50,279 research outputs found

    Scientific productivity in social science disciplines related to health and caring

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    The problem to be addressed Timely and impactful dissemination of knowledge is essential, and this is arguably even more important when it informs practises that have a direct impact of people’s health and well-being (Sundell, 2010). It has been documented that disciplines differ substantially in the number of journal articles that each researcher produces, although they all serve the health and social services, without rational cause (e.g., Olsson & Sundell, 2015). Almost all such studies are based on what is actually published, and are therefore not informed about the base frequency through knowing how many active researchers there are. Obviously, a discipline with 100 researchers should produce one-third of a discipline with 300 researchers, if all researchers are equally productive. Moreover, authors who do not publish anything at all in the databases used are not noticed, although they should contribute to a lower mean productivity for their discipline. To provide a fair comparison of disciplines, we therefore identified the whole population of researchers in Education, Sociology, Social Work, Psychology, Public Health, and Nursing and Caring Science, and measured the mean numbers of publications and citations across all researchers in each discipline for the period 2000-2009 (Madison & Sundell, 2022). With these representative data of the population of researchers in Sweden we were also able to address the well-documented sex difference in scientific productivity. The data showed that, for all six disciplines, the vast majority of women and men are equally productive, and constitute similar proportions across low- and medium levels of productivity (10th-80th percentile). Above the 80th percentile, however, the proportion of males increases with the level of productivity (Madison & Sundell, 2023). The present pre-registered project aims to replicate these two previous studies, and to compare the outcomes across the 12 years that have elapsed. To this end, we will again identify the whole population of researchers in Sociology, Social Work, Psychology, Public Health, and Nursing and Caring Science, but not Education, and obtain their numbers of publications and citations for the period 2012-2021. Researchers are defined as faculty at academic institutions that are at least associate professors (docent). In contrast to our previous study, which analysed productivity for the whole population, we will now draw randomized stratified samples optimised for the various research questions. This will increase statistical power and decrease the workload. Specifically, we will create one sample optimised for comparing disciplines, having the same proportion of docent and professor, and male and female researchers, as in the whole population. Another sample will be optimised for comparing male and female researchers at both docent and professor academic levels within each discipline, having equal sample sizes of 150 individuals for each of these four groups (30 for each discipline) but otherwise the same proportion of researchers from institutions with various levels of eminence and productivity as in the whole population. Methods Researchers are identified through the institutions at which they are employed. We will contact heads of departments at all institutions in Sweden that contain the target disciplines through email, and ask them to provide a list of research staff, as defined above. This includes all departments of Sociology, Social Work, and Psychology, and various departments relevant for Public Health and Nursing and Caring Science, which may belong to either Medicine or Social Sciences. Then, randomized, equally-sized samples will be created to optimize analyses comparing disciplines and comparing males and females, provided that the population N varies across disciplines or sex. The full record of publications for each researcher will then be downloaded from the Web of Science, from which the numbers of publications and citations for each year in the period 2012-2021 is extracted. Analyses will involve numbers of publications, citations, and numbers of publications per year as dependent variables. Independent variables are discipline, sex, academic rank (associate or full professor), and academic age, defined as the number of years since the start of a consistent publication record or a significant bout of publications. At the time of writing this pre-registration, we have gathered the researcher names from the institutions, but we have not compiled them in a data matrix, extracted their publication records from the Web of Science, nor performed any analyses. Hypotheses (H1) Productivity (i.e. numbers of publications, citations, and numbers of publications per year) is greater for 2012-2021 than for 2000-2009, across sex and discipline. This is because some disciplines publishes more in peer-reviewed journals. (H2) As found for 2000-2009 (Madison & Sundell, 2022), productivity remains highest for Public Health and Nursing and Caring Science, and next highest for Psychology, followed by Sociology and Social Work. (H3) Productivity differences between disciplines is smaller for 2012-2021 than for 2000-2009. This is because we predict that Sociology and Social Work has begun publishing more in peer-reviewed journals, while Psychology, Public Health and Nursing and Caring Science remain about the same. (H4) The productivity difference between women and men is smaller in 2012-2021 than in 2000-2009, when males published 20-162% more journal articles, received 27-308% more citations, and received -0.5-224% more citations per publication, depending on discipline (Madison & Sundell, 2023). This is predicated on the fact that the proportion of females in faculty has increased in the last decades, to the effect that their academic age should be essentially the same as men’s in 2012-2021 even if it was younger in 2000-2009. For example did the proportion of female full professors in Sweden increase by about 10 percentage units from ~20% to ~30% from 2008 to 2014 (Madison & Fahlman, 2020). (H5) A substantial productivity difference between women and men prevails in 2012-2021 above the 80th percentile, where the proportion of males increases with the level of productivity. This is predicated on the greater male variability hypothesis, which states that psychological traits that predict academic precociousness and productivity varies more in males. Therefore, the males in the strongly selected population that survives the gate-keepers of the academic system will contain a much larger proportion of exceptionally talented males than exceptionally talented females. Hence, (H6) variability in productivity (both number of publications and citations) is larger in males than in females, as indicated by a variance ratio (the variance amongst males divided by the variance amongst females) greater than 1.0 (Madison & Sundell, 2023). (H7) The sex difference in productivity above the 80th percentile is larger in 2012-2021 than in 2000-2009. This is predicated on the fact that if the proportion of the group with smaller variability increases (females) then the proportion of exceptionally talented individuals within this group will decrease as individuals have to be selected from a more rapidly dwindling pool of such individuals. In contrast, the smaller proportion of males will be selected from a larger and increasing pool of exceptionally talented males. (H8) H1 through H7 holds even when controlled for academic rank. H5 and H6 holds even when controlled for academic age. These hypotheses will be evaluated through multivariate statistical analyses, primarily comparing group means while maybe controlling for possible confounding variables. For H6 the variance ratio will be used, computed as the ratio of variances based on individually log transformed data. References Madison, G. & Fahlman, P. (2020). Sex differences in the number of scientific publications and citations when attaining the rank of professor in Sweden. Studies in Higher Education, 46, 2506-2527. Madison, G. & Sundell, K. (2022). Numbers of publications and citations for researchers in fields pertinent to the social services: a comparison of peer-reviewed journal publications across six disciplines. Scientometrics, 127, 6029-6046. Madison, G. & Sundell, K. (2023). Sex differences in scientific productivity and impact are largely explained by the proportion of highly productive individuals: a whole-population study of researchers across six disciplines in Sweden . Studies in Higher Education, 49, 119-140. Olsson, T. M. & Sundell, K. (2015). Research that guides practice: Outcome research in Swedish PhD theses across seven disciplines 1997-2012. Prevention Science, 17, 525-532. Sundell, K. (2010). Internationella publikationer och citeringar under perioden 2000–2009 hos svenska professorer och docenter inom folkhälsovetenskap, omvårdnadsvetenskap, pedagogik, psykologi, socialt arbete och sociologi Socialstyrelsen

