Thursday, December 13, 2012

JFK Security Workers Threaten Strike - Business Insider

Security guards at New York's JFK Airport are threatening to strike just before Christmas, demanding significant improvements to their working conditions.

About 300 workers will vote tomorrow to authorize the strike, which would begin December 20. They are also considering unionization, Crain's New York Business reports.

The workers, who are employed by two private companies, Air Serv and Global Elite Group, are responsible for inspecting planes for explosives and contraband before takeoff, and checking airport staff who have access to aircraft.

They are also in charge of directing terminal traffic, according the the New York Post.

The guards are currently paid $8 an hour without benefits, and complain of low quality equipment and a lack of sufficient training.

"We want to be issued enough of the proper equipment to be able to do our job and keep the public safe," Prince Jackson, an Air Serv employee, told Crain's. "We want more money and benefits."

Michael Allen, a spokesman for the Service Employees International Union, which is advising the guards, told The Post:

These security officers feel responsible for the safety and security at JFK Airport. They feel it is their duty to bring attention to these gaping holes in preparedness and safety standards.

Air Serv did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider, but both issued a statement, according to Crain's:

We understand that a labor union is seeking over a period of time to organize workers from companies that work at JFK. We have no comment on that effort.

Global Elite Group also released a statement:

Global Elite Group will be looking into these recent union activities and to date we have not received any petition from employees.

Global Elite Group believes this is part of a larger ploy by the service workers' union to generate public and governmental support for its efforts to unionize our employees. We are not the only company being targeted by the union ? a number of companies operating at airports across the nation are seeing similar actions.

Global Elite Group maintains an open door policy with employees. Regular meetings are held with employees to discuss issues pertaining to field operations. We provide all the resources needed by our employees to perform their jobs.

JFK was the sixth busiest airport in the country in 2011, serving more than 47 million passengers, according to Airports Council International.

Of course, the week before Christmas is peak travel season. Consumer Traveler reported that in 2010, December 19 to December 25 was the year's busiest for air travel.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/jfk-security-workers-threaten-strike-2012-12

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Too big or just right? Optimal circle of friends depends on socioeconomic conditions

Dec. 12, 2012 ? Some people like to have a few close friends, while others prefer a wider social circle that is perhaps less deep. These preferences reflect people's personalities and individual circumstances -- but is one approach to social networks "better" than the other? New research suggests that the optimal social networking strategy depends on socioeconomic conditions.

Researchers Shigehiro Oishi of the University of Virginia and Selin Kesebir of the London Business School explore the benefits of social networking strategies in two studies published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

"In the age of Facebook, many Americans seem to opt for a broad, shallow networking strategy. Yet, cross-cultural research has shown that having many friends is not always viewed positively outside the United States," Oishi and Kesebir write.

One reason that Americans may prefer a large social network, the researchers surmise, is because Americans move around a lot. Thus, it may make sense to spread time and resources across many friends to minimize the loss of any one friend moving away.

Another important factor may be the economic conditions at a given time. When times are prosperous, your friends are less likely to need much help, whether it's covering a hospital bill or providing babysitting, and so a broad network of friends is easy to maintain. But when times aren't as flush, having more friends might incur huge costs in terms of both time and resources.

With this in mind, Oishi and Kesebir predicted that a broad, shallow networking strategy would be optimal for people living in a residentially mobile, economically favorable context. A narrow, deep networking strategy, on the other hand, would be optimal if people tend to stay in one place and economic conditions aren't as favorable.

In the first study, they created a model that simulated the benefits individuals receive from their social network under various socioeconomic conditions. The researchers were able to simulate people who have different numbers of friends at different levels of friendship and they were also able to account for the investment required by each type of friendship.

As they predicted, they found that having a small social network with deep ties to friends is advantageous when friends are not likely to move away and the economy is unstable. Regardless of economic conditions, having a broad social network with weak ties to friends is advantageous when friends are likely to move away.

Oishi and Kesebir conducted a second study to investigate whether this pattern of results would hold up in the real world.

They recruited 247 Americans to participate in an online survey through Amazon's Mechanical Turk. The survey was designed to parallel the computer simulation from the first study. The participants were asked to list three different kinds of friends: very close, close, and distant. In order to get a sense of the participants' social networking strategy, the researchers asked them to imagine that their time, energy, and money were limited to 60 points and to distribute the points among their three types of friends.

They also assessed participants' subjective well-being through a combination of three measures: life satisfaction, experiences of positive emotions, and lack of experiences of negative emotions.

Finally, the researchers used census data to obtain information about residential mobility and median family income in each zip code.

The findings from the second study echoed those of the first study. In zip codes that were residentially stable and relatively low income, participants who had a narrow, deep friendship strategy reported greater well-being than those who had a broad, shallow friendship strategy. Notably, the broad, shallow strategy was associated with subjective well-being in all three of the other economic conditions (low income-unstable, high income-stable, high income-unstable).

Oishi and Kesebir argue that these two studies provide clear evidence for the role of socioeconomic factors -- such as residential mobility and economic security -- in determining the most adaptive networking strategy.

