1,347 research outputs found
Temporary Jobs: Stepping Stones or Dead Ends?
In Britain about 7% of male employees and 10% of female employees are in temporary jobs. In contrast to much of continental Europe - with stricter employment protection provisions - this proportion has been relatively stable over the 1990s. Using data from the British Household Panel Survey, and informed by relevant theory relating to probation, sorting and human capital investment, we find that temporary workers report lower levels of job satisfaction, receive less work-related training, and are less well-paid than their counterparts in permanent employment. However, there is some evidence that fixed-term contracts are a stepping stone to permanent work. Women (but not men) who start in fixed-term employment and move to permanent jobs fully catch up to those who start in permanent jobs.temporary jobs, fixed term contracts, individual unobserved heterogeneity, job-specific effects.
Labour as a Buffer: Do Temporary Workers Suffer?
In this paper, we investigate whether or not there is an equal opportunities dimension to regulating equal pay and conditions for temporary work. We develop a ?buffer stock? model of temporary work that suggests a number of reasons why ethnic minorities and women may be more likely to be on fixed-term contracts than comparable white males. Using three different British datasets (a random representative survey of households and two data sets of specific labour market groups), we then estimate the degree to which women and/or ethnic minorities are more likely to be on temporary contracts and estimate any associated wage
differentials
Oligopsony, Institutions and the Efficiency of General Training
In oligopsonistic labour markets, firms have some market power, and a wedge is created between wages and marginal product. When oligopsonistic firms' production technology requires generally trained workers, firms may therefore receive part of the returns to general training and be willing to pay for it despite its general nature. However this outcome is not efficient, in the sense that too few workers are trained and workers who are hired receive too
little training. We consider how different institutions can affect this inefficiency. Industry-level minimum wages can remove the training inefficiency and provide workers with the right incentives to invest in general training. A training subsidy to firms can also be used to achieve first-best. Trade unions might also remedy the market failure, in two ways. First, if an industry-wide union has a direct say in the training decision and maximises the utility of a
representative worker, it will choose the efficient level of training intensity. Second, firmspecific unions, through raising relative wages and reducing turnover, can increase training intensity
Structure and electronic properties of the quasi-one-dimensional Ba₂Co₁₋ₓZnₓS₃ series
This work focuses on the structure and physical properties of the solid solution Ba₂Co₁₋ₓZnₓS₃ (0 ≤ x ≤ 1), a family of quasi-one-dimensional sulfides with end members Ba₂CoS₃ and Ba₂ZnS₃. The structure of selected compounds with increasing Zn²⁺ content has been analysed using, neutron diffraction, TEM and EXAFS and the physical properties via magnetic susceptibility and resistivity measurements. The progressive substitution of the non-magnetic Zn²⁺ cation for Co²⁺ rapidly destroys the antiferromagnetic transition present at 46 K in the quasi one-dimensional Ba₂CoS₃, leading to paramagnetic behaviour down to the lowest investigated temperature (5K) for compounds with x > 0.25. For compounds with x ≥ 0.4, a pure CW regime is recovered around 300 K, yielding effective moments consistent with the g factor of the tetrahedrally coordinated Co²⁺ previously determined for Ba₂CoS₃. The Zn²⁺/Co²⁺ substitution also removes the metallic-like behaviour of Ba₂CoS₃ causing an increase in the value of the resistivity with all the Ba₂Co₁₋ₓZnₓS₃ compounds showing semiconducting behaviour. The negative magnetoresistance of Ba₂CoS₃ is improved by the Zn²⁺/Co²⁺ substitution, with values of – 6% for Ba₂Co₀.₇₅Zn₀.₂₅S₃, – 9% for Ba₂Co₀.₅Zn₀.₅S₃ and – 8% for Ba₂Co₀.₂₅Zn₀.₇₅S₃. However, there does not seem to be a correlation between the values of the resistivity and the magnetoresistance and the content of Zn²⁺, leading to the hypothesis that transport properties may be linked more closely to extrinsic properties
Temporary jobs: who gets them, what are they worth, and do they lead anywhere?
