2,464 research outputs found

    The Role of Repression in the Incidence of Ironic Errors

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    The role of repression in the incidence of ironic errors was investigated on a golf task. Coping styles of novice golfers were determined using measures of cognitive anxiety and physiological arousal. Following baseline putts, participants (n = 58) performed a competition putt with the opportunity to win UK£50 (approx. US$100). Before completing the competition putt participants were instructed to “land the ball on the target, but be particularly careful not to over-shoot the target.” The distance the ball traveled past the hole formed the measure of ironic effects. Probing of the coping style × condition interaction, F(2, 41) = 6.53, p < .005, revealed that only the repressors incurred a significant increase in ironic error for the competition putt. This suggests that the act of repressing anxiety has a detrimental performance effect

    The Greater Boston Housing Report Card 2008: From Paradigm to Paradox: Understanding Greater Boston's New Housing Market

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    Combines an annual survey of Greater Boston's market conditions, housing production, rents, home prices, and public spending and support with an analysis of the dynamics of rising foreclosures, falling prices, and the unresolved problem of affordability

    Monk’s Bread: The History of the Commercial Bakery at the Abbey of the Genesee

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    Throughout the long history of the Cistercian Order each foundation would attempt to become self sufficient by establishing an industry which was linked to the life of the monastic community. Not only did this practice encourage independence from the mother-house but also discouraged overdependence upon assistance from the secular world. The Abbey of the Genesee was founded in 1951 as an offshoot of Gethsemani Abbey (home to the famous Thomas Merton). These early Trappist communities were among 10 others in the United States that had their roots in most strict observances within the Cistercian order. The Genesee monks chose several commercial endeavors which included cattle raising, refurbishing of furniture and their most successful venture, the production of a line of breads and baked goods. Bread production at the Abbey of the Genesee began as a suggestion from lay volunteers who were helping with the early construction of the abbey. Laborers who took their meals with the brothers particularly enjoyed their bread and asked whether or not they might purchase some of it to take home to their families. Brother Sylvester (from among the founding group of Genesee monks) had served as a cook in the navy and was used to producing as many as 400 loaves at a time for his shipmates. Initially Sylvester used the community kitchen to bake the popular bread. Given the numerous requests, he began to craft the bread into high-crowned loaves that were about three pound each and wrapped them in coarse market paper. He used an old oven in the kitchen of a farmhouse on the site which served as an early retreat center. Guests and retreatants who came to visit the monastery would also request loaves. Neighborhood stores soon began to ask for the famous bread so they could sell it to local customers. In 1952 a wooden structure behind Bethlehem House was renovated, and it was there that the monks first began to produce (smaller) two-pound loaves for distribution. Loaves were taken to churches in the Conesus Lake area which could be sold after masses. Soon a business plan was developed to assist in a more profitable program for wider dispersal of the product. By October of 1952 the Genesee monks were selling thousands of loaves weekly. In the Spring of 1955 the Genesee community had begun a new bakery facility. It was decided that a more modern operation was needed if the monks were going to continue to engage in the large scale commercial production of bread. At this time they were still using an assembly line process for the cutting, wrapping and packaging of the bread.Most of the work in the bakery was done in the kitchen by the lay brothers, although the choir monks did assist in the clean-up. By 1956, construction of a modern mechanized bakery was completed (at the site of the present facility). The lay brothers worked through an 8 hours overnight process and by 1957 were producing 52 loaves a minute. It soon became necessary to work with a distributor as bread was being sent as far away as New York City. In 1959 they began to franchise the product to keep up with demand. During the 1960’s their major distributor went bankrupt so it became necessary for the monks to purchase their own fleet of trucks to continue operation. Through the decades the Genesee monks have persisted in the updating of their facility and continue to produce the famous bread on the premises to this day. My paper will be based upon research for my doctoral dissertation (and forthcoming book) A History of the Abbey of the Genesee. The presentation will include a rich array of photographs from the Abbey Archives as well as interviews with the monks and documents from commercial partners. I will trace the history of bread production at the Abbey of the Genesee and discuss the implications and directives for community involvement and the philosophy behind their business model. The commercial bakery not only became a major source of income for the Genesee monks but at the height of the popularity of the spiritual writing of Thomas Merton and later coupled with Henri Nouwen’s Genesee Diary, it became a way of “advertising” their order

    Photographing the Corpse

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    Demand Under Product Differentiation: An Empirical Analysis of the US Wine Market

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    Oversupply has posed a number of problems for the Australian wine industry in recent times. When disaggregated from the industry level, however, the problem can be better described as a range of attribute-specific disequilibria. To date, solutions to this problem have predominantly revolved around reducing output through crop thinning or vine pulling. This paper proposes a different approach by suggesting that disequilibria may be reduced by gaining a better understanding of the demand for Australian wine. A discrete choice model of product differentiation is used to estimate the demand for wine in the United States, Australia's second largest export market. Implications of the analysis are explored.oversupply, demand for wine, product differentiation, nested logit, Demand and Price Analysis,

    Extraterritorial Application of the Writ of Habeas Corpus After Boumediene: With Separation of Powers Comes Individual Rights

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    This is the published version

    The Greater Boston Housing Report Card 2015: The Housing Cost Conundrum

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    Why has housing supply not kept up with housing demand? This is the question we decided to finally tackle head-on in this edition of the "Greater Boston Housing Report Card" by undertaking an in-depth study of detailed housing cost data that we have collected from housing agencies and developers. The answer to our question is an unsettling one. We have failed to meet housing production targets because there is no way to do so given the high cost of producing housing for working and middle-income households. In part, this is because of the extreme barriers to new construction, especially in the form of severely restrictive zoning at the local level across much of Massachusetts.Solving this problem of insufficient housing supply will require a battery of new approaches to zoning and construction techniques -- something that has eluded developers and policymakers alike. We suggest in these pages some new approaches to increase housing supply

    Adapting and validating diabetes simulation models across settings: Accounting for mortality differences using administrative data

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    Abstract Aims. To develop age and sex-specific risk equations for predicting mortality following major complications of diabetes, using a large linked administrative dataset from Western Australia (WA) and to incorporate these into an existing diabetes simulation model.. Methods: The study uses linked hospital and mortality records on 13,884 patients following a major diabetes-related complication with a mean (SD) duration of 2.62 (2.25) years. Risk equations for predicting mortality were derived and integrated into the UKPDS Outcomes Model. Estimates of life expectancy and incremental QALYs gained as a result of two theoretical therapies (a reduction of HbA1c of 1%, and reduction of systolic blood pressure of 10mmHg) were determined using the original and adapted models. Results: The two versions of the model generated differences in life expectancy following specific events; however there was little impact of using alternative mortality equations on incremental QALYs gained as a result of reducing HbA1c or systolic blood pressure, or on outcomes of life expectancy for a cohort initially free of complications. Conclusions: Mortality following complications varies across diabetic populations and can impact on estimates of life expectancy, but appears to have less impact on incremental benefits of interventions that are commonly used in pharmoeconomic analyses.National Health and Medical Resaerch Council; Diabetes Australia Research Trus
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