Search results for "FLE"

showing 10 items of 3517 documents

Colour reverse learning and animal personalities: the advantage of behavioural diversity assessed with agent-based simulations

2012

Foraging bees use colour cues to help identify rewarding from unrewarding flowers, but as conditions change, bees may require behavioural flexibility to reverse their learnt preferences. Perceptually similar colours are learnt slowly by honeybees and thus potentially pose a difficult task to reverse-learn. Free-flying honeybees (N = 32) were trained to learn a fine colour discrimination task that could be resolved at ca. 70% accuracy following extended differential conditioning, and were then tested for their ability to reverse-learn this visual problem multiple times. Subsequent analyses identified three different strategies: ‘Deliberative-decisive’ bees that could, after sev…

EcologyComputer sciencebusiness.industryForagingFlexibility (personality)Personality psychologyPreferenceTask (project management)NectarGeneral Materials ScienceArtificial intelligencebusinessDiversity (business)Cognitive psychologyReverse learningNeuroscience
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Some Critical Remarks on the Suitability of the Concept of the Photosynthetic Unit in Photosynthesis Research and Phytoplankton Ecology

1993

Based on the classical definition of the photosynthetic unit after Emerson and Arnold, new definitions are presented and their consistency subjected to critical reflection. Modern molecular approaches to determine the physiological condition or even the efficiency of the photosynthetic machinery via determination of the magnitude of the photosynthetic unit are discussed against the background of new data on the dynamics of the thylakoid membrane.

EcologyEcology (disciplines)ThylakoidPhytoplanktonPlant ScienceBiologyCritical reflectionPhotosynthesisPhotosynthetic capacityBotanica Acta
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Fruit quality and flavor compounds before and after commercial harvest of the late-ripening ‘Fairtime’ peach cultivar

2007

ABSTRACT In this work quality of tree ripe and commercial ripe ‘Fairtime’ peach fruit was evaluated during fruit maturation and storage. Quality parameters and volatile fraction were monitored at intervals of 7-15 days from pit hardening until 10 days after commercial harvest and after 7, 17 and 24 days of refrigeration. In fruit on the tree, weight increased quadratically, diameter and peel color increased linearly, whereas flesh firmness decreased linearly. Soluble solids (SS) reached maximum levels at commercial harvest, whereas acidity started declining after commercial harvest. In the peel, esters and alcohols showed opposite trends. In the flesh, alcohols decreased quadratically and d…

EcologyFleshRosaceaefood and beveragesCold storageRipeningPlant ScienceHorticultureBiologybiology.organism_classificationHorticulturePostharvestCultivarFood scienceAgronomy and Crop ScienceFlavorFruit tree
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Production of innovative, recycled and high-performance asphalt for road pavements

2010

Abstract The paper deals with a specific laboratory study aiming at perfectioning recycled asphalt with high mechanical performance, for surface and structural layers of flexible pavements. The aim of the research was to combine in the same material the maximum possible quantity of recycled asphalt (RA), coming from degraded asphalt layers, together with high structural performance of the recycled mixtures obtained (mainly stability, load spreading properties, rutting and fatigue resistance) that should not be lower, or possibly better than those offered by traditional asphalt mixture, made with virgin binder and aggregate. For this purpose, innovative recycled mixtures, close-graded and wi…

Economics and EconometricsFatigue resistanceAggregate (composite)Materials scienceRheologyWaste managementAsphaltRutHomogeneity (physics)Settore ICAR/04 - Strade Ferrovie Ed AeroportiComposite materialWaste Management and Disposalrecycled asphalt high-performance mixture flexible pavementsResources, Conservation and Recycling
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The effect of episodes of large capital inflows on domestic credit

2012

This paper analyses the effect of capital inflow surges on the evolution of domestic credit. Using a panel of developed and emerging economies from 1970 to 2007, it is shown that in the two years following the beginning of a capital inflow surge the credit-to-GDP ratio increases by about 2 percentage points. The effect is reversed in the medium-term with the credit-to-GDP ratio decreased by almost 4 percentage points seven years after the initial surge. The paper also finds that the effect is different depending on the type of flows characterising the episode (debt vs. portfolio equity vs. FDI), with large capital inflows that are debt-driven having the largest effect. The results of the pa…

Economics and EconometricsInflows creditmedia_common.quotation_subjectEquity (finance)Monetary economicsForeign direct investmentExchange-rate flexibilityFiscal policyCapital outflowDebtEconomicsPortfolioEconomic systemEmerging marketsFinancemedia_commonThe North American Journal of Economics and Finance
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Fiscal adjustments, labour market flexibility and unemployment

2014

Using a panel of 17 countries for 1978-2009, we find that tax-driven consolidations increase unemployment by 0.25 percentage points. Labour market flexibility mitigates this: a one-point rise in the flexibility index reduces youth (long-term) unemployment by 0.6-0.7 (1.8-2.2) percentage points.

Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsFull employmentYouth and long-term unemploymentmedia_common.quotation_subject1. No povertySettore SECS-P/02 Politica EconomicaFlexibility IndexLabour market flexibilitySocial SciencesPercentage pointUnemployment8. Economic growthUnemploymentFiscal adjustmentEconomicsFiscal adjustmentsFinancemedia_commonLabour market flexibility
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Fairness Considerations in Labor Union Wage Setting : A Theoretical Analysis

2012

We consider a theoretical model in which unions not only take the outside option into account, but also base their wage-setting decisions on an internal reference, called the fairness reference. Wage and employment outcomes and the shape of the aggregate wage-setting curve depend on the weight and the size of the fairness reference relative to the outside option. If the fairness reference is relatively high compared to the outside option, higher wages and lower employment than in the standard model will prevail. If hit by an adverse technology shock, the economy will then react with a stronger downward adjustment in employment, whereas real wages are more rigid than in the standard model. W…

Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsSociology and Political Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectWagefairnessjel:J64jel:E24Microeconomicsfinancial performancelabor unionsEfficiency wage0502 economics and businessEconomics050207 economicsReal wagesEmployment outcomes050205 econometrics media_commonlabor unions fairness wage rigidity wage flexibility wage stickiness wage-setting curve wage-setting process unemploymentta511Technology shock05 social sciencesLabor UnionsFairnessWage RigidityWage FlexibilityWage StickinessWage-Setting CurveWage-Setting ProcessUnemploymentjel:J51firmsUnemploymentwage-settingLabor unionScottish Journal of Political Economy
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Sheepskin Effects in the Spanish Labour Market: A Public–Private Sector Analysis

2005

ABSTRACT The aim of this paper is to contrast the nature of the effect of education, Human Capital or Screening, in the Spanish labour market. We use the Hungerford and Solon methodology to distinguish between the returns to schooling from mere years of schooling as a reflection of their productive–enhancing contribution (human capital) and the returns to schooling from academic certificates as signals of the individual’s ability (sheepskin effects). We separate our data into public and private sector workers. In the public sector the institutional restriction in the access and in the wage settings might force certificate rewards. Those not necessarily should be interpreted as sheepskin eff…

Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectPublic sectorWageFlexibility (personality)Private sectorCertificateHuman capitalEducationCollective bargainingEconomicsbusinessProductivityhealth care economics and organizationsmedia_commonEducation Economics
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A problem-adjusted genetic algorithm for flexibility design

2013

Many present markets for goods and services have highly volatile demand due to short life cycles and strong competition in saturated environments. Determination of capacity levels is difficult because capacities often need to be set long before demand realizes. In order to avoid capacity-demand mismatches, operations managers employ mix-flexible resources which allow them to shift excess demands to unused capacities. The Flexibility Design Problem (FDP) models the decision on the optimal configuration of a flexible (manufacturing) network. FDP is a difficult stochastic optimization problem, for which traditional exact approaches are not able to solve but the smallest instances in reasonable…

Economics and EconometricsMathematical optimizationSDG 16 - PeaceComputer scienceMetaheuristicsManagement Science and Operations ResearchIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringStochastic optimization problemGenetic algorithmLocal search (optimization)/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/industry_innovation_and_infrastructureNetwork designInnovationMetaheuristicFlexibility (engineering)business.industrySDG 16 - Peace Justice and Strong InstitutionsFlexibility designSolver/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/peace_justice_and_strong_institutionsGeneral Business Management and AccountingFlexible manufacturingJustice and Strong InstitutionsGenetic algorithmSimulated annealingChainingand InfrastructureStochastic optimizationSDG 9 - Industry Innovation and InfrastructurebusinessSDG 9 - IndustryInternational Journal of Production Economics
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Building future nuclear power fleets: The available uranium resources constraint

2013

Abstract According to almost all forward-looking studies, the world′s energy consumption will increase in the future decades, mostly because of the growing world population and the long-term development of emerging countries. The effort to contain global warming makes it hard to exclude nuclear energy from the global energy mix. The availability of natural uranium resources is a major constraint in terms of meeting this demand. In line with the scenarios floated by various international organisations and taking into consideration only current uranium-consuming light water reactors technologies with slow neutrons, 4 to 7 Mt of uranium could be consumed by 2050, namely, all identified or know…

Economics and EconometricsSociology and Political ScienceNuclear fuelWaste managementbusiness.industryNatural resource economicschemistry.chemical_elementEnergy consumptionManagement Monitoring Policy and LawNatural uraniumUraniumNuclear power[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceSpent nuclear fuelEnergy developmentchemistryWorld energy resourcesNuclear power fleetsEnvironmental scienceUranium[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and financesbusiness[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceLawComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
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