561 research outputs found
The gender gap in workplace authority in Sweden 1968-2000 – a family affair?
We assess whether the gender gap in authority in Sweden has changed during the period 1968–2000, and investigate to what extent family factors are responsible for this gap. We find that the gap has narrowed modestly during this period, and identify the life-event of parenthood as a major cause of the gap. When men become fathers, they gain authority; when women become mothers, they do not. Our fixed effects panel estimates of the effects of family factors deviate from the cross-sectional estimates, suggesting that unobserved individual heterogeneity – routinely neglected in this line of research – matters.Workplace authority; gender gap; work-family balance; Sweden
Cluster Model of Decagonal Tilings
A relaxed version of Gummelt's covering rules for the aperiodic decagon is
considered, which produces certain random-tiling-type structures. These
structures are precisely characterized, along with their relationships to
various other random tiling ensembles. The relaxed covering rule has a natural
realization in terms of a vertex cluster in the Penrose pentagon tiling. Using
Monte Carlo simulations, it is shown that the structures obtained by maximizing
the density of this cluster are the same as those produced by the corresponding
covering rules. The entropy density of the covering ensemble is determined
using the entropic sampling algorithm. If the model is extended by an
additional coupling between neighboring clusters, perfectly ordered structures
are obtained, like those produced by Gummelt's perfect covering rules.Comment: 10 pages, 20 figures, RevTeX; minor changes; to be published in Phys.
Rev.
Remote Sensing for Natural or Man-made Disasters and Environmental Changes
Disasters can cause drastic environmental changes. A large amount of spatial data is required for managing the disasters and to assess their environmental impacts. Earth observation data offers independent coverage of wide areas for a broad spectrum of crisis situations. It provides information over large areas in near-real-time interval and supplementary at short-time and long-time intervals. Therefore, remote sensing can support disaster management in various applications. In order to demonstrate not only the efficiency but also the limitations of remote sensing technologies for disaster management, a number of case studies are presented, including applications for flooding in Germany 2013, earthquake in Nepal 2015, forest fires in Russia 2015, and searching for the Malaysian aircraft 2014. The discussed aspects comprise data access, information extraction and analysis, management of data and its integration with other data sources, product design, and organisational aspects
Hyperconvexity and Tight Span Theory for Diversities
The tight span, or injective envelope, is an elegant and useful construction
that takes a metric space and returns the smallest hyperconvex space into which
it can be embedded. The concept has stimulated a large body of theory and has
applications to metric classification and data visualisation. Here we introduce
a generalisation of metrics, called diversities, and demonstrate that the rich
theory associated to metric tight spans and hyperconvexity extends to a
seemingly richer theory of diversity tight spans and hyperconvexity.Comment: revised in response to referee comment
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