Search for the rare decay of the muon into a positron and a photon

This dissertation examines some of the more subjective aspects of individuals' experiences of isolation within the context of racialized and gendered work organizations. This research develops two constructs--institutional and social isolation--and attempts to ascertain the extent to which raci...

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Main Author: Zhang, Yiding
Other Authors: Physics
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/38036
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06062008-151737/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-380362021-12-21T06:03:09Z Search for the rare decay of the muon into a positron and a photon Zhang, Yiding Physics symmetry LD5655.V856 1995.Z437 This dissertation examines some of the more subjective aspects of individuals' experiences of isolation within the context of racialized and gendered work organizations. This research develops two constructs--institutional and social isolation--and attempts to ascertain the extent to which racial and gender groups experience isolation similarly. Other attitudes, such as intent to turnover, affective commitment, and alienation, are analyzed with respect to feelings of isolation for these groups. Finally, because current thinking has advocated the use of organizational interventions, such as mentoring programs, to ameliorate individuals' feelings of separateness within the organization, the relationship of mentoring to the aforementioned constructs was examined for its usefulness in understanding similarities and differences between these groups. This research extends previous work by providing support for new conceptualizations of social isolation and isolation. It extends work done by Nkomio and Cox (1990) and others who found that individuals who had achieved some objective measures of success in organizations, still did not feel, subjectively, as if they were a part of the organization. Thus, the use of these isolation constructs will expand our knowledge of organizational processes in examining groups based on gender and race/ethnicity. The results indicate that isolation docs exist on two dimensions: institutional isolation and social isolation. Asian-Americans have higher levels of institutional isolation, and African-Americans have higher levels of social isolation than any other group. Females experience higher levels of social isolation--but not institutional isolation--than males. There are some differences when race and gender are examined simultaneously in levels of experienced institutional and social isolation. Younger faculty feel more institutionally and socially isolated than older faculty. There is no significant effect of the presence of mentoring on institutional or social isolation; nor is there differential access to mentoring relationships by race. However, females enter mentoring relationships in greater proportions than males. There are also effects from cross-racial mentoring relationships. Finally, there are no significant differences, by race or gender, in the levels of affective organizational commitment or intent to turnover. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T21:12:12Z 2014-03-14T21:12:12Z 1995 2008-06-06 2008-06-06 2008-06-06 Dissertation Text etd-06062008-151737 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/38036 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06062008-151737/ en OCLC# 34347182 LD5655.V856_1995.Z437.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ xiii, 180 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic symmetry
LD5655.V856 1995.Z437
spellingShingle symmetry
LD5655.V856 1995.Z437
Zhang, Yiding
Search for the rare decay of the muon into a positron and a photon
description This dissertation examines some of the more subjective aspects of individuals' experiences of isolation within the context of racialized and gendered work organizations. This research develops two constructs--institutional and social isolation--and attempts to ascertain the extent to which racial and gender groups experience isolation similarly. Other attitudes, such as intent to turnover, affective commitment, and alienation, are analyzed with respect to feelings of isolation for these groups. Finally, because current thinking has advocated the use of organizational interventions, such as mentoring programs, to ameliorate individuals' feelings of separateness within the organization, the relationship of mentoring to the aforementioned constructs was examined for its usefulness in understanding similarities and differences between these groups. This research extends previous work by providing support for new conceptualizations of social isolation and isolation. It extends work done by Nkomio and Cox (1990) and others who found that individuals who had achieved some objective measures of success in organizations, still did not feel, subjectively, as if they were a part of the organization. Thus, the use of these isolation constructs will expand our knowledge of organizational processes in examining groups based on gender and race/ethnicity. The results indicate that isolation docs exist on two dimensions: institutional isolation and social isolation. Asian-Americans have higher levels of institutional isolation, and African-Americans have higher levels of social isolation than any other group. Females experience higher levels of social isolation--but not institutional isolation--than males. There are some differences when race and gender are examined simultaneously in levels of experienced institutional and social isolation. Younger faculty feel more institutionally and socially isolated than older faculty. There is no significant effect of the presence of mentoring on institutional or social isolation; nor is there differential access to mentoring relationships by race. However, females enter mentoring relationships in greater proportions than males. There are also effects from cross-racial mentoring relationships. Finally, there are no significant differences, by race or gender, in the levels of affective organizational commitment or intent to turnover. === Ph. D.
author2 Physics
author_facet Physics
Zhang, Yiding
author Zhang, Yiding
author_sort Zhang, Yiding
title Search for the rare decay of the muon into a positron and a photon
title_short Search for the rare decay of the muon into a positron and a photon
title_full Search for the rare decay of the muon into a positron and a photon
title_fullStr Search for the rare decay of the muon into a positron and a photon
title_full_unstemmed Search for the rare decay of the muon into a positron and a photon
title_sort search for the rare decay of the muon into a positron and a photon
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/38036
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06062008-151737/
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