51 research outputs found

    College Quality and the Wages of Young Men

    Get PDF
    Using the rich data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, we show that several dimensions of college quality have substantial positive impacts on young men’s wages. This finding is robust to a wide array of alternative specifications. Controlling for ability reveals that sorting of more able persons into better colleges accounts for only a modest portion of the unconditional quality effect. We find that young black men reap larger gains to quality than do young white men. Our results also indicate that attending a college with a racially diverse student body increases the later earnings of both white and black men

    Galectin-3 regulates intracellular trafficking of EGFR through Alix and promotes keratinocyte migration.

    Get PDF
    The EGFR-mediated signaling pathways are important in a variety of cellular processes, including cell migration and wound re-epithelialization. Intracellular trafficking of EGFR is critical for maintaining EGFR surface expression. Galectin-3, a member of an animal lectin family, has been implicated in a number of physiological and pathological processes. Through studies of galectin-3-deficient mice and cells isolated from these mice, we demonstrated that the absence of galectin-3 impairs keratinocyte migration and skin wound re-epithelialization. We have linked this pro-migratory function to a crucial role of cytosolic galectin-3 in controlling intracellular trafficking and cell surface expression of EGFR after EGF stimulation. Without galectin-3, the surface levels of EGFR are markedly reduced, and the receptor accumulates diffusely in the cytoplasm. This is associated with reduced rates of both endocytosis and recycling of the receptor. We have provided evidence that this previously unreported function of galectin-3 may be mediated through interaction with its binding partner Alix, which is a protein component of the ESCRT (endosomal sorting complex required for transport) machinery. Our results suggest that galectin-3 is potentially a critical regulator of a number of important cellular responses through its intracellular control of trafficking of cell surface receptors

    Atomic Resonance and Scattering

    Get PDF
    Contains reports on nine research projects.U.S. Energy Research and Development Administration (Contract EG-77-S-02-4370)U. S. Air Force - Office of Scientific Research (Contract F44620-72-C-0057)Joint Services Electronics Program (Contract DAAB07-76-C-1400)National Science Foundation (Grant PHY75-15421-AO1)National Science Foundation (Grant PHY77-09155)National Science Foundation (Grant CHE76-81750)U. S. Air Force - Office of Scientific Research (Grant AFOSR-76-2972A

    Female Labor Supply Differences by Sexual Orientation: A Semi-Parametric Decomposition Approach

    Full text link
    Using 2000 U.S. Census data we illustrate the importance of accounting for household specialization in lesbian couples when examining the sexual orientation gap in female labor supply. Specifically, we find the labor supply gap is substantially larger between married women and partnered lesbian women who specialize in market production (primary earners) than between married women and partnered lesbian women who specialize in household production (secondary earners). Using a semi-parametric decomposition approach, we further show that the role of children in explaining the mean labor supply gap by sexual orientation is greatly understated if the household division of labor between household and market production is not taken into account. Finally, we illustrate that controlling for children significantly reduces differences between married women and secondary lesbian earners both in terms of the decision to remain attached to the labor market (the extensive margin), as well as in terms of annual hours of work conditional on working (the intensive margin). Further, the effect of controlling for children is not uniform across the distribution of conditional annual hours; instead it primarily reduces the percentage of secondary lesbian earners working extremely high annual hours

    Productivity, Wages, and Marriage: The Case of Major League Baseball

    Get PDF
    The effect of marriage on productivity and, consequently, wages has been long debated in economics. A primary explanation for the impact of marriage on wages has been through its impact on productivity, however, there has been no direct evidence for this. In this paper, we aim to fill this gap by directly measuring the impact of marriage on productivity using a sample of professional baseball players from 1871 - 2007. Our results show that only lower ability men see an increase in productivity, though this result is sensitive to the empirical specification and weakly significant. In addition, despite the lack of any effect on productivity, high ability married players earn roughly 16 - 20 percent more than their single counterparts. We discuss possible reasons why employers may favor married men

    College Quality and Wages in the United States

    No full text
    Abstract We estimate the effects of the quality of the college a student attends on their later earnings using data from a cohort of U.S. college students from the late 1970s and early 1980s. We rely on a linear selection on observables identification strategy, which is justified in our context by a very rich set of conditioning variables. We find economically important earnings effects of college quality for men and women, as well as effects on educational attainment, spousal earnings and other demographic variables. These effects remain roughly constant over time and result primarily from effects on wages, rather than from effects on hours or labor force participation. We find that, over the lower part of the range of college quality, increases in college quality (which entail higher expenditures per student) pass a simple social cost-benefit test

    Analysis Of LVQ In The Context Of Spontaneous EEG Signal Classification

    No full text
    OF THESIS ANALYSIS OF LVQ IN THE CONTEXT OF SPONTANEOUS EEG SIGNAL CLASSIFICATION Learning Vector Quantization (LVQ) has proven to be an effective classification procedure. Since its introduction by Kohonen in 1990 several extensions to the basic algorithm have been proposed. This paper investigates what and how LVQ learns in the context of EEG signal classification. LVQ is shown to be comparable with other Neural Network algorithms for the task of classifying electroencephalograph (EEG) signals, yielding approximately 80% classification accuracy for three out of the four subjects tested when differentiating between two different mental tasks. The best classification accuracy was obtained with unnormalized, sixth-order autoregressive, AR(6), coefficients derived from raw, unfiltered EEG signals. The LVQ2.1 algorithm outperformed any of the other traditional LVQ algorithms tested, yielding a slightly higher classification accuracy than the LVQ3 algorithm. The highest classification accu..
    • …
    corecore