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@@ -224,7 +224,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  |
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  meta | xi
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- | Chapter 1
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+ title | Chapter 1
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  blank |
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  title | Introduction
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@@ -329,7 +329,7 @@ text | is straightforward, easy to implement, and computationally tract
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  | radio reveals that the 1996-2006 merger wave provided $2.5b per year of cost syn-
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  | ergies, which constitutes about 10% of total industry revenue. The scale of those
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  | efficiencies is a an order of magnitude higher than loss in surplus for advertisers.
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- meta | Chapter 2
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+ title | Chapter 2
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  blank |
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  title | Mergers in two-sided markets:
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  | Case of U.S. radio industry
@@ -1564,7 +1564,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  meta | 5
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  text | Source: A.Richter (2006)
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- meta | Chapter 3
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+ title | Chapter 3
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  blank |
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  title | Estimation of cost synergies from
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  | mergers without cost data:
@@ -2551,8 +2551,8 @@ blank |
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  title | Additional material to Chapter 3
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  blank |
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  title | B.1 Estimation without acquisition prices
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- text | r
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- | In case the pricing function P̂jk cannot be estimated in the first state because of data
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+ | r
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+ text | In case the pricing function P̂jk cannot be estimated in the first state because of data
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  | constraint, one could employ a bargaining model for infer it. Suppose one employs
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  | a parametrization P̂ (ω|θP ). For an initial value of parameters θP0 one could compute
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  | a surplus from acquisition of the product j by an owner k using simulated V̂kt and
@@ -5756,7 +5756,7 @@ text | Several catalysts were obtained for the SMR reaction testing to
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  | reforming catalyst and the other two, water gas shift catalysts. The properties of these
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  | catalysts are listed in Table 4.1.
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- title | Table 4.1 – Properties of catalysts used in this work
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+ text | Table 4.1 – Properties of catalysts used in this work
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  text | Catalyst Reaction Active metal Bulk density
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  | Support
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  | Rela;ve Pressure [P/Po]
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  |
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- title | Figure 4.6 – W220 LT-WGS adsorption and desorption isotherms
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+ text | Figure 4.6 – W220 LT-WGS adsorption and desorption isotherms
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  meta | 148
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  | On-board hydrogen production from natural gas via a metallic Pd-based membrane reactor
@@ -11494,18 +11494,18 @@ text | Flow meter: GCA/Precision Scientific – Wet test meter: Liter u
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  text | Pressure gauge: MKS PDR2000A dual capacitance manometer
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- title | Gold plating
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+ text | Gold plating
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  text | Power supply – Sorensen DCS 8-125 0-8V 0-125A
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  text | Heat plate to maintain controlled gold bath temperature – Corning PC-357
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- title | Pd plating
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+ text | Pd plating
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  text | Temperature controlled bath: Thermo Scientific Precision microprocessor controlled
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  | 280 series water bath
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- title | Support oxidation
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+ text | Support oxidation
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  text | Support oxidation oven: Lindberg Blue M 732
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@@ -2974,8 +2974,8 @@ text | In the tests described previously, the fasteners were located at
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  | fastener tests. All fastener edge specimens were tested with the CUREE-Caltech loading
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  | protocol (Figure 3.3). Both enhanced screw fasteners and 41 mm coarse threaded screws
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  | were studied, though the coarse threaded screws were only tested with an edge spacing of
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- meta | 16 mm.
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- | CHAPTER 3. ENHANCED GYPSUM AND STUCCO COMPONENT TESTS 45
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+ | 16 mm.
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+ meta | CHAPTER 3. ENHANCED GYPSUM AND STUCCO COMPONENT TESTS 45
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  |
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  |
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  |
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  text | (a) (b) (c)
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  | Figure 3.16. Damage to screw fasteners with 16 mm edge spacing at deformations of (a)
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- meta | 1.5 mm, (b) 5 mm, and (c) 15 mm.
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- | CHAPTER 3. ENHANCED GYPSUM AND STUCCO COMPONENT TESTS 50
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+ | 1.5 mm, (b) 5 mm, and (c) 15 mm.
