16,314 research outputs found
Spherically symmetric solutions of a boundary value problem for monopoles
In this paper we study spherically symmetric monopoles, which are critical
points for the Yang-Mills-Higgs functional over a disk in 3 dimensions, with
prescribed degree and covariant constant at the boundary. This is a
3-dimensional gauge-theory generalization of the Ginzburg-Landau model in 2
dimensions.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures, LaTe
A content analysis of Chicago Cubs and White Sox local news coverage during the 2004 and 2008 major league baseball seasons
This research paper explored how the media presented information about the Chicago Cubs and White Sox during the 2004 and 2008 seasons. This was accomplished through
content analysis from sports sections of both, The Chicago Tribune and Chicago Sun Times, totaling 167 articles
containing 2,777 paragraphs. This analysis measured quantity
and tone of news coverage with cross-comparisons between two teams, two years and two news sources.
Each paragraph was assigned to one of the teams and categorized into a pre-determined coding group. These coding groups were classified as positive, negative, or
neutral in tone. This study sought to identify whether significant agenda-setting or framing differences existed
between the Chicago Cubs and Chicago White Sox and how this differences could have impact on object salience. The theories of agenda-setting and framing will provide insight
into the decision making process of sportswriters as to: how much information of each subject is being presented (quantity), and how the story is presenting the subject
(tone). The Cubs received a slightly higher amount of coverage
than the White Sox for the entirety of the study. However, as total coverage decreased, from 2004 to 2008, the majority of which was in coverage for the White Sox. Thus,
suggesting an agenda-setting function in this particular area of the study.
Both the White Sox and Cubs received more neutral
coverage, than positive or neutral frames. The remained constant to the study, with the exception of the Cubs in the year 2008, where they received a significant amount of
positive coverage as opposed to their 2004 season.
This paper sought the theories of framing and agendasetting beyond their popular reach in the political world.
by applying them to sports writing, a previously untapped
discipline.Department of JournalismThesis (M.A.
The value of a new idea: knowledge transmission, workers' mobility and market structure
We model the process of knowledge transmission among ïŹrms via workers mobility as a multi-stage game. In our setup an idea to be realized needs that the agent informed about the idea recruits another agent from a pool of uninformed people. This constraint generates a recursive eïŹect of knowledge transmission via players mobility across ïŹrms which aïŹects simultaneously the players payoïŹs and the number of active players engaged in market competition. We provide suïŹcient conditions for the game to possess a unique symmetric subgame perfect equilibrium in which all incumbent players deter the exit of their collaborators. The equilibrium outcome is shown to depend upon the success of the idea over time, expressed by the behaviour of the market demand and on playerstime preferences. A few other intuitions are provided on the interplay between technology, market structure and the market value of an innovative idea.Innovation; Workersâ Mobility; Knowledge Transmission; Subgame Perfect Nash Equilibrium; Recursive Games
Cooling of a lattice granular fluid as an ordering process
We present a new microscopic model of granular medium to study the role of
dynamical correlations and the onset of spatial order induced by the
inelasticity of the interactions. In spite of its simplicity, it features
several different aspects of the rich phenomenology observed in granular
materials and allows to make contact with other topics of statistical mechanics
such as diffusion processes, domain growth, persistence, aging phenomena.
Interestingly, while local observables being controlled by the largest
wavelength fluctuations seem to suggest a purely diffusive behavior, the
formation of spatially extended structures and topological defects, such as
vortices and shocks, reveals a more complex scenario.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
A sequential approach to the characteristic function and the core in games with externalities
This paper proposes a formulation of coalitional payoff possibilities in games with externalities, based on the assumption that forming coalitions can exploit a âfirst mover advantageâ. We derive a characteristic function and show that when outside players play their best response noncooperatively, the core is nonempty in games with strategic complements. We apply this result to Cournot and Bertrand games and to public goods economies.Core; cooperative games; externalities
Road pricing as a citizen-candidate game
We construct a political economy model to analyze the political acceptability of road pricing policies.
We use a citizen-candidate framework with a population composed by three groups differing for their income level. We show that road pricing policies are never applied when there is no redistribution of the resources in favour of other modes of transport or when the congestion of these types of transport is relatively high. The results suggest that the efficiency of the redistribution of resources from road to the alternative types of transport as well as the fraction of the population that uses the road transport are key factors in explaining the adoption of road pricing schemes
Driven granular gases with gravity
We study fluidized granular gases in a stationary state determined by the
balance between an external driving and the bulk dissipation. The two
considered situations are inspired by recent experiments, where the gravity
plays a major role as a driving mechanism: in the first case gravity acts only
in one direction and the bottom wall is vibrated, in the second case gravity
acts in both directions and no vibrating walls are present. Simulations
performed under the molecular chaos assumption show averaged profiles of
density, velocity and granular temperature which are in good agreement with the
experiments. Moreover we measure the velocity distributions which show strong
non-Gaussian behavior, as experiments pointed out, but also density
correlations accounting for clustering, at odds with the experimental results.
The hydrodynamics of the first model is discussed and an exact solution is
found for the density and granular temperature as functions of the distance
from the vibrating wall. The limitations of such a solution, in particular in a
broad layer near the wall injecting energy, are discussed.Comment: Revised version accepted for publication. New results added and
discussions considering tangential forces. 27 pages (19 figures included), to
appear in Phys.Rev.
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