parallel effect
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2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Asim Talukdar ◽  
Anirban Ganguly

PurposeThe primary aim of this paper is to study a dark side of e-HRM concerning its parallel effect on human resource (HR) socialization and HR service delivery and the consequent impact of perceived HR effectiveness.Design/methodology/approachThe current study started with an in-depth review of the extant literature in the field of e-HRM to derive a set of constructs. Based on the theoretical foundation of the identified constructs, the current study went on to derive a set of hypotheses, which was subsequently validated using the uses the quantitative technique of PLS-SEM. A primary survey, in the form of a structured questionnaire, was used as the source for data collection on a sample size of 276 from the Indian industrial domain. Careful attention was paid to eliminate the common method bias in the study.FindingsThe findings of this study show a simultaneous significant full mediation effect of both HR service delivery and HR socialization is the relationship between e-HRM and HR effectiveness. However, e-HRM has a strong and significant negative effect on HR socialization. Though HR socialization is positively related to HR effectiveness, the significantly reduced level of HR socialization as a consequence of adaption of e-HRM had negatively affected the perceived HR effectiveness.Originality/valueAlthough the dark side of e-HRM has been recognized by academicians and practitioners alike, its implications have seldom been studied in the academic literature. The current study intends to shed some light on this important, but sparsely discussed topic. Further, this study makes significant and meaningful contributions in the literature of e-HRM by empirically studying together the positive and negative consequences of e-HRM and its effects on HR effectiveness. Several e-HRM scholars have discussed the implications of e-HRM adoption and highlighted the negative impacts of e-HRM, and traversing the same path, the current study advances the literature by empirically investigating the effect of e-HRM on the dehumanization of HR processes and practices.



2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 281-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
Idan Landau

Ellipsis of a constituent whose head has moved out of it (“headless ellipsis”) is possible in some cases but not in others. Headless ellipsis is licensed only if the stranded head has not crossed a Spell-Out domain. The reason is that the silencing instruction responsible for ellipsis must be PF-visible on the head of the elided constituent, and PF-visibility is cut off at Spell-Out domain boundaries. A parallel effect is observed with remnants of head movement that are frozen for movement (“headless movement”). The two effects can possibly be united if ellipsis and copy deletion recruit the same silencing instruction at PF, hosted on the head of the deleted constituent. A third, mirror-image effect is observed with reprise fragments, which must be visibly headed. This time head movement removes the PF instruction that spares these fragments from ellipsis. Overall, these phenomena establish the significance of headedness for the syntax-PF interface.



Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 310 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giacomo Ferretti ◽  
Giulio Galamini ◽  
Valeria Medoro ◽  
Massimo Coltorti ◽  
Dario Di Giuseppe ◽  
...  

Notwithstanding the widespread use of natural and pre-exchanged zeolites for zootechnical effluent treatment, little attention has been dedicated to the variation in the chemical composition of the treated slurries, besides the effects on their NH4+ content. This paper aimed at elucidating the compositional variations in terms of major and trace elements of a raw pig-slurry (PS) after three sequential treatment cycles (TC) with three different grain sizes of natural and Na-exchanged zeolite-rich volcanic tuffs (natural ZTs and NaZTs). A series of laboratory batch experiments revealed that all ZTs had profoundly influenced the final PS chemical composition. As expected, the NaZTs were more efficient in terms of NH4+ removal than the natural ZTs, reaching almost 60% reduction of the initial content after three TCs. A parallel effect of this efficient removal was the remarkable increase in Na+. The Na-forms of ZTs led also to stronger competition with K+ ions, resulting in adsorption of this macronutrient and hence in a reduction of the fertilization value of the PS. In terms of heavy metals and other trace elements, all the treatments with ZTs had significantly increased the Li, Ba, Rb, Sr, Ga, and U content in the PS.



2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 2240-2245
Author(s):  
Zexuan Guo ◽  
Man Zhao ◽  
Jing Zhang ◽  
Chunyan Xu ◽  
Dayong Jiang


Chemosphere ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 199 ◽  
pp. 747-754 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomas Jambor ◽  
Hana Greifova ◽  
Anton Kovacik ◽  
Eva Kovacikova ◽  
Eva Tvrda ◽  
...  


2016 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
RAMONA KUNENE NICOLAS ◽  
MICHÈLE GUIDETTI ◽  
JEAN-MARC COLLETTA

AbstractThe present study reports on a developmental and cross-linguistic study of oral narratives produced by speakers of Zulu (a Bantu language) and French (a Romance language). Specifically, we focus on oral narrative performance as a bimodal (i.e., linguistic and gestural) behaviour during the late language acquisition phase. We analyzed seventy-two oral narratives produced by L1 Zulu and French adults and primary school children aged between five and ten years old. The data were all collected using a narrative retelling task. The results revealed a strong effect of age on discourse performance, confirming that narrative abilities improve with age, irrespective of language. However, the results also showed cross-linguistic differences. Zulu oral narratives were longer, more detailed, and accompanied by more co-speech gestures than the French narratives. The parallel effect of age and language on gestural behaviour is discussed and highlights the importance of studying oral narratives from a multimodal perspective within a cross-linguistic framework.



2015 ◽  
Vol 44 (17) ◽  
pp. 7911-7916 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junlong Tian ◽  
Feng Pan ◽  
Ruiyang Xue ◽  
Wang Zhang ◽  
Xiaotian Fang ◽  
...  

A tin oxide multi-tube array with a parallel effect was fabricated, which exhibited high sensitivity to H2S gas at room temperature.



Author(s):  
Lindsey Kuper ◽  
Aaron Todd ◽  
Sam Tobin-Hochstadt ◽  
Ryan R. Newton
Keyword(s):  


2014 ◽  
Vol 49 (6) ◽  
pp. 2-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lindsey Kuper ◽  
Aaron Todd ◽  
Sam Tobin-Hochstadt ◽  
Ryan R. Newton
Keyword(s):  


2014 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 181-196
Author(s):  
Onur Isci

The proliferation of popular newspapers during the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878 transformed the boundaries of public debate in Russia and brought the people into close contact with each other as well as with the outer world. Printing and the press had a parallel effect on the fin-de-siècle Ottoman public sphere. Newspapers of the Sublime Porte utilized defeats against Russia to juxtapose – if not depose – the Sultan’s cult as the sole symbol of unity with a nationalist one. “Wartime Propaganda and the Legacies of Defeat” is a comparative study of the two major newspapers – Golos and Basiret – during this period. I examine the major commonalities between these papers: such as perceived images of the enemy, the war’s aims and purposes, as well as the behavior of the troops portrayed by the war correspondents. My primary purpose is to shed light on the Turkish popular press, which weighed in on the issues of nationalism, defeat and political campaigning just as its Russian counterparts did. Ultimately, this article argues that the emergence of a critically debating public sphere in Russia and Turkey demonstrates how both empires experienced modernity in the sense that most Europeans understood it.



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