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+ meta | CHAPTER 3. ENHANCED GYPSUM AND STUCCO COMPONENT TESTS 50
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  |
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  title | 3.1.5 Adhesive bonding to cold-formed steel framing
@@ -4207,8 +4207,8 @@ text | 3. Stucco-gypsum connections where one side was covered using
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  | carrying capacity in the stucco connection may not be apparent after an
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  | earthquake.
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  meta | CHAPTER 4
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- | Enhanced light-frame wall tests
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- | Portions of this chapter are adapted from:
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+ title | Enhanced light-frame wall tests
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+ text | Portions of this chapter are adapted from:
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  blank |
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  text | Swensen, S., Deierlein, G.G., and Miranda, E. (in review). Behavior of screw and
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  | adhesive fasteners in wood and cold-formed steel framed walls. Journal of Structural
@@ -5849,8 +5849,8 @@ text | Sheathing-to-framing screw fasteners generally display an inelas
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  | force-displacement envelope. Folz and Filiatrault (2000; 2001) developed a 10-parameter
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  | model to capture the behavior of sheathing-to-framing fasteners as part of the CUREE-
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  | Caltech Woodframe Project. The parameters of the CUREE fastener model are shown in
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- meta | Figure 5.1.
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- | CHAPTER 5. FINITE ELEMENT MODELS 147
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+ | Figure 5.1.
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+ meta | CHAPTER 5. FINITE ELEMENT MODELS 147
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  |
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  |
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  blank |
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  text | Fy
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  | F 0 for     p   pc (5.4d)
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- meta | K0
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- | CHAPTER 5. FINITE ELEMENT MODELS 151
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+ | K0
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+ meta | CHAPTER 5. FINITE ELEMENT MODELS 151
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  blank |
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  |
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  text | When cyclic degradation is ignored, this model unloads with the initial loading stiffness
@@ -6399,8 +6399,8 @@ text | Figure 5.14. Representation of return walls in finite el
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  meta | CHAPTER 5. FINITE ELEMENT MODELS 164
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  |
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- text | 5.2.6 Model validation with small scale gypsum wall tests
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- | The ultimate strength and secant stiffness measured at 0.1% wall drift for each wall is
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+ title | 5.2.6 Model validation with small scale gypsum wall tests
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+ text | The ultimate strength and secant stiffness measured at 0.1% wall drift for each wall is
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  | shown in Table 5.6. Properties for the tested walls and finite element models are
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  | compared. The wall strengths predicted by the finite element models are within 20% of
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  | those observed in tests and three of the five wall models predicted strength within 6% of
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  blank |
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  |
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  |
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- meta | Conventional wood-framed gypsum wall
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+ title | Conventional wood-framed gypsum wall
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  text | The force-displacement behavior of the conventional gypsum wood framed wall tested
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  | (W1) at CSUS is shown in Figure 5.64 along with the fitted equivalent diagonal element
@@ -8422,7 +8422,7 @@ meta | CHAPTER 5. FINITE ELEMENT MODELS
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  text | produce walls with initial racking stiffnesses similar to those observed in test walls for all
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  | cases studied.
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- meta | CHAPTER 6
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+ title | CHAPTER 6
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  blank |
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  title | Design of light-frame strength- and
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  | stiffness-enhanced structures
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  blank |
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  |
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  |
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- text | 6.2 Strength and stiffness determination of enhanced
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+ title | 6.2 Strength and stiffness determination of enhanced
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  | light-frame walls
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- | To implement a design procedure for light-frame strength- and stiffness-enhanced
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+ text | To implement a design procedure for light-frame strength- and stiffness-enhanced
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  | structures, the behavior of enhanced walls must be defined. In this section, methods for
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  | calculating the lateral strength and stiffness of enhanced light-frame walls of different
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  | geometries are presented. Both data from wall testing and detailed finite element models
@@ -8931,8 +8931,8 @@ text |
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  | wood 5/8" Type X Gypsum 7/8" stucco on 5/8" Type X Gypsum 20.5 (1400) 28.5 (1950)
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  | 1 1
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  | CFS 5/8" Type X Gypsum 5/8" Type X Gypsum 14.0 (950) 14.0 (950)
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- | 1
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- | 1-5/8" drywall screws at 7in edge spacing, 3/8 in adhesive bead along framing
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+ meta | 1
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+ text | 1-5/8" drywall screws at 7in edge spacing, 3/8 in adhesive bead along framing
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  meta | 2
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  text | 2-1/2 in 1/4 in diam. Screws at 4 in edge spacing, 2.5 lb expanded metal lath
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  meta | CHAPTER 6. DESIGN OF ENHANCED LIGHT-FRAME STRUCTURES 248
@@ -11349,7 +11349,7 @@ blank |
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  text | Figure 6.34. First floor uplift forces.
