2,920 research outputs found
The Utilization of U.S. male labor, 1975-1992: Estimates of foregone work hours
The percentage of working-age men in the United States who were fully active in the labor market decreased over the 1975-1992 period ("fully active" means working 2080 hours in a year). Similarly, the extent to which men were less than fully active increased. When one considers the number of hours by which men fell short of the 2080 norm in 1992, it was as if 20 percent of them did not work at all in that year, up from 18 percent in 1975. However, because the least-productive workers were the ones most likely to be less than fully active and the most-productive were the ones least likely to be less than fully active, total productivity-weighted work hours did not fall by this large an amount. If men failed to work 2080 hours in a year, most likely it was because they did not work at all; men most often did not work at all because they could find no jobs. Data were from Current Population Surveys.
Recent trends in U.S. male work and wage patterns: An overview
This paper brings together figures on recent trends in the labor market activity and wages of working-age men in the United States over the 1967-1992 period. The data, which come from Current Population Surveys, reveal several important developments. Year-long joblessness, the percentage of men failing to participate in the labor force, and the proportion who were unemployed rose throughout the period. Part-time employment as a percentage of all forms of employment was also higher at the end of the period than at the beginning, and the average hours worked by full-time workers increased slightly. Finally, median and mean wages fell. None of the trends was due to changes in the racial, educational, and age composition of the male work force; in fact, if the racial/educational/age composition had remained the same over the period, labor market activity would have declined even further.
Slipping anchor? Testing the vignettes approach to identification and correction of reporting heterogeneity
Anchoring vignettes are increasingly used to identify and correct heterogeneity in the reporting of health, work disability, life satisfaction, political efficacy, etc. with the aim of improving interpersonal comparability of subjective indicators of these constructs. The method relies on two assumptions: vignette equivalence – the vignette description is perceived by all to correspond to the same state; and, response consistency - individuals use the same response scales to rate the vignettes and their own situation. We propose tests of these assumptions. For vignette equivalence, we test a necessary condition of no systematic variation with observed characteristics in the perceived difference in states corresponding to any two vignettes. To test response consistency we rely on the assumption that objective indicators fully capture the covariation between the construct of interest and observed individual characteristics, and so offer an alternative way to identify response scales, which can then be compared with those identified from the vignettes. We also introduce a weaker test that is valid under a less stringent assumption. We apply these tests to cognitive functioning and mobility related health problems using data from the English Longitudinal Survey of Ageing. Response consistency is rejected for both health domains according to the first test, but the weaker test does not reject for cognitive functioning. The necessary condition for vignette equivalence is rejected for both health domains. These results cast some doubt on the validity of the vignettes approach, at least as applied to these health domains
Elimination of TFA-Mediated Cleavage in Distributed Drug Discovery
Distributed Drug Discovery (D3) is a multi-disciplinary approach to the discovery of new drugs, which target neglected diseases or conditions common to developing-world countries. As part of a continuing effort to improve D3 methodology, two approaches for eliminating the final step TFA-mediated resin cleavage are proposed for investigation. Cleavage under basic conditions (saponification) and mild acid conditions (dilute HCl/hexafluoroisopropanol or dilute HCl/trifluoroethanol) represent improvements in safety and convenience to the undergraduate student researcher. Previous studies have shown that saponification provides yields comparable to the traditional TFA cleavage but recovery is not as convenient. Further improvements in the saponification workup will be evaluated by analyzing the effectiveness of simple trituration with acetone compared to use of a strong anion-exchange resin or drying reagents to isolate the free acid from the salt. Different trituration procedural modifications have been made and are being tested. Results have shown that in the presence of methanol, esterification will occur when the acid is liberated from the salt using HCl. To counter this problem, the samples are first evaporated to remove methanol and then the pH is adjusted with HCl. It was shown that using acetic acid did not result in pH levels low enough to guarantee complete protonation of the carboxylate. Through the use of a Bill-Board, an apparatus that holds six reaction vessels, several procedural modifications can be carried out simultaneously. Analysis is conducted by liquid chromatography coupled with a mass spectrometer and with nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Further studies will be carried out to assess the efficiency and practicality of using mild acidic conditions for cleavage using HCl/hexafluoroisopropanol or dilute HCl/trifluoroethanol. Both saponification and mild acid cleavage would represent improvements in safety and convenience to the undergraduate student researcher
Adsorption and Dissociation of a Bicyclic Tertiary Diamine, Triethylenediamine, on a Si(100)-2 x 1 Surface
This study investigates the adsorption and thermal transformations of a bicyclic tertiary amine, triethylenediamine, on the clean Si(100)-2 × 1 surface. Below room temperature, triethylenediamine adsorption leads to the formation of a strong dative bond between one of the nitrogen atoms of this compound and the silicon surface. In contrast to previously studied amines, the datively adsorbed triethylenediamine features a second tertiary amine entity that is not bonded to the surface, with a lone pair orbital that is directed away from the surface and is available for further reactions. The thermal chemistry and electronic properties of triethylenediamine on silicon are studied using thermal desorption spectroscopy, infrared spectroscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure measurements are utilized to clarify the geometry of the adsorbates at room temperature. Density functional theory calculations are used to describe the binding geometry and electronic properties of the resulting surface species and the likely reaction paths at elevated temperatures
