8,697 research outputs found

    An On-Line Study of Japanese Nesting Complexity

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    This paper reports the results of a self-paced reading experiment in Japanese in which the materials consisted of four versions of successively more nested syntactic structures. It was found that (1) people read the more nested materials slower than the less nested materials; and (2) the locus of the relative slowdown occurred early in the nested structures. There was no corresponding slowdown when processing the verbs at the end of each clause. The results are therefore not predicted by retrieval-based integration accounts of syntactic complexity. Rather, the results support expectation-based accounts of syntactic complexity for these materials

    Location choices of multinational firms in Europe: the role of national boundaries and EU policy

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    What determines multinational firms’ location choices in Europe? Do national boundaries matter in location decisions? To what extent are European regional policies (Structural and Cohesion Funds) able to mitigate the agglomeration forces at work? Do location determinants differ for EU and US MNEs? In this paper, we address these questions using data from 5,761 foreign subsidiaries established in 55 regions in 8 EU countries over the period 1991-1999 and estimating a nested logit model of location choices. Controlling for regional market size and potential, agglomeration economies and labor markets conditions, we find that EU policy, proxied by Cohesion Fund and Objective 1 eligibility, played a significant role in attracting multinationals. Differences emerge in determinants of EU and US multinationals location choices, with special reference to the role of labor markets. National boundaries do not seem to affect location decisions, with the relevant exception of Italy. Results suggest that multinational firms’ perceive European regions as geo-economic aggregates different from the actual political boundaries of countries.

    Assembled landscapes: The sites and sounds of some recent shakuhachi recordings

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    This article examines the folding together of music and landscape in some recent albums featuring the shakuhachi, a Japanese bamboo flute that today animates an active and international music scene. Through analysis of the texts, images, and sounds on these albums, I explore the reimagining of the shakuhachi's musical geography as the instrument reaches new players and places in Europe, Australia, and North America. Using recordings that incorporate environmental sounds alongside the shakuhachi, I examine ideas about the perceived authenticity of particular sounds, performance spaces, and recording aesthetics. These recordings unsettle our thinking about the relationship between music and landscape in several ways. First they document performers' connections with particular sites, yet complicate any notion that the shakuhachi is related to a single place or nation, signalling a distinctly contemporary sense of place. Second, the centrality of mediation in these artistic projects makes technology crucial to the production of the natural and renders the naturalness of the shakuhachi audible in new ways. Third, the use of environmental sounds provokes questions about agency and the boundaries between human and non-human sound-making. By treating these albums as assemblages of material, social, technological, and natural elements, I reveal the lively and complex character of otherwise everyday musical objects

    Egg-laying substrate selection for optimal camouflage by quail

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    Camouflage is conferred by background matching and disruption, which are both affected by microhabitat [1]. However, microhabitat selection that enhances camouflage has only been demonstrated in species with discrete phenotypic morphs [2 and 3]. For most animals, phenotypic variation is continuous [4 and 5]; here we explore whether such individuals can select microhabitats to best exploit camouflage. We use substrate selection in a ground-nesting bird (Japanese quail, Coturnix japonica). For such species, threat from visual predators is high [6] and egg appearance shows strong between-female variation [7]. In quail, variation in appearance is particularly obvious in the amount of dark maculation on the light-colored shell [8]. When given a choice, birds consistently selected laying substrates that made visual detection of their egg outline most challenging. However, the strategy for maximizing camouflage varied with the degree of egg maculation. Females laying heavily maculated eggs selected the substrate that more closely matched egg maculation color properties, leading to camouflage through disruptive coloration. For lightly maculated eggs, females chose a substrate that best matched their egg background coloration, suggesting background matching. Our results show that quail “know” their individual egg patterning and seek out a nest position that provides most effective camouflage for their individual phenotyp

    Location Choices of Multinational Firms in Europe: the Role of National Bourdaries and EU Policy