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  |
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- text | Alternate equivalent static force-based procedure calculations
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+ title | Alternate equivalent static force-based procedure calculations
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  text | To illustrate the difference in required strengths and stiffnesses when the alternative
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  | force-based procedure is used, those calculations were performed and are displayed in
@@ -11506,8 +11506,8 @@ text | The index one-story house to be investigated was previously util
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  | rectangular floor plan and a total floor area of 111 m2 (1,200 ft2). The total structural
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  | weight (neglecting the concrete slab) is 228 kN (51 kips), while the weight tributary to
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  | the roof is 141 kN (32 kips). The floor plan of the index one-story structure is shown in
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- meta | Figure 6.35.
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- | CHAPTER 6. DESIGN OF ENHANCED LIGHT-FRAME STRUCTURES 321
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+ | Figure 6.35.
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+ meta | CHAPTER 6. DESIGN OF ENHANCED LIGHT-FRAME STRUCTURES 321
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  |
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  |
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  | θ SA [g] β LN,SA θ SA [g] β LN,SA θ SA [g] β LN,SA
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  | Enhanced House 1.03 0.19 1.30 0.24 2.42 0.36
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  | Conventional House with finishes 0.73 0.33 1.01 0.32 1.99 0.40
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- meta | Conventional House w/o finishes 0.49 0.38 0.76 0.38 1.69 0.44
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- | CHAPTER 8. PERFORMANCE EVALUATION OF ENHANCED STRUCTURES 381
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+ | Conventional House w/o finishes 0.49 0.38 0.76 0.38 1.69 0.44
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+ meta | CHAPTER 8. PERFORMANCE EVALUATION OF ENHANCED STRUCTURES 381
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  blank |
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  text | The collapse fragility curves for the three house types using MSA are shown in Figure
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  | 8.11. The lognormal distribution parameters fitted to the MSA results are shown in Table
@@ -13662,9 +13662,9 @@ text | FEMA P695
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  blank |
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  |
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  |
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- text | 8.7 Response of strength- and stiffness-enhanced simple
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+ title | 8.7 Response of strength- and stiffness-enhanced simple
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  | building archetypes
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- | To extend the performance evaluation of the two-story house to other building
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+ text | To extend the performance evaluation of the two-story house to other building
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  | configurations, simplified one-, two-, and three-story archetypes were developed and
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  | analyzed, as discussed previously (Section 8.2 and Figure 8.3). These simplified
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  | archetypes include configurations with different building heights, enhanced wall
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  | gypsum.
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  blank |
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  |
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- text | Gypsum panel edge connections
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+ title | Gypsum panel edge connections
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  blank |
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  text | Experiments on gypsum-to-gypsum panel edge joints showed that joints enhanced with a
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  | stronger compound and fiberglass tape can produce connections about twice as strong as
@@ -14694,9 +14694,9 @@ text | incurred in light-frame structures exposed to seismic hazards wh
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  | structures of differing geometries.