"As residential mobility decreases and economic recession deepens in the United States, the optimal social-networking strategy might shift from the broad but shallow to the narrow but deep, even in a nation known best for the strength of weak ties," the researchers conclude.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Association for Psychological Science.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. S. Oishi, S. Kesebir. Optimal Social-Networking Strategy Is a Function of Socioeconomic Conditions. Psychological Science, 2012; DOI: 10.1177/0956797612446708

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/mind_brain/consumer_behavior/~3/xavJupL1Oxw/121212162756.htm

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Wednesday, December 12, 2012

WCXM Pitfall 11: Missing or underestimating internal change ...

WCXM Pitfall 11: Missing or underestimating internal change management issues

11-Dec-2012

Tags: Web Content & Experience Management, Implementation

Twelve Common Pitfalls to Avoid (and Best Practices to Follow) When Embarking on a Web Content and Experience Management Project

Pitfall 11: Missing or underestimating internal change management issues

Best Practice:

Recognize and clarify how new systems and tools are likely to affect people's jobs and enlist people's support for productive change.

Providing publishing and site management tools to line-of-business managers will be exhilarating and liberating to some, horrifying to others. Some content owners might not want to take direct responsibility and control for the timeliness and detail of their part of a website. Workflow tools and detailed auditing mechanisms in particular bring a whole new dimension to accountability.

Some will welcome the ability to directly affect visitor experiences.? Others may resent finding themselves suddenly unable to dictate the look and feel of their content.

Of course, that's just the idea. If the Internet is central to the way you do business, and content lies at the foundation of your web efforts, then you want a system of incentives, enablements, and controls to make sure content is managed well. You are not necessarily eliminating people's jobs; you're just asking staff people to focus more intently on their particular areas of expertise. Involve your best people in the design process and the new system should work well for you.

There is, however, a good specialization story to tell. Instead of spending time shoveling content through HTML converters or tracking down the correct version of the latest press release, former "webmasters" can free themselves to focus on higher value-added specialties:

  • Content-oriented webmasters can focus on the editorial quality, web suitability, and the substance of the subject matter, itself.
  • Technically-oriented webmasters can grow to manage a true online publishing system.
  • Design-oriented webmasters can focus on the visual effectiveness of the presentation, and multiply the value of their efforts dramatically by propagating their designs through broadly used (and enforced) templates.

So what goes away here? The generalist webmaster position.

In any event, many people's jobs are likely to change. Some will have more work; some will have less. On the whole, you should be able to manage more content, faster, and with better visitor experiences, but leadership will be needed to address the inevitable individual winnings and losses along the way.

Pitfall 1: Selecting a Web CMS package before developing solid requirements and a business case. Read the details of Pitfall 1 here.

Pitfall 2: Not getting a clear mandate from the top. Read the details of Pitfall 2 here.

Pitfall 3: Thinking a web content management package will provide a full CMS solution. Read the details of Pitfall 3 here.

Pitfall 4: Not involving internal Web CXM stakeholders from the very beginning. Read the details of Pitfall 4 here.

Pitfall 5: Involving only internal stakeholders. Read the details of Pitfall 5 here.

Pitfall 6: Spending insufficient effort describing and organizing content, and underestimating migration times. Read the details of Pitfall 6 here.

Pitfall 7: Picking a CMS package that doesn't play well with other company applications. Read the details of Pitfall 7 here.

Pitfall 8: Underestimating hardware needs. Read the details of Pitfall 8 here.

Pitfall 9: Underestimating integration and other professional service needs. Read the details of Pitfall 9 here.

Pitfall 10: Looking solely at the product and not enough at the vendor. Read the details of Pitfall 10 here.

Pitfall 12: Coming soon...

    Excerpt from the CM System Evaluation

    Web Content Management Evaluation Stream looks at... Percussion's Viability

    "Percussion is perpetually rumored to be up for sale, but it is closely held, does not appear to be actively shopping, and it could probably chug along with the current ownership for quite a long time. However,..."
    (p. 358)

    CMS Vendor Evaluations

    Learn the real strengths and weaknesses of major CMS vendors from around the world, in our Web Content & Experience Management research stream.

Source: http://www.realstorygroup.com/Blog/2451-WCXM-Pitfall-11%3A-Missing-or-underestimating-internal-change-management-issues?source=RSS

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Chinese Phone Packs All the Best Specs Into a Sexy Package

Chinese Phone Packs All the Best Specs Into a Sexy Package
Oppo, a little know Chinese company that makes Blu-ray players praised by audio and videophiles, is bringing a 1080p Android smartphone to the U.S. next year.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/S5tu-KRqHmA/

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Video: Halftime Pops & Drops

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50166472/

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Feds rule on health care law's Medicaid expansion

WASHINGTON (AP) ? States must commit to fully expanding their Medicaid programs to take advantage of generous funding in the federal health care law, the Obama administration said Monday.

The ruling affects a federal-state program that covers nearly 60 million low-income and severely disabled people, caught in a tug-of-war between Republican governors and the Democratic administration.

President Barack Obama's health care law expanded Medicaid to cover people up to 138 percent of the federal poverty line, or about $15,400 for an individual. The change mainly affects low-income adults without children at home, as well as low-income parents who can't get coverage under current Medicaid rules.

