team structures that minimize the harmful effects of activated faultlines on justice perceptions and team performance.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
Logics for Unranked Trees: An Overview
Labeled unranked trees are used as a model of XML documents, and logical
languages for them have been studied actively over the past several years. Such
logics have different purposes: some are better suited for extracting data,
some for expressing navigational properties, and some make it easy to relate
complex properties of trees to the existence of tree automata for those
properties. Furthermore, logics differ significantly in their model-checking
properties, their automata models, and their behavior on ordered and unordered
trees. In this paper we present a survey of logics for unranked trees
Adaptive walks on time-dependent fitness landscapes
The idea of adaptive walks on fitness landscapes as a means of studying
evolutionary processes on large time scales is extended to fitness landscapes
that are slowly changing over time. The influence of ruggedness and of the
amount of static fitness contributions are investigated for model landscapes
derived from Kauffman's landscapes. Depending on the amount of static
fitness contributions in the landscape, the evolutionary dynamics can be
divided into a percolating and a non-percolating phase. In the percolating
phase, the walker performs a random walk over the regions of the landscape with
high fitness.Comment: 7 pages, 6 eps-figures, RevTeX, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Exotic spacetimes, superconducting strings with linear momentum, and (not quite) all that
We derive the general exact vacuum metrics associated with a stationary (non
static), non rotating, cylindrically symmetric source. An analysis of the
geometry described by these vacuum metrics shows that they contain a subfamily
of metrics that, although admitting a consistent time orientation, display
"exotic" properties, such as "trapping" of geodesics and closed causal curves
through every point. The possibility that such spacetimes could be generated by
a superconducting string, endowed with a neutral current and momentum, has
recently been considered by Thatcher and Morgan. Our results, however, differ
from those found by Thatcher and Morgan, and the discrepancy is explained. We
also analyze the general possibility of constructing physical sources for the
exotic metrics, and find that, under certain restrictions, they must always
violate the dominant energy condition (DEC). We illustrate our results by
explicitly analyzing the case of concentric shells, where we find that in all
cases the external vacuum metric is non exotic if the matter in the shells
satisfies the DEC.Comment: 13 pages with no figures. Accepted in PR
Shaping the global communications milieu : the EU's influence on internet and telecommunications governance
This article evaluates the European Union's (EU) influence in shaping the global governance for telecommunications and the Internet. Through analysing EU behaviour within an actorness framework, we demonstrate how the external opportunity structure and the EU's internal environment has impacted on its ability to exert and maximize its presence in order to meet its goals and aims in these two very different sub-sectors of global communications in terms of evolution and development. Such a comparison of EU actorness, we argue, is revealing in terms of uncovering the underlying factors and conditions that allow the EU to influence two important and dynamic communications sub-sectors
On the binary nature of 1RXS J162848.1-415241
We present spectroscopy of the optical counterpart to 1RXS J162848.1-41524,
also known as the microquasar candidate MCQC J162847-4152. All the data
indicate that this X-ray source is not a microquasar, and that it is a
single-lined chromospherically active binary system with a likely orbital
period of 4.9 days. Our analysis supports a K3IV spectral classification for
the star, which is dominant at optical wavelengths. The unseen binary component
is most likely a late-type (K7-M) dwarf or a white dwarf. Using the high
resolution spectra we have measured the K3 star's rotational broadening to be
vsini = 43 +/- 3 km/s and determined a lower limit to the binary mass ratio of
q(=M2/M1)>2.0. The high rotational broadening together with the strong CaII H &
K / Halpha emission and high-amplitude photometric variations indicate that the
evolved star is very chromospherically active and responsible for the
X-ray/radio emission.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Phase III randomised trial of doxorubicin-based chemotherapy compared with platinum-based chemotherapy in small-cell lung cancer
