5,400 research outputs found
Resettlement of young people leaving custody: Lessons from the literature
This literature review aims to set out the research and practice evidence about effective resettlement services for children and young adults and can be used to inform future policy and practice to ensure service delivery is evidence based. The findings of the review will help to steer the focus of Beyond Youth Custodyâs research over the duration of the programme and act as a baseline to assess how our understanding has advanced in terms of what works in facilitating the transition from youth custody to the community and beyond. In addition, the review highlights some examples of good practice, as well as the emerging key principles of effective resettlement provision
Some special trigonometrical series related to the distribution of prime numbers
This article does not have an abstract
Averages of character sums
This article does not have an abstract
OBJECTIVE AND SOCIAL FACTORS AS DETERMINANTS OF TASK PERCEPTIONS AND RESPONSES: AN INTEGRATED PERSPECTIVE AND EMPIRICAL INVESTIGATION.
The purpose of this study was to test the merits of an integrated perspective derived from the job characteristics and social information processing models of task design. We conducted a complex laboratory study, manipulating objective properties of a task, social information, and changes in both. Results suggested strong support for the integrated perspective. Implications for future theory and research are discussed
Investment decisions for retirement savings
We conducted a choice experiment to investigate whether retirement savers follow simple portfolio theory when choosing investments. We modeled experimental survey data on 693 participants using a scale-adjusted version of the latent class choice model. Results show that underlying variability in response was explained by age and " risk profile" score and that preferences varied with income and age. Younger individuals were conventionally risk averse, but older, higher-income individuals may react positively to both higher returns and increasing risk, when risk is presented as widening ranges of possible outcomes. Respondents tended to choose among a few similar investment options. Copyright 2010 by The American Council on Consumer Interests
On rolling, tunneling and decaying in some large N vector models
Various aspects of time-dependent processes are studied within the large N
approximation of O(N) vector models in three dimensions. These include the
rolling of fields, the tunneling and decay of vacua. We present an exact
solution for the quantum conformal case and find a solution for more general
potentials when the total change of the value of the field is small.
Characteristic times are found to be shorter when the time dependence of the
field is taken into account in constructing the exact large N effective
potentials. We show that the different approximations yield the same answers in
the regions of the overlap of the validity. A numerical solution of this
potential reveals a tunneling in which the bubble that separates the true
vacuum from the false one is thick
Retirement investor risk tolerance in tranquil and crisis periods: Experimental survey evidence
We conduct a choice experiment to investigate the impact of the financial crisis of 2008 on retirement saver investment choice and risk aversion. Analysis of estimated individual risk parameters shows a small increase in mean risk aversion between the relatively tranquil period of early 2007 and the crisis conditions of late 2008. Investment preferences of survey respondents, estimated using the scale-adjusted version of a latent class choice model, also change during the crisis. We identify age and income as important determinants of preference classes in both surveys and age is also identified as a key determinant of variability (scale). Young and low income individuals make choices that are more consistent with standard mean- variance analysis, but older and higher income individuals react positively to both higher returns and increasing risk in returns. Overall we find a mild moderating of retirement investor risk tolerance in 2008. © The Institute of Behavioral Finance
Mass as a Relativistic Quantum Observable
A field state containing photons propagating in different directions has a
non vanishing mass which is a quantum observable. We interpret the shift of
this mass under transformations to accelerated frames as defining space-time
observables canonically conjugated to energy-momentum observables. Shifts of
quantum observables differ from the predictions of classical relativity theory
in the presence of a non vanishing spin. In particular, quantum redshift of
energy-momentum is affected by spin. Shifts of position and energy-momentum
observables however obey simple universal rules derived from invariance of
canonical commutators.Comment: 5 pages, revised versio
Closed form representation for a projection onto infinitely dimensional subspace spanned by Coulomb bound states
The closed form integral representation for the projection onto the subspace
spanned by bound states of the two-body Coulomb Hamiltonian is obtained. The
projection operator onto the dimensional subspace corresponding to the
-th eigenvalue in the Coulomb discrete spectrum is also represented as the
combination of Laguerre polynomials of -th and -th order. The latter
allows us to derive an analog of the Christoffel-Darboux summation formula for
the Laguerre polynomials. The representations obtained are believed to be
helpful in solving the breakup problem in a system of three charged particles
where the correct treatment of infinitely many bound states in two body
subsystems is one of the most difficult technical problems.Comment: 7 page
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