Relationship of Proteinases and Proteinase Inhibitors with Microbial Presence in Chronic Lung Disease of Prematurity
Background: A proteolytic imbalance has been implicated in the development of “classical” chronic lung disease of prematurity (CLD). However, in “new” CLD this pattern has changed. This study examines the longitudinal relationship between neutrophil proteinases and their inhibitors in ventilated preterm infants and their relationship to microbial colonisation. Methods: Serial bronchoalveolar lavage fluid was obtained from ventilated newborn preterm infants. Neutrophil elastase (NE) activity, cell counts, metalloproteinase (MMP)-9, MMP-9/TIMP-1 complex, SerpinB1 concentration and percentage of SerpinB1 and α1-antitrypsin (AAT) in complex with elastase were measured. The presence of microbial genes was examined using PCR for 16S rRNA genes. Results: Statistically more infants who developed CLD had NE activity in at least one sample (10/20) compared with infants with resolved respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) (2/17). However, NE activity was present in a minority of samples, occurring as episodic peaks. Peak levels of MMP-9, MMP-9/TIMP-1 complex, percentage of AAT and SerpinB1 in complex and cell counts were all statistically greater in infants developing CLD than in infants with resolved RDS. Peak values frequently occurred as episodic spikes and strong temporal relationships were noted between all markers. The peak values for all variables were significantly correlated to each other. The presence of bacterial 16S rRNA genes was associated with the development of CLD and with elevated elastase and MMP-9. Conclusion: NE activity and MMP-9 appear to be important in the development of “new” CLD with both proteinase and inhibitor concentrations increasing episodically, possibly in response to postnatal infection
Exchange Field Induced Magnetoresistance in Colossal Magnetoresistance Manganites
The effect of an exchange field on electrical transport in thin films of
metallic ferromagnetic manganites has been investigated. The exchange field was
induced both by direct exchange coupling in a ferromagnet/antiferromagnet
multilayer and by indirect exchange interaction in a ferromagnet/paramagnet
superlattice. The electrical resistance of the manganite layers was found to be
determined by the absolute value of the vector sum of the effective exchange
field and the external magnetic field.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Saponification of N-Acylated L-Phenylalanine Wang and Merrifield Resins. Assessment of Cleavage Efficiency and Epimerization
poster abstractAs part of a continuing effort to modify Distributed Drug Discovery (D3) synthetic procedures to enhance safety and accommodate the limited resources available to students in developing-world countries, we have recently begun to examine alternatives to trifluoroacetic acid (TFA)-cleavage of amino acid derivatives from polystyrene-based resins. Cleavage of a representative example, N-(4-chlorobenzoyl)-L-phenylalanine, from both Wang and Merrifield resins was accomplished in thirty minutes at room temperature using 0.5M sodium hydroxide in methanol/tetrahydrofuran. In a side-by-side comparison with cleavage using TFA, results indicated that saponification from Wang resin was incomplete after thirty minutes. Experiments designed to examine separately the effect of reaction time, temperature, and concentration were performed and results will be presented. Additionally, investigations were performed to assess the degree of epimerization which had occurred during cleavage of Merrifield-bound L-phenylalanine acylated with both (R)- and (S)-mandelic acid. Results revealed a small but significant amount of epimerization (15:1 to 31:1 diastereomeric ratios) after a thirty-minute cleavage time at room temperature
GHASP : an H alpha kinematic survey of spiral and irregular galaxies. V. Dark matter distribution in 36 nearby spiral galaxies
The results obtained from a study of the mass distribution of 36 spiral
galaxies are presented. The galaxies were observed using Fabry-Perot
interferometry as part of the GHASP survey. The main aim of obtaining high
resolution H alpha 2D velocity fields is to define more accurately the rising
part of the rotation curves which should allow to better constrain the
parameters of the mass distribution. The H alpha velocities were combined with
low resolution HI data from the literature, when available. Combining the
kinematical data with photometric data, mass models were derived from these
rotation curves using two different functional forms for the halo: an
isothermal sphere and an NFW profile. For the galaxies already modeled by other
authors, the results tend to agree. Our results point at the existence of a
constant density core in the center of the dark matter halos rather than a
cuspy core, whatever the type of the galaxy from Sab to Im. This extends to all
types the result already obtained by other authors studying dwarf and LSB
galaxies but would necessitate a larger sample of galaxies to conclude more
strongly. Whatever model is used (ISO or NFW), small core radius halos have
higher central densities, again for all morphological types. We confirm
different halo scaling laws, such as the correlations between the core radius
and the central density of the halo with the absolute magnitude of a galaxy:
low luminosity galaxies have small core radius and high central density. We
find that the product of the central density with the core radius of the dark
matter halo is nearly constant, whatever the model and whatever the absolute
magnitude of the galaxy. This suggests that the halo surface density is
independent from the galaxy type.Comment: 21 pages, 14 figures. MNRAS (accepted october 3rd 2007
Ultraluminous X-ray sources out to z~0.3 in the COSMOS field
Using Chandra observations we have identified a sample of seven off-nuclear
X-ray sources, in the redshift range z=0.072-0.283, located within optically
bright galaxies in the COSMOS Survey. Using the multi-wavelength coverage
available in the COSMOS field, we study the properties of the host galaxies of
these ULXs. In detail, we derived their star formation rate from H_alpha
measurements and their stellar masses using SED fitting techniques with the aim
to compute the probability to have an off-nuclear source based on the host
galaxy properties. We divide the host galaxies in different morphological
classes using the available ACS/HST imaging. We find that our ULXs candidates
are located in regions of the SFR versus M plane where one or more
off-nuclear detectable sources are expected. From a morphological analysis of
the ACS imaging and the use of rest-frame colours, we find that our ULXs are
hosted both in late and early type galaxies. Finally, we find that the fraction
of galaxies hosting a ULX ranges from ~0.5% to ~0.2% going from L[0.5-2 keV]=3
x 10^39 erg s^-1 to L[0.5-2 keV]= 2 x 10^40 erg s^-1.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
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