3,378 research outputs found
From Stigma to Standing: The Effects of Peer Leadership Participation on Student Veteransâ Ideas About Self and Others
The Veterans Embracing Transition (VET) Connect Peer Leadership Program is a University-based effort to assist student veterans in transitioning to campus and civilian life. Peer Leaders receive training to provide outreach to educate the campus community about the needs and perspectives of veterans (Klaw, Li, Avalos, & Diaz, 2016). As part of a larger project exploring the effects of VET Connect, exploratory findings in qualitative research indicate that through their participation in VET Connect student veterans gained a sense that civilians do indeed care (12, 92%) about veterans. Over half of the participants (8, 61%) reported changing ideas about themselves as veterans, seeing themselves at first as ânot needing anybodyâ and then discovering that relationships were important to their sense of self. In their services as peer educators, these students discovered that they were not significantly different from other SJSU students as diverse and varied individuals. This study was conducted in collaboration with Jemerson Diaz. We worked on independent research questions and observations using data derived from the same larger study simultaneously under the supervision of Dr. Klaw
Trivalent Graph isomorphism in polynomial time
It's important to design polynomial time algorithms to test if two graphs are
isomorphic at least for some special classes of graphs.
An approach to this was presented by Eugene M. Luks(1981) in the work
\textit{Isomorphism of Graphs of Bounded Valence Can Be Tested in Polynomial
Time}. Unfortunately, it was a theoretical algorithm and was very difficult to
put into practice. On the other hand, there is no known implementation of the
algorithm, although Galil, Hoffman and Luks(1983) shows an improvement of this
algorithm running in .
The two main goals of this master thesis are to explain more carefully the
algorithm of Luks(1981), including a detailed study of the complexity and, then
to provide an efficient implementation in SAGE system. It is divided into four
chapters plus an appendix.Comment: 48 pages. It is a Master Thesi
Artistic creation and intellectual property
We analyze artistic markets considering three key distinctive features that have been overlooked by the standard analysis on intellectual property. These features are the dynamic link between the current number of young artists and future high-quality artistic creation, Rosen's superstars phenomenon, and the role played by promotion costs. Introducing them into an overlapping-generations model brings about a new perspective on the consequences for artistic creation of changes in the copyright term, progress in communication technologies favoring market concentration by stars, and the enlargement of markets. The conventional result that longer copyrights always stimulate artistic creation only holds as a particular case
Firms' Main Market, Human Capital and Wages
Recent international trade literature emphasizes two features in characterizing the current patterns of trade: efficiency heterogeneity at the firm level and quality differentiation. This paper explores human capital and wage differences across firms in that context. We build a partial equilibrium model predicting that firms selling in more-remote markets employ higher human capital and pay higher wages to employees within each education group. The channel linking these variables is firmsâ endogenous choice of quality. Predictions are tested using Spanish employer-employee matched data that classify firms according to four main destination markets: local, national, European Union, and rest of the World. Employeesâ average education is increasing in the remoteness of firmâs main output market. Marketâdestination wage premia are large, increasing in the remoteness of the market, and increasing in individual education. These results suggest that increasing globalization may play a significant role in raising wage inequality within and across education groups
Accretion, disks, and magnetic activity in the TW Hya association
We present new photometric and spectroscopic data for the M-type members of
the TW Hya association with the aim of a comprehensive study of accretion,
disks and magnetic activity at the critical age of ~10 Myr where circumstellar
matter disappears.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in Proceedings IAU Symposium No. 314, Young Stars
& Planets Near the Sun, 201
Artistic creation and intellectual property
We analyze artistic markets considering three key distinctive features that have been overlooked by the standard analysis on intellectual property. These features are the dynamic link between the current number of young artists and future high-quality artistic creation, Rosen's superstars phenomenon, and the role played by promotion costs. Introducing them into an overlapping-generations model brings about a new perspective on the consequences for artistic creation of changes in the copyright term, progress in communication technologies favoring market concentration by stars, and the enlargement of markets. The conventional result that longer copyrights always stimulate artistic creation only holds as a particular case.superstars; copyright; innate abilities; talent
Inflation and Factor Shares
We use results from the literature on the determinants of price-cost margins to derive an equation relating labor's share of national income to the inflation rate (as well as to the output gap, the unemployment rate and the capital stock per worker). The equation is tested with a panel of 15 OECD countries. We obtain a robust positive relationship between inflation and the labor share. Our results suggest that disinflation is not distributively neutral, provide empirical support for the distinct concern about price stability shown by trade unions and employers' organizations, and help explaining the negative impact of inflation on growth.Inflation, Functional Distribution of Income, Markups.
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