24,319 research outputs found
Social Functioning of Children and Their Parents: Are They Related?
This study examined whether parents' social support was related to their children's peer acceptance and likability. The moderating role of the parent's and the child's gender was also examined. Father (N = 146-150) and mother (N = 201) reports of social support and peer reports of peer acceptance were obtained from 107 boys and 96 girls (7.92-16.76 years, M = 11.77). Aspects of fathers' and mothers' social support were observed to be differentially correlated with their children's friendships and likability. While fathers' social support was moderately correlated with their children's friendships, mothers' social support was not. The implications of these findings for the role of fathers in children's social functioning are discussed
Productivity Growth in European Railways: Technological Progress,Efficiency Change and Scale Effects
This paper analyzes the performance of the European railway sector in the period of deregulation (1990-2005). Using a stochastic frontier panel data model that controls for unobserved heterogeneity a multiple-output multiple input distance function model is estimated in order to evaluate the sources of productivity growth: technological progress, technical efficiency change and scale effects. The results indicate that technology improvements were by far the most important driver of productivity growth, followed by gains in technical efficiency, and to a lesser extent by exploitation of scale economies. Overall, we find an average productivity growth of 39 per cent within the sample period.European railways, Deregulation, Stochastic frontier analysis,Total factor productivity
A tubular protozoan predator: a burrow selectively filled with tubular agglutinated protozoans (Xenophyophorea, Foraminifera) in the abyssal South China Sea
We report the occurrence of an unusual agglutinated protozoan-filled burrow recovered in a box core
collected in 1998 from a depth of 2496 m in the South China Sea. The onion-shaped burrow
occurring some 8 cm beneath the sediment surface was packed full with specimens of
xenophyophoreans and foraminifera dominated by a single genus (Aschemonella) that had been living
on the surface of the 1991 Mt. Pinatubo ash layer. This selective scavenging of epibenthic tubular
agglutinated protozoans contributes to the patchiness of the benthic fauna on the sea floor. Because
the tubular protozoans selectively agglutinate mafic mineral grains from the volcanic ash, two levels
of biological scavenging are involved with the redistribution of these volcanic grains
Sediment disturbance caused by a suspension-feeding tubular agglutinated foraminifer
We report the occurrence of in-situ sediment disturbance caused by a specimen of Rhabdammina
observed in life position on the 1991 Mt. Pinatubo ash layer in the abyssal South China Sea. The
specimen extracts sediment grains from the ash layer to build its agglutinated test, causing a
depression, or âmoatâ to form around the base of the specimen. We suspect that such fine-scale
disturbance caused by large, erect tubular foraminifera is a common feature of the fossil record in
deep-sea settings
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