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    We examine the determinants of multinational firms’ location choices in Europe by estimating a nested logit model on a data-set of 5,761 foreign subsidiaries established in 55 regions in 8 EU countries over the period 1991-1999. We find that firms perceive regions across different countries as more similar than regions within national borders. This might be revealing that the process of European integration has reduced the national specificities perceived by multinationals and that regions within Europe attract FDIs more across than within countries. Controlling for regional market size and potential, agglomeration economies and labor markets conditions, we also find that EU regional policy, captured by Cohesion Funds and Objective 1 eligibility, played a significant role in attracting multinationals, thus mitigating the agglomeration forces at work. Differences emerge in determinants of EU and US multinationals location choices, with special reference to the role of labor markets.Europe, Foreign Direct Investments; Location; Nested Logit Models

    Leaving the nest: the rise of regional financial arrangements and the future of global governance

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    This article examines the impact of regional financial arrangements (RFAs) on the global liquidity regime. It argues that the design of RFAs could potentially alter the global regime, whether by strengthening it and making it more coherent or by decentring the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and destabilizing it. To determine possible outcomes, this analysis deploys a ‘middle‐up’ approach that focuses on the institutional design of these RFAs. It first draws on the rational design of institutions framework to identify the internal characteristics of RFAs that are most relevant to their capabilities and capacities. It then applies these insights to the interactions of RFAs with the IMF, building on Aggarwal's (1998) concept of ‘nested’ versus ‘parallel’ institutions, to create an analytical lens through which to assess the nature and sustainability of nested linkages. Through an analysis of the Chiang Mai Initiative Multilateralization (CMIM) and the Latin American Reserve Fund (FLAR), the article demonstrates the usefulness of this lens. It concludes by considering three circumstances in which fault lines created by these RFAs’ institutional design could be activated, permitting an institution to ‘leave the nest’, including changing intentions of principals, creation of parallel capabilities and facilities, and failure of the global regime to address regional needs in a crisis.The authors would like to thank Veronica Artola, Masatsugu Asakawa, Ana Maria Carrasquilla, Junhong Chang, Paolo Hernando, Hoe Ee Khor, Kazunori Koike, Jae Young Lee, Ser-Jin Lee, Guillermo Perry, Yoichi Nemoto, Freddy Trujillo, Masaaki Watanabe, Yasuto Watanabe, Akihiko Yoshida, and others who wished to remain anonymous, for their generosity in providing in-person interviews. Further, the authors would like to thank various central bank and ministry of finance officials of both FLAR and CMIM member countries. We also thank Jose Antonio Ocampo, Diana Barrowclough, and participants in the 'Beyond Bretton Woods' Workshop at Boston University (where an earlier version of this article was presented in September 2017) for their feedback on our broader research projects on RFAs. Last but not least, the authors wish to thank the anonymous referees for their constructive comments. This work builds upon previous work funded by UNCTAD and the Global Economic Governance Initiative at the Global Development Policy Center at Boston University. (UNCTAD; Global Economic Governance Initiative at the Global Development Policy Center at Boston University)Accepted manuscrip

    Delaying dispreferred responses in English: From a Japanese perspective

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    This article employs conversation analysis to explore the interpenetration of grammar and preference organization in English conversation in comparison with a previous study for Japanese. Whereas varying the word order of major syntactic elements is a vital grammatical resource in Japanese for accomplishing the potentially universal task of delaying dispreferred responses to a range of first actions, it is found to have limited utility in English. A search for alternative operations and devices that conversationalists deploy for this objective in English points to several grammatical constructions that can be tailored to maximize the delay of dispreferred responses. These include the fronting of relatively mobile, syntactically ?non-obligatory? elements of clause structure and the employment of various copular constructions. A close interdependence is observed between the rudimentary grammatical resources available in the two languages and the types of operations that are respectively enlisted for the implementation of the organization of preference

    Movement ecology and sex are linked to barn owl microbial community composition.