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  meta | Appendix A
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- text | Enhanced gypsum and stucco
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+ title | Enhanced gypsum and stucco
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  | component and wall test data
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- | In Section 3.1, a series of experimental tests for light-frame fasteners and connections
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+ text | In Section 3.1, a series of experimental tests for light-frame fasteners and connections
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  | were discussed. While the test results cited were representative of all performed, the data
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  | from each test was not presented explicitly for brevity. For some experiments, parameters
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  | such as the peak strength and stiffness were noted, but the force-displacement behavior
@@ -14836,7 +14836,7 @@ text | Fastener Lo
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  | Fu = Ultimate load (mean of positive and negative loading directions)
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  | Du = Ultimate displacement
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  | K0 = Secant stiffness at +/- 0.25 mm of deformation
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- | APPENDIX A. ENHANCED GYPSUM AND STUCCO COMPONENT TEST DATA 426
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+ meta | APPENDIX A. ENHANCED GYPSUM AND STUCCO COMPONENT TEST DATA 426
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  blank |
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  text | Table A.4. Strength and initial stiffness of tested screw (per screw) and adhesive gypsum-
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  | to-steel (per 178 mm stud length) connections.
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  | Fu = Ultimate load (mean of positive and negative loading directions)
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  | Du = Ultimate displacement
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  | K0 = Secant stiffness at +/- 0.25 mm of deformation
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- | APPENDIX A. ENHANCED GYPSUM AND STUCCO COMPONENT TEST DATA 427
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+ meta | APPENDIX A. ENHANCED GYPSUM AND STUCCO COMPONENT TEST DATA 427
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  |
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  text | 5 3000
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- meta | 0 2500
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+ text | 0 2500
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  | -5 2000
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- text | -10 1500
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+ | -10 1500
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  | -15 1000
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  | -20
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  | 500
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  text | 5 3000
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- meta | 0 2500
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+ text | 0 2500
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  | -5 2000
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- text | -10 1500
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+ | -10 1500
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  | -15 1000
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  | -20 test 1 test 1
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  | 500
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  meta | APPENDIX A. ENHANCED GYPSUM AND STUCCO COMPONENT TEST DATA 474
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- meta | 5000
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- text | 25
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+ | 25
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  | 4500
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  text | 5 3000
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- meta | 0 2500
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+ text | 0 2500
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  | -5 2000
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- text | -10 1500
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+ | -10 1500
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  | -15 1000
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  | -20 test 1 test 1
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  | 500
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  text | 5 3000
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- meta | 0 2500
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+ text | 0 2500
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  | -5 2000
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- text | -10 1500
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+ | -10 1500
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  | -15 1000
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  | -20
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  | 500
@@ -191,8 +191,8 @@ text | 1 Introduction .............................................
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  | 3.4.6 Synchronization .......................................................................................... 59
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  meta | vii
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- | 4 Application of Integrated Link/Network Model ....................................................... 60
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- text | 4.1 Matching Scale Dispersion to Time Regimes .................................................... 60
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+ text | 4 Application of Integrated Link/Network Model ....................................................... 60
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+ | 4.1 Matching Scale Dispersion to Time Regimes .................................................... 60
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  | 4.2 Identification of Candidate Links, Nodes, and Chains....................................... 63
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  | 4.3 Network Improvements ...................................................................................... 66
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  | 4.3.1 Link Discontinuity Adjustment................................................................... 67
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- text | xii
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- | …complex products
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+ meta | xii
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+ title | …complex products
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  | produced by complex organizations
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  | become fragments of complex systems
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  blank |
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  |
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  meta | 2
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- text | 1.2 Mega Design Communities and Design Organization Model
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- | Mega-Systems are designed by Mega-Organizations that have tens of thousands of
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+ title | 1.2 Mega Design Communities and Design Organization Model
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+ text | Mega-Systems are designed by Mega-Organizations that have tens of thousands of
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  | engineers spread widely across a large geographic area. Organizations are treated here as
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  | evolutionary computing organisms that evolve as they compute. An abstract
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  | organizational network model is developed in Section 2.0 as summarized in Figure 1-2.
