2,171 research outputs found
The collective model of the household and an unexpected implication for child labor : hypothesis and an empirical test
The authors use the collective model of the household and show, theoretically, that as the woman's power rises, child labor will initially fall,but beyond a point it will tend to rise again. A household with a balanced power structure between the husband and the wife is least likely to send its children to work. An empirical test of this relationship using data from Nepal strongly corroborates the theoretical hypothesis.Street Children,Labor Policies,Environmental Economics&Policies,Children and Youth,Labor Standards,Street Children,Children and Youth,Youth and Governance,Environmental Economics&Policies,Health Economics&Finance
Packing and Covering with Non-Piercing Regions
In this paper, we design the first polynomial time approximation schemes for the Set Cover and Dominating Set problems when the underlying sets are non-piercing regions (which include pseudodisks). We show that the local
search algorithm that yields PTASs when the regions are disks [Aschner/Katz/Morgenstern/Yuditsky, WALCOM 2013; Gibson/Pirwani, 2005; Mustafa/Raman/Ray, 2015] can be extended to work for non-piercing regions. While such an extension is intuitive and natural, attempts to settle this question have failed even for pseudodisks. The techniques used for analysis when the regions are disks rely heavily on the underlying geometry, and do not extend to topologically defined settings such as pseudodisks. In order to prove our results, we introduce novel techniques that we believe will find applications in other problems.
We then consider the Capacitated Region Packing problem. Here, the input consists of a set of points with capacities, and a set of regions. The objective is to pick a maximum cardinality subset of regions so that no point is covered by more regions than its capacity. We show that this problem admits a PTAS when the regions are k-admissible regions (pseudodisks are 2-admissible), and the capacities are bounded. Our result settles a conjecture of Har-Peled (see Conclusion of [Har-Peled, SoCG 2014]) in the affirmative. The conjecture was for a weaker version of the problem, namely when the regions are pseudodisks, the capacities are uniform, and the point set consists of all points in the plane.
Finally, we consider the Capacitated Point Packing problem. In this setting, the regions have capacities, and our
objective is to find a maximum cardinality subset of points such that no region has more points than its capacity. We show that this problem admits a PTAS when the capacity is unity, extending one of the results of Ene et al. [Ene/Har-Peled/Raichel, SoCG 2012]
Importance of -stripping process in the Li+Tb reaction
The inclusive cross sections of the -particles produced in the
reaction Li+Tb have been measured at energies around the Coulomb
barrier. The measured cross sections are found to be orders of magnitude larger
than the calculated cross sections of Li breaking into and
fragments, thus indicating contributions from other processes. The experimental
cross sections of -stripping and -pickup processes have been determined
from an entirely different measurement, reported earlier. Apart from incomplete
fusion and/ -transfer processes, the -stripping process is found to be a
significant contributor to the inclusive -particle cross sections in
this reaction
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