    Deformations in Closed String Theory --- Canonical Formulation and Regularization

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    : We study deformations of closed string theory by primary fields of conformal weight (1; 1), using conformal techniques on the complex plane. A canonical surface integral formalism for computing commutators in a non-holomorphic theory is constructed, and explicit formulae for deformations of operators are given. We identify the unique regularization of the arising divergences that respects conformal invariance, and consider the corresponding parallel transport. The associated connection is metric compatible and carries no curvature. accepted for publication in Nucl.Phys. B. email addresses: [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Cederwall, von Gussich, Sundell: Deformations in Closed String Theory : : : : : : : : : : : 2 1. Introduction and Summary Probably the most important theoretical problem concerning string theory is the lack of a "covariant" formulation. Despite the fact that closed string theory contains gravity as part of the infinite spectrum, the..

    Author Self-Citation in the Turkish Otorhinolaryngology Literature

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    Objective:To evaluate the prevalence and other characteristics of author self-citations in six Turkey-originated general otorhinolaryngology (ORL) journals of Turkish ORL literature.Methods:A total of 970 articles published in six Turkey-originated general ORL journals (ENT Updates, Journal of Ear Nose Throat and Head Neck Surgery, KBB-Forum, Praxis of Otorhinolaryngology, The Turkish Journal of Ear Nose and Throat, and Turkish Archives of Otorhinolaryngology) in 2016-2020 were analyzed for author self-citations. The association between author self-citations and journal types, study types, study topics, country of origin, and compatibility with the topic were also evaluated.Results:There were 265 author self-citations (0.273 per article) which corresponded to 1.36% of all citations. There was no significant difference between the journal types, study topics, and origin of the studies in terms of mean self-citation values per study, whereas case reports had significantly lower self-citations than review and original investigations. There were three citations (1.1%) that were irrelevant to the study topic.Conclusion:To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study that investigated the practice of author self-citation in Turkish ORL literature. Author self-citation rate in the Turkish-originated general ORL journals was found remarkably lower than the medical literature, whereas the self-citations were found compatible with the study topic to a very large extent. Members of the scientific community including authors, readers, and journal editors should be cautious regarding the unethical practices of self-citations

    All-order quartic couplings in highly symmetric D-brane-anti-D-brane systems

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    We compute six-point string amplitudes for the scattering of one closed string Ramond-Ramond state, two tachyons and two gauge fields in the worldvolume of D-brane-anti-D-brane systems in the Type II superstring theories. From the resulting S-matrix elements, we read off the precise form of the couplings, including their exact numerical coefficients, of two tachyons and two gauge fields in the corresponding highly symmetric effective field eheory (EFT) Lagrangian in the worldvolume of D-brane-Anti-D-brane to all orders in α′, which modify and complete previous proposals. We verify that the EFT reproduces the infinite collection of stringy gauge field singularities in dual channels. Inspired by interesting similarities between the all-order highly symmetric EFTs and holographic duals of Vasiliev’s higher spin gravities à là Nilsson and Vasiliev, we make a proposal for tensionless limits of D-brane-anti-D-brane systems. © 2021, The Author(s)INDEXACIÓN:SCOPU