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  |
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  |
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  meta | 19
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- title | Sector Sector Sector
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- text | Coord Coord Coord
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+ text | Sector Sector Sector
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+ | Coord Coord Coord
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  | Major
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  | Teammates
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  meta | 21
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- text | System
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+ title | System
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  |
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  text | {
@@ -3484,8 +3484,8 @@ text | prepared every year at the end of each research project, but th
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  |
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- text | 5.2 Estimating the Amount of Communication you Should Afford
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- | When you change the information transfer rate a, you must also adjust the variety at both
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+ title | 5.2 Estimating the Amount of Communication you Should Afford
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+ text | When you change the information transfer rate a, you must also adjust the variety at both
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  | the receiving and transmitting agents. Otherwise the agents will suffer an information
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  | overload, and you will still have inefficient information transfer. It may be that the cost
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  | of the extra staff needed to increase the variety of the agent is more than the value of the
@@ -3860,8 +3860,8 @@ text | This dynamic perspective implies that design communities can, a
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  | variables will not improve the evolutionary adaptation rate.
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  title | 6.3 Government Aerospace, Low-Price Procurement, and
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- text | Overhead Rates
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- | The stability of any implemented improvements is somewhat problematic given the
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+ | Overhead Rates
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+ text | The stability of any implemented improvements is somewhat problematic given the
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  | evolving environment, but especially given the counter-acting efforts of government
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  | acquisition regulations and nominal management tendencies.
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  |
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  meta | 89
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  title | 7 Appendix A – Research Background
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- text | Design Community Responses to Recognition of Complexity
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- | There are two inter-twined facets of large scale engineering organizations: the large
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+ | Design Community Responses to Recognition of Complexity
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+ text | There are two inter-twined facets of large scale engineering organizations: the large
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  | organization itself, required to design, build, and operate the product, and the processes
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  | they follow to produce their mega-products. Mega-organizations were covered in
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  | Section 1. Here we address the internal design processes that guide the organizational
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  |
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  |
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  meta | vi
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- title | Limitations and Future Directions 68
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+ text | Limitations and Future Directions 68
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  text | Practical Implications 74
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@@ -399,7 +399,7 @@ text | The fact that women are seen as less agentic than men me
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  text | receive less credit than men for the same achievements (Biernat & Kobrynowicz,
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- title | 1997; Correll, 2004; Heilman & Haynes, 2005). People expect more valuable
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+ text | 1997; Correll, 2004; Heilman & Haynes, 2005). People expect more valuable
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  text | contributions to come from people who have a more valued status in a group (e.g.,
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  text | self-reliance or dominance.
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@@ -978,7 +978,7 @@ text | study in which they were given little information about someone
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  text | rate that individual’s personality. Thus, for all analyses N=363.
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- text | Procedure
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  text | composite measure of perceived competence (α = .94).
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  text | Means and standard deviations from each analysis are reported in Table 2.
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  text | form of being seen as less trustworthy that self-reliant female targets did not incur.
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- text | Discussion
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  text | The results of Study 1 provide initial support for the idea that displaying
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@@ -1433,7 +1433,7 @@ text | prediction by having participants evaluate either a male or fema
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  text | displayed either self-reliance or dominance.
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- text | Study 2
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  text | Study 2 further assesses the functional aspects of self-reliance for women in
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@@ -1451,7 +1451,7 @@ text | participants were randomly assigned to review application materi
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  text | or female job applicant that displayed either high self-reliance or high dominance. 2
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- text | Method
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  title | Participants
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@@ -1630,7 +1630,7 @@ text | [he] is?” Participants responded to the question on a 5-point
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  text | incompetent; 5 = very competent).
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- text | Manipulation checks
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+ title | Manipulation checks
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  text | Perceived self-reliance. Participants indicated the extent to which the applicant
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@@ -1648,7 +1648,7 @@ text | averaged these two items to create a measure of the applicant’
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  text | (α = .91).
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- text | Results
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  text | Means and standard deviations from each analysis are reported in Table 4.
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@@ -1912,7 +1912,7 @@ text | than the male applicants because they judged the female applica
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  text | dominance to be less trustworthy.
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- text | Discussion
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  text | Study 2 builds on Study 1 by showing that the type of agency women display
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@@ -1961,7 +1961,7 @@ text | when they display traits related to competition and hierarchy?
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  text | Study 3.
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  text | Study 3 assessed whether self-reliance is a functional form of agency for
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@@ -1975,7 +1975,7 @@ text | and then answered questions about their impressions of the state
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  text | as their willingness to vote the state representative.