In Britain about 7% of male employees and 10% of female employees are in temporary jobs. In contrast to much of continental Europe, this proportion has been relatively stable over the 1990s. Using data from the British Household Panel Survey, we find that, on average, temporary workers report lower levels of job satisfaction, receive less work-related training, and are less well-paid than their counterparts in permanent employment. We find some evidence that temporary jobs are a stepping stone to permanent employment. We find some evidence that temporary jobs are a stepping stone to permanent work, although this transition takes between 18 months and three and a half years depending on contract type (seasonal or fixed term) and gender. Moreover, the wage growth penalty associated with experience of seasonal jobs is quite high, and it is likely that workers experiencing such jobs early in their working lives will never catch up. But experience of fixed-term contracts may lead to high wage growth if the workers move to permanent full-time jobs. This is because workers (especially women) who had such contracts enjoy high returns to (experience capital) once they acquire a permanent job
Incidenza della sclerosi multipla in Toscana: uno studio basato su dati amministrativi
INTRODUZIONE
L’Italia è un’area ad elevato rischio di sclerosi multipla (SM) con una prevalenza stimata di 75.000 casi e un’incidenza di 2.000 casi annui. Gli ultimi dati pubblicati sull’incidenza sono 5,5 casi/105 a Padova (2000-09), 6,6 a Genova (1998-2007) e 9,7 in Sardegna (2003-07). In Toscana è presente un registro regionale della SM ma, ad oggi, non è rappresentativo dell’intera popolazione. Una possibile alternativa per studiare l’epidemiologia è attraverso i dati amministrativi. Questi, infatti, coprono l’intera popolazione residente e vengono raccolti di routine in un modo standardizzato ai fini della gestione del servizio sanitario.
Il nostro scopo è calcolare l’incidenza della SM in Toscana utilizzando dati amministrativi.
METODI
Per il calcolo dell’incidenza abbiamo creato il seguente algoritmo: ospedalizzazione in reparto per acuti e con diagnosi primaria di SM, esenzione attiva per SM, e prescrizione di farmaci specifici. I casi incidenti sono stati identificati come quei casi catturati dall’algoritmo non tracciati in precedenza nei flussi amministrativi, e la data della prima traccia è stata considerata quale data di diagnosi della SM. Da questa coorte di soggetti abbiamo selezionato i pazienti con un’età ≤ 55 anni, residenti in Toscana al momento della diagnosi e presenti in anagrafe da almeno 10 anni (o nati in Toscana se età <10). Abbiamo calcolato i tassi grezzi e standardizzati e gli intervalli di confidenza (IC) al 95% per gli anni 2011-2015.
RISULTATI
Abbiamo identificato, negli anni analizzati, 1.056 nuovi casi con un’incidenza che varia da 5,04/105 nel 2011 a 6,02 casi/105nel 2015 (Tab 1). Nelle donne l’incidenza è circa due volte più alta rispetto agli uomini con un range che va da 6,48 a 7,96/105 nelle donne, e da 3,49 a 3,93/105 negli uomini.
