8,609 research outputs found

    A life course approach to understand work–life choices of women entrepreneurs: evidence from Pakistan

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    This thesis attempted to provide a rich and robust understanding of how women’s work–life1 choices are influenced and shaped by the socio-cultural context of Pakistani society. It also illuminated the role of human agency in making work–life choices. Recently, women’s entrepreneurship has gained wide recognition in research in both developed and developing countries. However, critical analysis of the existing literature highlighted the failure of research in women’s entrepreneurship to recognise the context in which women’s entrepreneurship is embedded (deBruin et al., 2007; Blackburn and Kovalainen, 2009; Welter, 2010). Moreover, the majority of the research was conducted in Anglo-Saxon countries that may not appropriately reflect the true nature of women’s entrepreneurship in the context of developing countries (Gracia and Brush, 2012; Jamali, 2009). As a result there are emerging calls for more research stemming from developing countries (Brush et al., 2009; Jamali, 2009) based on a more explanatory mechanism by including subjective experiences, which may represent a unique set of factors that impinge on a woman’s work–life choices. It is precisely in this context that the present research concentrated on exploring women entrepreneurs’ experiences of managing work and family within the social structures of Pakistan. This study provided insight into how women talk about and experience work and family by including their subjective perspectives. Concisely, the research explored the various ways in which women’s choices of work–life are socially embedded (context specific)

    Smooth and non-smooth traveling wave solutions of some generalized Camassa-Holm equations

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    In this paper we employ two recent analytical approaches to investigate the possible classes of traveling wave solutions of some members of a recently-derived integrable family of generalized Camassa-Holm (GCH) equations. A recent, novel application of phase-plane analysis is employed to analyze the singular traveling wave equations of three of the GCH NLPDEs, i.e. the possible non-smooth peakon and cuspon solutions. One of the considered GCH equations supports both solitary (peakon) and periodic (cuspon) cusp waves in different parameter regimes. The second equation does not support singular traveling waves and the last one supports four-segmented, non-smooth MM-wave solutions. Moreover, smooth traveling waves of the three GCH equations are considered. Here, we use a recent technique to derive convergent multi-infinite series solutions for the homoclinic orbits of their traveling-wave equations, corresponding to pulse (kink or shock) solutions respectively of the original PDEs. We perform many numerical tests in different parameter regime to pinpoint real saddle equilibrium points of the corresponding GCH equations, as well as ensure simultaneous convergence and continuity of the multi-infinite series solutions for the homoclinic orbits anchored by these saddle points. Unlike the majority of unaccelerated convergent series, high accuracy is attained with relatively few terms. We also show the traveling wave nature of these pulse and front solutions to the GCH NLPDEs

    Effects of Sfermion Mixing induced by RGE Running in the Minimal Flavor Violating CMSSM

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    Within the Constrained Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (CMSSM) with Minimal Flavor Violation (MFV) for scalar quarks we study the effects of intergenerational squark mixing on BB-physics observables, electroweak precision observables (EWPO) and the Higgs boson mass predictions. Squark mixing is generated through the Renormalization Group Equations (RGE) running from the GUT scale to the electroweak scale due to presence of non diagonal Yukawa matrices in the RGE's, e.g. due to the CKM matrix. We find that the BB-Physics observables as well as the Higgs mass predictions do not receive sizable corrections. On the other hand, the EWPO such as the WW boson mass can receive corrections by far exceeding the current experimental precision. These contributions can place new upper bounds on the CMSSM parameter space. We extend our analysis to the CMSSM extended with a mechanism to explain neutrino masses (CMSSM-seesaw I), which induces flavor violation in the scalar lepton sector. Effects from slepton mixing on the analyzed observables are in general smaller than from squark mixing, but can reach the level of the current experimenal uncertainty for the EWPO

    The Quark Flavor Violating Higgs Decay hbˉs+bsˉh \rightarrow \bar b s + b \bar s in the MSSM

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    We study the quark flavor violating Higgs-boson decay hbˉs+bsˉh \rightarrow \bar b s + b \bar s in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM). The decay is analyzed first in a model independent, and in a second step in the minimal flavor violationg (MFV) Constrained MSSM. The experimental constraints from BB-Physics observables (BPO) and electroweak precision observables (EWPO) are also calculated and imposed on the parameter space. It is shown that in some cases the EWPO restrict the flavor violating parameter space stronger than the BPO. In the model independent analysis values of O(104){\cal O}(10^{-4}) can be found for BR(hbˉs+bsˉ){\rm BR}(h \rightarrow \bar b s + b \bar s). In the MFV CMSSM such results can only be obtained in very restricted parts of the parameter space. The results show that it is not excluded to observe the decay hbˉs+bsˉh \rightarrow \bar b s + b \bar s in the MSSM at future e+ee^+e^- colliders.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1501.02258; text overlap with arXiv:hep-ph/9909325 by other author