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- text | Method
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+ title | Method
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  title | Participants
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@@ -2085,9 +2085,9 @@ text | directed. I seek to depend on myself, rather than on othe
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  text | accomplished.”
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- text | Measures
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+ title | Measures
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- text | Outcome variables
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+ title | Outcome variables
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  text | Willingness to vote for the state representative. Participants indicated how
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  blank |
@@ -2120,7 +2120,7 @@ text | they thought the state representative was on a 7-point scale (1
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  text | very competent).
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- text | Manipulation checks
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+ title | Manipulation checks
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  text | Perceived self-reliance. Participants responded to four questions about their
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  blank |
@@ -2173,7 +2173,7 @@ text | scored participants’ responses to the items and then averaged
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  text | composite measure of perceived dominance (α = .91)
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- text | Covariate
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+ title | Covariate
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  text | To help obscure the study’s interest in the relationship between the content of
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@@ -2245,7 +2245,7 @@ text | covariate is not included for participants’ willingness to vot
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  text | representative and for their perceptions of the state representatives’ trustworthiness.
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- text | Results
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+ title | Results
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  |
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  |
@@ -2616,7 +2616,7 @@ text | willing to vote for the female state representative that display
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  text | the two male state representatives because they judged her to be more trustworthy.
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- text | Discussion
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+ title | Discussion
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  text | Study 3 provided further evidence that self-reliance is a functional form of
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@@ -2701,7 +2701,7 @@ text | an executive displays affects people’s impressions of the exec
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  |
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  |
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- text | Study 4
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+ title | Study 4
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  text | Study 4 assessed participants’ willingness to invest in Facebook or LinkedIn as
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@@ -2715,7 +2715,7 @@ text | dominance, or no specific type of agency and then indicated thei
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  text | in her or his company.
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- text | Method
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+ title | Method
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  title | Participants
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@@ -2886,7 +2886,7 @@ text | public, it will be because investors are willing to put
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  text | of Sandberg [Weiner].
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- text | Measures
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+ title | Measures
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  text | Outcome variables.
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  blank |
@@ -2941,7 +2941,7 @@ text | competence by answering the question, “How competent or incomp
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  text | she [he] is?” (1= very incompetent; 7 = very competent).
2943
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  blank |
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- text | Manipulation checks
2944
+ title | Manipulation checks
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  blank |
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  text | Perceived self-reliance. Participants responded to the same items as they did in
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@@ -2957,7 +2957,7 @@ text | items and averaged them to create a composite measure of perceiv
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  text | .88).
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- text | Results
2960
+ title | Results
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  blank |
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  text | Means and standard deviations from each analysis are reported in Table 8.
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  blank |
@@ -3030,7 +3030,7 @@ blank |
3030
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  meta | 56
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  text | displayed no specific type of agency, but this difference was not significant, t(272) =
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3033
- title | 1.62, p = .11.
3033
+ text | 1.62, p = .11.
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  blank |
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  text | Participants also viewed Jeff Weiner to be more self-reliant when he displayed
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  blank |
@@ -3194,7 +3194,7 @@ text | (see Figure 6). 12
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  blank |
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  |
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  |
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- title | 11
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+ meta | 11
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  text | I also compared participants’ desire to invest in the company as a function of
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  | whether Sheryl Sandberg or Jeff Weiner was named as its executive within the type of
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  | agency that she or he displayed. Participants were less inclined to invest in the
@@ -3405,7 +3405,7 @@ text | Additionally, the results remain the same if these variables are
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  text | in the analyses. .
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- text | Discussion
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+ title | Discussion
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  text | Participants were more inclined to invest in Facebook when its COO, Sheryl
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  blank |
@@ -3470,7 +3470,7 @@ text | targets were held constant. Thus, even when the targets had the
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  text | position, a similar pattern of results emerged.
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- text | General Discussion
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+ title | General Discussion
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  text | Why do women obtain leadership positions less frequently than men even
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@@ -3930,7 +3930,7 @@ text | demonstrating their agency than men, and thus may still be disad
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  text | comes to being seen as well suited for leadership positions.