Under the law, the federal government will cover 100 percent of the cost of the first three years of the expansion, gradually phasing down to a 90 percent share ? still a far more generous match than states have traditionally received. The expansion, scheduled for 2014, is expected to provide coverage to about half the 30 million people uninsured people who will benefit from the law.

But some governors said Medicaid was already straining their state budgets to a breaking point, and the Supreme Court in June gave states the right to opt out of the expansion. Since the court decision, Republican governors have been asking if they can do a partial expansion.

The administration's ruling puts the ball back in the states' court. Administration officials said states can expand Medicaid part way, but they wouldn't get the three years of full federal funding provided under the law.

"The law contemplated that every American would have a way to get health insurance coverage," said Medicaid administrator Cindy Mann. "It's very significant federal support, unlike any other federal support provided to any other coverage initiative.

"We are going to remain true to that intent of Congress and not waive that provision," she added.

Mike Schrimpf, a spokesman for the Republican Governors Association, said the decision was "disappointing for many governors who hoped the administration was more serious about providing the states flexibility."

Most states are still pondering their decision. Twelve have said they'll turn down the expansion, although legislators are still debating the issue in some cases. Another 14 states have said they'll accept it. There's no deadline for states to decide, and they can try the expansion and later cancel it if it doesn't work out.

Two nonpartisan groups, the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Urban Institute, said in a recent report that states can expect to receive $9 in federal funds for every $1 they spend on the expansion.

Also on Monday, the Obama administration granted conditional approval to six states to set up new insurance markets called exchanges. Under the law, the exchanges will serve as a one-stop shop for consumers, steering middle-class people to subsidized private coverage and low-income people to Medicaid. Colorado, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, Oregon, and Washington all received approval.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-12-10-US-Health-Overhaul-Medicaid/id-f39ab5983e5b46c3a3c199f7062584d2

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ADHD linked to oxygen deprivation before birth

Dec. 10, 2012 ? Children who had in-utero exposure to ischemic-hypoxic conditions, situations during which the brain is deprived of oxygen, were significantly more likely to develop attention deficit hyperactivity disorder later in life as compared to unexposed children, according to a Kaiser Permanente study published in the journal Pediatrics. The findings suggest that events in pregnancy may contribute to the occurrence of ADHD over and above well-known familial and genetic influences of the disorder.

The population-based study examines the association between IHC and ADHD. Researchers examined the electronic health records of nearly 82,000 children ages 5 years old and found that prenatal exposure to IHC -- especially birth asphyxia, neonatal respiratory distress syndrome, and preeclampsia -- was associated with a 16 percent greater risk of developing ADHD. Specifically, exposure to birth asphyxia was associated with a 26 percent greater risk of developing ADHD, exposure to neonatal respiratory distress syndrome was associated with a 47 percent greater risk, and exposure to preeclampsia (high blood pressure during pregnancy) was associated with a 34 percent greater risk. The study also found that the increased risk of ADHD remained the same across all race and ethnicity groups.

"Previous studies have found that hypoxic injury during fetal development leads to significant structural and functional brain injuries in the offspring," said study lead author Darios Getahun, MD, PhD, of the Kaiser Permanente Southern California Department of Research & Evaluation. "However, this study suggests that the adverse effect of hypoxia and ischemia on prenatal brain development may lead to functional problems, including ADHD."

Researchers also found that the association between IHC and ADHD was strongest in preterm births and that deliveries that were breech, transverse (shoulder-first) or had cord complications were found to be associated with a 13 percent increased risk of ADHD. These associations were found to be the case even after controlling for gestational age and other potential risk factors.

"Our findings could have important clinical implications. They could help physicians identify newborns at-risk that could benefit from surveillance and early diagnosis, when treatment is more effective," said Getahun. "We suggest future research to focus on pre- and post-natal conditions and the associations with adverse outcomes, such as ADHD."

During critical periods of fetal organ development, IHC may result in a lack of oxygen and nutrient transport from the mother's blood to fetal circulation. The result may be compromised oxygen delivery to tissues and cerebrovascular complications. However, this study suggests that the adverse effect of hypoxia on prenatal brain development may lead to functional problems, including ADHD.

In 2005, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated the annual cost of ADHD-related illness in children under 18 years of age to be between $36 billion and $52.4 billion, making the condition a public health priority. In 2010, approximately 8.4 percent of children ages 3 to 17 had been diagnosed with ADHD. For about half the affected children, the disease persists into adulthood, according to CDC statistics. Symptoms of ADHD in children may include attention problems, acting without thinking, or an overly active temperament.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Kaiser Permanente, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Darios Getahun, George G. Rhoads, Kitaw Demissie, Shou-En Lu, Virginia P. Quinn, Michael J. Fassett, Deborah A. Wing, and Steven J. Jacobsen. In Utero Exposure to Ischemic-Hypoxic Conditions and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder. Pediatrics, December 10, 2012 DOI: 10.1542/peds.2012-1298

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/ut_bYBTunVk/121210080833.htm

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