CONCLUSIONI
L’incidenza calcolata risulta elevata, soprattutto nelle donne, ma comunque in linea ai dati pubblicati in altre Regioni, al di là dei bias metodologici legati all’uso di dati amministrativi
Consistency and diversity of spike dynamics in the neurons of bed nucleus of Stria Terminalis of the rat: a dynamic clamp study
Neurons display a high degree of variability and diversity in the expression and regulation of their voltage-dependent ionic channels. Under low level of synaptic background a number of physiologically distinct cell types can be identified in most brain areas that display different responses to standard forms of intracellular current stimulation. Nevertheless, it is not well understood how biophysically different neurons process synaptic inputs in natural conditions, i.e., when experiencing intense synaptic bombardment in vivo. While distinct cell types might process synaptic inputs into different patterns of action potentials representing specific "motifs'' of network activity, standard methods of electrophysiology are not well suited to resolve such questions. In the current paper we performed dynamic clamp experiments with simulated synaptic inputs that were presented to three types of neurons in the juxtacapsular bed nucleus of stria terminalis (jcBNST) of the rat. Our analysis on the temporal structure of firing showed that the three types of jcBNST neurons did not produce qualitatively different spike responses under identical patterns of input. However, we observed consistent, cell type dependent variations in the fine structure of firing, at the level of single spikes. At the millisecond resolution structure of firing we found high degree of diversity across the entire spectrum of neurons irrespective of their type. Additionally, we identified a new cell type with intrinsic oscillatory properties that produced a rhythmic and regular firing under synaptic stimulation that distinguishes it from the previously described jcBNST cell types. Our findings suggest a sophisticated, cell type dependent regulation of spike dynamics of neurons when experiencing a complex synaptic background. The high degree of their dynamical diversity has implications to their cooperative dynamics and synchronization
Measurement of tissue oxygenation in isolated rat hearts using near infrared spectroscopy
New techniques involving Near Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) and imaging are rapidly evolving for a large number of new clinical applications. These techniques, based upon nearinfrared light transmission through biological tissue, aim to monitor the hemoglobin and myoglobin concentration changes due to particular physiological state. Clinical applications regard, for instance, the monitoring of muscles and cerebral oxygenation, functional brain activation studies and heart perfusion research. Recently, some works presented tissue oxygenation studies in beating or arrested isolated porcine hearts. In our work we present the design and realization of a dedicated NIRS system for the myocardial perfusion analysis of isolated, saline solution perfused beating rat hearts; in this case the absence of blood allows for unambiguous measurement of tissue myoglobin oxygenation. The presented prototype is portable, low cost, battery operated and permits the measurement of both oxy and deoxy myoglobin concentration changes during imposed regional or global ischemia and reperfusion
Commissioning of the MEG II tracker system
The MEG experiment at the Paul Scherrer Institut (PSI) represents the state
of the art in the search for the charged Lepton Flavour Violating (cLFV) decay. With the phase 1, MEG set the new world best
upper limit on the \mbox{BR}(\mu^+ \rightarrow e^+ \gamma) < 4.2 \times
10^{-13} (90% C.L.). With the phase 2, MEG II, the experiment aims at reaching
a sensitivity enhancement of about one order of magnitude compared to the
previous MEG result. The new Cylindrical Drift CHamber (CDCH) is a key detector
for MEG II. CDCH is a low-mass single volume detector with high granularity: 9
layers of 192 drift cells, few mm wide, defined by wires in a
stereo configuration for longitudinal hit localization. The filling gas mixture
is Helium:Isobutane (90:10). The total radiation length is
\mbox{X}_0, thus minimizing the Multiple Coulomb Scattering (MCS)
contribution and allowing for a single-hit resolution m and an
angular and momentum resolutions of 6 mrad and 90 keV/c respectively. This
article presents the CDCH commissioning activities at PSI after the wiring
phase at INFN Lecce and the assembly phase at INFN Pisa. The endcaps
preparation, HV tests and conditioning of the chamber are described, aiming at
reaching the final stable working point. The integration into the MEG II
experimental apparatus is described, in view of the first data taking with
cosmic rays and beam during the 2018 and 2019 engineering runs. The
first gas gain results are also shown. A full engineering run with all the
upgraded detectors and the complete DAQ electronics is expected to start in
2020, followed by three years of physics data taking.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figures, 1 table, proceeding at INSTR'20 conference,
accepted for publication in JINS
Chloride anion transporters inhibit growth of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in vitro
A series of aminopyrrolic receptors were tested as anion transporters using POPC liposome model membranes. Many were found to be effective Cl– transporters and to inhibit clinical strains of Staphylococcus aureus growth in vitro. The best transporters proved effective against the methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) strains, Mu50 and HP1173. Tris-thiourea tren-based chloride transporters were also shown to inhibit the growth of S. aureus. in vitro.<br/
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