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    The behavioural ecology of host species is likely to affect their microbial communities, because host sex, diet, physiology, and movement behaviour could all potentially influence their microbiota. We studied a wild population of barn owls (Tyto alba) and collected data on their microbiota, movement, diet, size, coloration, and reproduction. The composition of bacterial species differed by the sex of the host and female owls had more diverse bacterial communities than their male counterparts. The abundance of two families of bacteria, Actinomycetaceae and Lactobacillaceae, also varied between the sexes, potentially as a result of sex differences in hormones and immunological function, as has previously been found with Lactobacillaceae in the microbiota of mice. Male and female owls did not differ in the prey they brought to the nest, which suggests that dietary differences are unlikely to underlie the differences in their microbiota. The movement behaviour of the owls was associated with the host microbiota in both males and females because owls that moved further from their nest each day had more diverse bacterial communities than owls that stayed closer to their nests. This novel result suggests that the movement ecology of hosts can impact their microbiota, potentially on the basis of their differential encounters with new bacterial species as the hosts move and forage across the landscape. Overall, we found that many aspects of the microbial community are correlated with the behavioural ecology of the host and that data on the microbiota can aid in generating new hypotheses about host behaviour

    Data Descriptor: High resolution, week-long, locomotion time series from Japanese quail in a home-box environment

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    Temporal and spatial patterns of locomotion reflect both resting periods and the movement from one place to another to satisfy physiological and behavioural needs. Locomotion is studied in diverse areas of biology such as chronobiology and physiology, as well as in biomathematics. Herein, the locomotion of 24 visually-isolated Japanese quails in their home-box environment was recorded continuously over a 6.5 days at a 0.5 s sampling rate. Three time series are presented for each bird: (1) locomotor activity, (2) distance ambulated, and (3) zone of the box where the bird is located. These high resolution, week-long, time series consisting of 1.07 × 10 6 data points represent, to our knowledge, a unique data set in animal behavior, and are publically available on FigShare. The data obtained can be used for analyzing dynamic changes of daily or several day locomotion patterns, or for comparison with existing or future data sets or mathematical models across different taxa.publishedVersionFil: Flesia, Ana Georgina. Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Facultad de MatemĂĄtica, AstronomĂ­a y FĂ­sica; Argentina.Fil: Flesia, Ana Georgina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas - Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios de MatemĂĄtica; Argentina.Fil: GuzmĂĄn, Diego A. Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, FĂ­sicas y Naturales, CĂĄtedra de QuĂ­mica BiolĂłgica; Argentina.Fil: GuzmĂĄn, Diego A. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas - Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Instituto de Investigaciones BiolĂłgicas y TecnolĂłgicas; Argentina.Fil: GuzmĂĄn, Diego A. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas - Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Instituto de Ciencia y TecnologĂ­a de los Alimentos; Argentina.Fil: Pellegrini, Stefania. Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, FĂ­sicas y Naturales, CĂĄtedra de QuĂ­mica BiolĂłgica; Argentina.Fil: Pellegrini, Stefania. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas - Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Instituto de Investigaciones BiolĂłgicas y TecnolĂłgicas; Argentina.Fil: Pellegrini, Stefania. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas - Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Instituto de Ciencia y TecnologĂ­a de los Alimentos; Argentina.Fil: Aon, Miguel A. Johns Hopkins University. School of Medicine; Estados Unidos de AmĂ©ricaFil: Marin, RaĂșl H. Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, FĂ­sicas y Naturales, CĂĄtedra de QuĂ­mica BiolĂłgica; Argentina.Fil: Marin, RaĂșl H. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas - Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Instituto de Investigaciones BiolĂłgicas y TecnolĂłgicas; Argentina.Fil: Marin, RaĂșl H. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas - Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Instituto de Ciencia y TecnologĂ­a de los Alimentos; Argentina.Fil: Kembro, Jackelyn M. Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, FĂ­sicas y Naturales, CĂĄtedra de QuĂ­mica BiolĂłgica; Argentina.Fil: Kembro, Jackelyn M. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas - Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Instituto de Investigaciones BiolĂłgicas y TecnolĂłgicas; Argentina.Fil: Kembro, Jackelyn M. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas - Universidad Nacional de CĂłrdoba. Instituto de Ciencia y TecnologĂ­a de los Alimentos; Argentina.Fil: GuzmĂĄn, Diego A. Aarhus University. Department of Animal Science; Dinamarca
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