    Théorie non-commutative de champs de spin élevé

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    L'une des plus grandes quêtes de la physique moderne est celle d'une théorie quantique décrivant toutes les interactions fondamentales, incluant la gravité. L'une des pistes explorées par les physiciens théoriciens est l'inclusion dans le modèle d'une infinité de nouvelles particules, caractérisées par un moment angulaire intrinsèque (spin) supérieur à deux. Vasiliev [1] a écrit des équations du mouvement pour un tel système, dont les propriétés (en particulier les symétries) exhibent diverses similitudes avec les théories utilisées pour décrire des interactions électromagnétiques, faibles et fortes sur un type particulier d'espace-temps, qu'on appelle non-commutatif. L'objet de notre travail [2] est l'exploitation de cette analogie pour calculer des grandeurs physiques observables. Références [1] Vasiliev, M. A. (1989). Consistent equations for interacting massless fields of all spins in the first order in curvatures, Annals Phys. 190 : 59-106. [2] Bonezzi, R.; Boulanger, N.; De Filippi, D. and Sundell, P. (2017). Noncommutative Wilson lines in higher-spin theory and correlation functions of conserved currents for free conformal fields, J. Phys. A50 : 475401

    Applicativo web per audioguide - HooRMI Author

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    HooRMI Author è la parte da content creator del progetto HooRMI. La dissertazione si concentra sul funzionamento HooRMI Author, ovvero di come viene permesso all'utente di produrre contenuti video basati sulla propria posizione acquisita tramite tecnologia Plus code e caricarli sul proprio canale Youtube. I contenuti risulteranno pronti per essere selezionati e fruiti dai turisti, grazie alla profonda personalizzazione dei metadati associati ad ogni clip

    Sectoral allocation by gender of Latin American workers over the liberalization period of the 1990s

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    The recent restructuring of Latin American economies has renewed interest in the effects of trade liberalization, on labor markets, and on the gender division of labor. The author does not attempt to establish casuality between economic reforms, and the types of jobs that men and women hold. Instead, she provides a detailed description of the trends in male, and female formal, and informal sector participation during the economic reform period in Argentina, Brazil, and Costa Rica. The author first compares the gender composition of the formal, informal wage, and self-employment sectors in a year before reforms (1988 for Argentina, 1989 for Brazil, and Costa Rica), and a year after reforms implementation (1997 for Argentina, 1995 for Brazil and Costa Rica). Although women continued to be more likely than men to work in the informal wage sector, there is no trend of"masculinization"or"feminization"of the informal sector, or any other. Instead, in Argentina men have overtaken women as the most prevalent workers in the informal wage sector, while in Brazil, the opposite has occurred (as men move into self-employment). In Costa Rica there have been no statistical, observable changes. The author then considers the distribution across sectors within each gender group, to identify whether men, and women are more likely to select different sectors in the post-reform period relative to the pre-reform period. Among both men, and women in all three countries (except Brazilian men), workers have become more likely to hold informal wage jobs, and less likely to hold formal sector jobs. Trends in human capital accumulation explain these changes for both men, and women, while changes in gender roles, primarily in homecare and marriage, do not seem to have an effect.Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Labor Policies,Population&Development,Public Health Promotion,Environmental Economics&Policies,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Environmental Economics&Policies,Population&Development,Banks&Banking Reform,Work&Working Conditions

    Production, productivity per author and per age group of authors of new Siluriformes species descriptions.

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    <p>Production, black columns, y1 axis; Productivity per author, grey columns, y2 axis; Productivity per age group, striped columns, y2 axis.</p

    The dynamics of unreliable narration:Implicit and omitted authors, double narratees and constructive readers in first person unreliable narration

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    Per Krogh Hansen brings attention to one of the most discussed narratological concepts in recent years, the ‘unreliable narrator’. In the article »The Dynamics of Unreliable Narration«, Hansen is considering to what extent the question of authorial control or intention is relevant when analysing and interpreting unreliable narrators. In the first part of the article, he questions this claimed essentiality of an authorial agent from three different angles: One concerning the border between diegetic and extradiegetic issues. Another with specific focus on unreliable simultaneous narration (first person, present tense). And a third with attention paid to the role of unreliable narrators in factual narratives. In the article, he proposes a model for describing the different dynamic roles the authorial agent, as well as the empirical reader, plays in different forms of unreliable narration. Here, terms like ‘implicit author’, ‘omitted author’, ‘double narratees’ and ‘constructive readers’ are introduced andillustrated by examples of Dennis Cooper and Edgar Allan Poe
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