66,009 research outputs found
The Difficult Transition from Military to Civilian Life
Military service is difficult, demanding and dangerous. But returning to civilian life also poses challenges for the men and women who have served in the armed forces, according to a recent Pew Research Center survey of 1,853 veterans. While more than seven-in-ten veterans (72%) report they had an easy time readjusting to civilian life, 27% say re-entry was difficult for them -- a proportion that swells to 44% among veterans who served in the ten years since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Why do some veterans have a hard time readjusting to civilian life while others make the transition with little or no difficulty? To answer that question, Pew researchers analyzed the attitudes, experiences and demographic characteristic of veterans to identify the factors that independently predict whether a service member will have an easy or difficult re-entry experience. Using a statistical technique known as logistic regression, the analysis examined the impact on re-entry of 18 demographic and attitudinal variables
The Late Works of Dame Ethel Smyth: A Musical Microcosm of Interwar British Culture
This paper examines the late musical compositions of Dame Ethel Smyth in the context of British society and culture between the two World Wars. It focuses on Smyth\u27s large-scale works, especially her operas The Boatswain\u27s Mate (1914) and Entente Cordiale (1923-1924) and her oratorio The Prison (1930). Using these works as examples of the composer\u27s mature style, I draw attention to a number of Smyth\u27s original artistic choices as well as her sophisticated use of social commentary. Also considered in this research are certain anticipated roles for women as composers at the time, Smyth\u27s other passions and pursuits, and her interactions with her contemporaries. Her activities as a composer reflected an evolving social landscape for British women in addition to new musical developments
The Weil-\'etale fundamental group of a number field II
We define the fundamental group underlying to Lichtenbaum's Weil-\'etale
cohomology for number rings. To this aim, we define the Weil-\'etale topos as a
refinement of the Weil-\'etale sites introduced in \cite{Lichtenbaum}. We show
that the (small) Weil-\'etale topos of a smooth projective curve defined in
this paper is equivalent to the natural definition given in
\cite{Lichtenbaum-finite-field}. Then we compute the Weil-\'etale fundamental
group of an open subscheme of the spectrum of a number ring. Our fundamental
group is a projective system of locally compact topological groups, which
represents first degree cohomology with coefficients in locally compact abelian
groups. We apply this result to compute the Weil-\'etale cohomology in low
degrees and to prove that the Weil-\'etale topos of a number ring satisfies the
expected properties of the conjectural Lichtenbaum topos.Comment: 59 pages. To appear in Selecta Mathematic
Walking Away: A Third of the Public Says It's Sometimes OK to Stop Paying a Mortgage
Presents survey findings on the prevalence of "underwater" mortgages and views of those who stop payments and allow for foreclosure, analyzed by gender, race/ethnicity, age, region, education, political affiliation, and financial and homeownership status
Did social cognition evolve by cultural group selection?
Abstract Cognitive gadgets puts forward an ambitious claim: language, mindreading, and imitation evolved by cultural group selection. Defending this claim requires more than Heyes' spirited and effective critique of nativist claims. The latest human “cognitive gadgets,” such as literacy, did not spread through cultural group selection. Why should social cognition be different? The book leaves this question pending. It also makes strong assumptions regarding cultural evolution: it is moved by selection rather than transformation; it relies on high-fidelity imitation; it requires specific cognitive adaptations to cultural learning. Each of these assumptions raises crucial yet unaddressed difficulties
Why It's Great to Be the Boss
It pays to be the boss, in more ways than one. This report finds that in addition to bigger paychecks, America's bosses are more satisfied with their family life, jobs and overall financial situation than are non-managerial employees
Magnetic fields from low mass stars to brown dwarfs
Magnetic fields have been detected on stars across the H-R diagram and
substellar objects either directly by their effect on the formation of spectral
lines, or through the activity phenomena they power which can be observed
across a large part of the electromagnetic spectrum. Stars show a very wide
variety of magnetic properties in terms of strength, geometry or variability.
Cool stars generate their magnetic fields by dynamo effect, and their
properties appear to correlate - to some extent - with stellar parameters such
as mass, rotation and age. With the improvements of instrumentation and data
analysis techniques, magnetic fields can now be detected and studied down to
the domain of very-low-mass stars and brown dwarfs, triggering new theoretical
works aimed, in particular, at modelling dynamo action in these objects. After
a brief discussion on the importance of magnetic field in stellar physics, the
basics of dynamo theory and magnetic field measurements are presented. The main
results stemming from observational and theoretical studies of magnetism are
then detailed in two parts: the fully-convective transition, and the very-low
mass stars and brown dwarfs domain.Comment: 30 pages, 9 figures. Notes for lectures presented at the Evry
Schatzman school on "Low-mass stars and the transition from stars to brown
dwarfs", September 2011, Roscoff, France. To appear in the EAS Conference
Series, edited by C. Charbonnel, C. Reyle, M. Schulthei
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