    Fate of Electromagnetic Field on the Cracking of PSR J1614-2230 in Quadratic Regime

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    In this paper, we study the cracking of compact object PSR J1614-2230 in quadratic regime with electromagnetic field. For this purpose, we develop a general formalism to determine the cracking of charged compact objects. We apply the local density perturbations to the hydrostatic equilibrium equation as well as all the physical variables involve in the model. We plot the force distribution function against radius of the star with different values of model parameters both with and without charge. It is found that PSR J1614-2230 remains stable (no cracking) corresponding to different values of parameters when charge is zero, while it exhibit cracking (unstable) when charge is introduced. We conclude that stability region increases as amount of charge increases.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures, version to appear in advances in high energy physic

    Higgs masses and Electroweak Precision Observables in the Lepton-Flavor-Violating MSSM

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    We study the effects of Lepton Flavor Violation (LFV) in the scalar lepton sector of the MSSM on precision observables such as the W-boson mass and the effective weak leptonic mixing angle, and on the Higgs-boson mass predictions. The slepton mass matrices are parameterized in a model-independent way by a complete set of dimensionless parameters which we constrain through LFV decay processes and the precision observables. We find regions where both conditions are similarly constraining. The necessary prerequisites for the calculation have been added to FeynArts and FormCalc and are thus publicly available for further studies. The obtained results are available in FeynHiggs.Comment: LaTeX, 30 page

    A study of the molecular pathology of ductal carcinoma in situ and invasive ductal carcinoma of the breast.

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    The biological validity of the histopathological classification of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast was evaluated in this study by correlating the three histopathological grades of DCIS to immunohistochemical expression of Ki67, p53, cerbB-2, markers of poor prognosis in invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC) and also to bcl2 and ER, markers of good prognosis in invasive breast cancer. DCIS grades correlated positively to Ki67, p53, cerbB-2 and negatively to bcl2 and ER, suggesting validity of the classification. The incidence of bax protein expression was determined immunohistochemically in DCIS and IDC. It did not correlate to histopathological grades of DCIS or IDC. The relationships of bax protein to the above mentioned biological markers were also determined in DCIS and IDC. Furthermore, the expression of bax, bcl2, Ki67, ER, p53 and cerbB-2 within DCIS grades was compared with the expression of these markers within IDC grades. The DCIS grades were determined subjectively as well as objectively by means of computer assisted image analysis with significant correlation found between subjective and objective measures. Image analysis was also used to determine percentage of positive cells per case for the nuclear stains (Ki67, ER, p53). Immunohistochemically positive p53 cases were analysed for p53 mutation by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and subsequent DNA sequencing to compare the incidence of p53 mutation in DCIS to that of IDC. Biochemical changes within tissue may either initiate disease or occur as the result of the disease process and these changes can be studied by both Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) and FT-Raman spectroscopic techniques. FTIR and FT-Raman were employed to distinguish the DCIS and IDC grades. It has the potential to distinguish between DCIS grades, between IDC grades and also between DCIS and IDC as whole groups. The implications of the obtained data for the understanding of the molecular biology of DCIS of the breast and IDC are discussed and future investigations to further elucidate the molecular and cellular mechanisms involved are proposed

    Analyzing Energy-efficiency and Route-selection of Multi-level Hierarchal Routing Protocols in WSNs

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    The advent and development in the field of Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) in recent years has seen the growth of extremely small and low-cost sensors that possess sensing, signal processing and wireless communication capabilities. These sensors can be expended at a much lower cost and are capable of detecting conditions such as temperature, sound, security or any other system. A good protocol design should be able to scale well both in energy heterogeneous and homogeneous environment, meet the demands of different application scenarios and guarantee reliability. On this basis, we have compared six different protocols of different scenarios which are presenting their own schemes of energy minimizing, clustering and route selection in order to have more effective communication. This research is motivated to have an insight that which of the under consideration protocols suit well in which application and can be a guide-line for the design of a more robust and efficient protocol. MATLAB simulations are performed to analyze and compare the performance of LEACH, multi-level hierarchal LEACH and multihop LEACH.Comment: NGWMN with 7th IEEE Inter- national Conference on Broadband and Wireless Computing, Communication and Applications (BWCCA 2012), Victoria, Canada, 201
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