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- text | Conclusion
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+ title | Conclusion
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  blank |
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  text | A bleak picture is often painted for women in organizations. It suggests that no
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  blank |
@@ -4290,7 +4290,7 @@ blank |
4290
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  |
4291
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  |
4292
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  meta | 82
4293
- | Rudman, L. A., Moss-Racusin, C. A., Phelan, J. E., & Nauts, S. (2012). Status
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+ ref | Rudman, L. A., Moss-Racusin, C. A., Phelan, J. E., & Nauts, S. (2012). Status
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  ref | ncongruity and backlash effects: Defending the gender hierarchy motivates
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@@ -4369,7 +4369,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  |
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  meta | 84
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- | Table 1
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+ text | Table 1
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  blank |
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  text | Results from a principle axis factor analysis with promax rotation on all of the
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@@ -4397,7 +4397,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  |
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  meta | 85
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- | Table 2
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+ text | Table 2
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  blank |
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  text | Means and standard deviations for perceived competence and perceived trustworthiness from Study 1.
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@@ -4462,7 +4462,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  |
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  meta | 87
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- | Table 4
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+ text | Table 4
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  text | Means and standard deviations for all outcome variables from Study 2.
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@@ -4536,7 +4536,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  |
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  meta | 89
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- | Table 6
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+ text | Table 6
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  text | Means and standard deviations for all outcome variables from Study 3.
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@@ -4611,7 +4611,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  |
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  meta | 91
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- | Table 8
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+ text | Table 8
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4616
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  text | Means and standard deviations among study variables from Study 4.
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@@ -4648,7 +4648,7 @@ text | DV: Perceived
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  | dominance (z-scored 0.10 0.86 -0.28 0.66 0.08 0.79 0.22 0.79 -0.10 0.75 0.86
4649
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  | 0.01
4650
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  | manipulation check)
4651
- meta | Figure 1
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+ | Figure 1
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  blank |
4653
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  text | The effect of a target’s gender, the type of agency he or she displayed, and the degree of agency he or she displayed on
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@@ -4715,7 +4715,7 @@ blank |
4715
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  |
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  |
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  meta | 94
4718
- | Figure 3
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+ text | Figure 3
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  text | The effect of a job applicant’s gender and the type of agency he or she displayed on
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@@ -4749,7 +4749,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  |
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  meta | 95
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- | Figure 4
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+ text | Figure 4
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  text | The effect of a politician’s gender and the type of agency he or she displayed on participants’ willingness to vote for him or her and
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@@ -4781,7 +4781,7 @@ text | 1
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  | Male politician Female politician Male politician Female politician Male politician Female politician
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  text | Note. All three variables were measured on 7-point scales. Standard errors represent +-SE.
4784
- meta | Figure 5
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+ | Figure 5
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  text | The effect of a Silicon Valley executives’ gender and the type of agency that he or she
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@@ -4827,7 +4827,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  |
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  meta | 97
4830
- | Figure 6
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+ text | Figure 6
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  text | The effect of a Silicon Valley executives’ gender and the type of agency that he or she
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@@ -4868,7 +4868,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  |
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  meta | 98
4871
- | Appendix A
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+ title | Appendix A
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  text | Example of the manipulation of the type of agency and the degree of agency the target
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@@ -4902,7 +4902,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  |
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  meta | 101
4905
- | Appendix B
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+ title | Appendix B
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  text | Example of the cover letter, resume, and letter of recommendation used to manipulate
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@@ -4916,7 +4916,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  |
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  meta | 102
4919
- | Resume
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+ title | Resume
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  |
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  |
@@ -4928,7 +4928,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  |
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  meta | 104
4931
- | Appendix C
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+ title | Appendix C
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  text | Example of the materials used to manipulate the type of agency that the male and
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@@ -4941,7 +4941,7 @@ blank |
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  |
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  meta | 105
4943
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  | 106
4944
- | Appendix D
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+ title | Appendix D
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  text | Example of the materials used to manipulate the executive and the type of agency the
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