13,313 research outputs found
Missing Variables in Theories of Strategic Human Resource Management: Time, Cause, and Individuals
Much progress has been made with regard to theory building and application in the field of Strategic Human Resource Management (HRM) since Wright and McMahan’s (1992) critical review. While researchers have increasingly investigated the impact of HR on economic success within the Resource Based view of the firm, and have developed more middle level theories regarding the processes through which HR impacts firm performance, much work still needs to be done. This paper examines how future theorizing in SHRM should explore the concepts of time, cause, and individuals. Such consideration will drive more longitudinal research, more complex causal models, and consideration of multi-level phenomena
Experimental Potentials for the XΣ+2 and AΠ2 States of NaHe
Experimental potentials for the XΣ+2 and AΠ2 states of the NaHe molecule are presented. The potentials are generated from the temperature dependence of the red wing of the Na resonance line perturbed by He. For the AΠ2 state an unexpectedly large value is obtained for De=480(50) cm−1at Re=4.4(2)a0. The physical basis for this result, which indicates an important role for the internal structure of the rare gas in determining the repulsive part of the alkali-rare-gas interaction, is discussed
Group and phase velocity mismatch fringes in triple sum-frequency spectroscopy
The effects of group and phase velocity mismatch are well-known in optical
harmonic generation, but the non-degenerate cases remain unexplored. In this
work we develop an analytic model which predicts velocity mismatch effects in
non-degenerate triple sum-frequency mixing, TSF. We verify this model
experimentally using two tunable, ultrafast, short-wave-IR lasers to
demonstrate spectral fringes in the TSF output from a 500 m thick sapphire
plate. We find the spectral dependence of the TSF depends strongly on both the
phase velocity and the group velocity differences between the input and output
fields. We define practical strategies for mitigating the impact of velocity
mismatches
Robust Principal Component Analysis?
This paper is about a curious phenomenon. Suppose we have a data matrix,
which is the superposition of a low-rank component and a sparse component. Can
we recover each component individually? We prove that under some suitable
assumptions, it is possible to recover both the low-rank and the sparse
components exactly by solving a very convenient convex program called Principal
Component Pursuit; among all feasible decompositions, simply minimize a
weighted combination of the nuclear norm and of the L1 norm. This suggests the
possibility of a principled approach to robust principal component analysis
since our methodology and results assert that one can recover the principal
components of a data matrix even though a positive fraction of its entries are
arbitrarily corrupted. This extends to the situation where a fraction of the
entries are missing as well. We discuss an algorithm for solving this
optimization problem, and present applications in the area of video
surveillance, where our methodology allows for the detection of objects in a
cluttered background, and in the area of face recognition, where it offers a
principled way of removing shadows and specularities in images of faces
The Inclusive-Exclusive Connection and the Neutron Negative Central Charge Density
We find an interpretation of the recent finding that the central charge
density of the neutron is negative by using models of generalized parton
distributions at zero skewness to relate the behavior of deep inelastic
scattering quark distributions, evaluated at large values of Bjorken x, to the
transverse charge density evaluated at small distances. The key physical input
of these models is the Drell-Yan-West relation We find that the d quarks
dominate the neutron structure function for large values of Bjorken x, where
the large longitudinal momentum of the struck quark has a significant impact on
determining the center-of-momentum of the system, and thus the "center" of the
nucleon in the transverse position plane.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures. Text of an invited talk presented by G. A.
Miller at the 2008 Division of Nuclear Physics Meeting in Oakland. Prepared
for Int. Journ. Mod. Phys.
Folk moral relativism
It has often been suggested that people’s ordinary folk understanding of morality involves a rejection of moral relativism and a belief in objective moral truths. The results of six studies call this claim into question. Participants did offer apparently objectivist intuitions when confronted with questions about individuals from their own culture, but they offered increasingly relativist intuitions as they were confronted with questions about individuals from increasingly different cultures or ways of life. In light of these data, the authors hypothesize that people do not have a fixed commitment to moral objectivism but instead tend to adopt different views depending on the degree to which they consider radically different perspectives on moral questions. [NOTE: This is a reprint of Sarkissian et al 2011
A Third Planet Orbiting HIP 14810
We present new precision radial velocities and a three-planet Keplerian orbit
fit for the V = 8.5, G5 V star HIP 14810. We began observing this star at Keck
Observatory as part of the N2K Planet Search Project. Wright et al. (2007)
announced the inner two planets to this system, and subsequent observations
have revealed the outer planet planet and the proper orbital solution for the
middle planet. The planets have minimum masses of 3.9, 1.3, and 0.6 M_Jup and
orbital periods of 6.67, 147.7, and 952 d, respectively. We have numerically
integrated the family of orbital solutions consistent with the data and find
that they are stable for at least 10^6 yr. Our photometric search shows that
the inner planet does not transit.Comment: ApJL, accepte
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