14,362 research outputs found
An application of the requirement vs capability analysis to estimating design reliability of solid rocket motors
Design reliability parameters for solid propellant rocket engine
Voyager Mars planetary quarantine Basic math model report
Basic math model study of planetary quarantine effects on Voyager Mars missio
A WILLINGNESS TO PLAY: ANALYSIS OF WATER RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT
Economic analysis shows that the Central Arizona Project will be a poor investment from the point of view of individual farmers. Yet farmers support the Project. In this study of the economics and politics of the CAP, farmers are questioned as to their information, perceptions and motivations. Farmers are willing to play Ćā not necessarily to pay.Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Always on my mind: The impact of relational ambivalence on rumination upon supervisor mistreatment
Often viewed as a self-regulatory impairment (Thau & Mitchell, 2010), rumination describes the repeated pondering of an offense (Caprara, 1986). The current study predicts that employees high in relational ambivalence with supervisors, or who āmaintain both a positive and negative attitude toward their supervisor,ā are more likely than those in positive or negative relationships to ruminate over a supervisor-induced psychological contract violation (S-I PCV). By use of a 10-day diary study, this study reveals differences in the moderating role of relationship quality with supervisors (i.e., positive, negative, or ambivalent) on S-I PCV and rumination. More specifically, relational ambivalence with supervisors positively moderated the relationship between S-I PCV and rumination, whereas positive and negative relationships with supervisors both negatively moderated this relationship
Business and Industry Training Employment Opportunities in Chesapeake, Virginia
The purpose of this study was to determine the number of business and industry training opportunities in Chesapeake, Virginia. To answer this problem, the following questions were established: 1. What are the employment opportunities available in the business and industry training field? 2. What are the job title categories that companies are advertising? 3. In each category of advertised positions, how many people were currently needed at this time and what were the needs projected to 2010? 4. What are the business and industry training employment opportunities for undergraduate degree completers in the Chesapeake, Virginia region
The Effects of the 1933 Bank Holiday and the Emergency Banking Act of 1933 on the Systematic Risks of Various Industries
Utilizing the industry portfolio classifications that Fama and French provide in their data library, I analyze the specific effects that the 1933 Bank Holiday has on various industries. My empirical results go beyond what Silber (2009) determines to be significantly positive abnormal market returns on March 15, 1933, which is the day after the Bank Holiday and the largest ever one-day increase in the stock market. I use the CAPM and the Fama-French 3-factor Model to find significant systematic risk decreases after the Bank Holiday in the Coal and Transportation industries, as well as systematic risk increases in Consumer Goods and Apparel. To determine the driving factors behind these changes in systematic risk and abnormal returns, I test the correlation between industry leverage ratios and differences in systematic risk changes after the Bank Holiday. The Bank Holiday helps stabilize the economy and the nationās banking system, which I expect industries with larger debt obligations will benefit more after the Bank Holiday. Inconsistent with my expectations, I donāt find significant evidence that the systematic risks of highly leveraged industries decreases more than industries with lower leverage ratios. I develop my argument to leave room for changes in the model used to estimate systematic risks in order to identify the variables that are the true drivers of the systematic risk changes that I observe
Antecedents and consequences of relational ambivalence: a longitudinal and daily diary study investigation
Employee-manager relationships have received significant attention in the literature in
attempting to understand the development and consequences of āgoodā and ābadā
relationships. Whilst much is known about these relationships independently, relatively
little is known about those relationships that are both āgoodā and ābadā. This thesis uses
ārelational ambivalenceā to describe such relationships and addresses a fundamental
question in employee-manager research; can employees simultaneously like and dislike
their managers? Two separate research methodologies address this question. The first
study, employing a longitudinal survey over a six-month period, explored how
historical, individual and social-cognitive perspectives contributed to employee
relationship valuations (positive, negative, and ambivalent). This study also tested the
impact that each relationship valuation had on interpersonal and organisational
outcomes. The second study employed a daily diary method to explore how employee
relationship valuations impacted responses to manager-induced psychological contract
violations over a two-week period.
Findings indicated that relational ambivalence is a distinct relationship valuation both in
terms of its antecedents and consequences. The first study revealed that relational
ambivalence had a curvilinear relationship with both leader-member exchange and
relational schema similarity. Additionally, preoccupied attachment was positively
related to relational ambivalence, whilst oneness perceptions were negatively related to
relational ambivalence. The study examined two outcome categories: interpersonal and
organisational. The interpersonal outcomes revealed a negative relationship with affectbased and cognition-based trust, as well as relational identification; whilst the
organisational outcomes revealed that relational ambivalence was the strongest
relationship valuation linked to turnover intent. Relational ambivalence was negatively
related to OCBs directed toward the organisation, and job control negatively moderated
OCBs directed toward the manager. Finally, study two revealed that relational
ambivalence changes in intensity over time and leads to increased OCBs, decreased
forgiveness, and increased intrusive thoughts after a manager-induced psychological
contract violation. Employees offering positive valuations lowered their OCBs,
increased forgiveness, and did not experience intrusive thoughts; whilst those offering
negative valuations only lowered their OCBs. Contributions and implications of this
thesis are discussed
The Organs of the Parietal Fossa in Elasmobranchs
Davidson, in a paper on the musculature of Heptanchus maculatus (1918), mentions a small shield-shaped organ to be found in the parietal fossa, and in connection with it a pair of small muscles having their origin on the cranium and dorsal longitudinal muscles. He believes that these muscles constrict this sac-like organ
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