This randomised trial compared platinum-based to anthracycline-based chemotherapy in patients with small-cell lung cancer (limited or extensive stage) and ⩽2 adverse prognostic factors. Patients were randomised to receive six cycles of either ACE (doxorubicin 50 mg/m2 i.v., cyclophosphamide 1 g/m2 i.v. and etoposide 120 mg/m2 i.v. on day 1, then etoposide 240 mg/m2 orally for 2 days) or PE (cisplatin 80 mg/m2 and etoposide 120 mg/m2 i.v. on day 1, then etoposide 240 mg/m2 orally for 2 days) given for every 3 weeks. For patients where cisplatin was not suitable, carboplatin (AUC6) was substituted. A total of 280 patients were included (139 ACE, 141 PE). The response rates were 72% for ACE and 77% for PE. One-year survival rates were 34 and 38% (P=0.497), respectively and 2-year survival was the same (12%) for both arms. For LD patients, the median survival was 10.9 months for ACE and 12.6 months for PE (P=0.51); for ED patients median survival was 8.3 months and 7.5 months, respectively. More grades 3 and 4 neutropenia (90 vs 57%, P<0.005) and grades 3 and 4 infections (73 vs 29%, P<0.005) occurred with ACE, resulting in more days of hospitalisation and greater i.v. antibiotic use. ACE was associated with a higher risk of neutropenic sepsis than PE and with a trend towards worse outcome in patients with LD, and should not be studied further in this group of patients
Education policy as an act of white supremacy: whiteness, critical race theory and education reform
The paper presents an empirical analysis of education policy in England that is informed by recent developments in US critical theory. In particular, I draw on ‘whiteness studies’ and the application of Critical Race Theory (CRT). These perspectives offer a new and radical way of conceptualising the role of racism in education. Although the US literature has paid little or no regard to issues outside North America, I argue that a similar understanding of racism (as a multifaceted, deeply embedded, often taken-for-granted aspect of power relations) lies at the heart of recent attempts to understand institutional racism in the UK. Having set out the conceptual terrain in the first half of the paper, I then apply this approach to recent changes in the English education system to reveal the central role accorded the defence (and extension) of race inequity. Finally, the paper touches on the question of racism and intentionality: although race inequity may not be a planned and deliberate goal of education policy neither is it accidental. The patterning of racial advantage and inequity is structured in domination and its continuation represents a form of tacit intentionality on the part of white powerholders and policy makers. It is in this sense that education policy is an act of white supremacy. Following others in the CRT tradition, therefore, the paper’s analysis concludes that the most dangerous form of ‘white supremacy’ is not the obvious and extreme fascistic posturing of small neonazi groups, but rather the taken-for-granted routine privileging of white interests that goes unremarked in the political mainstream
Preliminary seismological and geological studies of the San Fernando, California, earthquake of February 9 1971
The San Fernando earthquake was the largest earthquake to occur in the metropolitan Los
Angeles area in more than 50 years. It has tentatively been assigned a magnitude, M_L of 6.6, a focal
depth of 13.0 km, and an epicentral location about 12 km east of Newhall, California, at 34°24.0'N,
118°23.7'W (Figure 1), but these figures undoubtedly will be modified as further data become available.
Although the focal depth is not as well defined as the epicenter, it is consistent with other
observations suggesting thrusting on a fault plane dipping north about 45 ° and breaking the surface
in the Sylmar-San Fernando area (Figure 1). It should be emphasized that the hypocenter of
the main shock represents only the point of initial rupture. Breaking, presumably, then propagated
southward and upward from this point, so that the main geological and engineering effects
were observed farther south where the fault was shallower and the displacement greater. The location
of the main shock is based on readings from permanent stations of the Caltech network, as
well as the U. S. Geological Survey station at Point Mugu (SBLG) and the California Department
of Water Resources stations at Pyramid (PYR) and Cedar Springs (CSP). Portable Caltech seismographs
were installed in the epicentral area as early as 3 hr following the main shock, and,
within a few days, there were at least 30 portable units in the region operated by various groups
and agencies
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