1,781,119 research outputs found
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Doubling your payoff: winning pain relief engages endogenous pain inhibition
When in pain, pain relief is much sought after, particularly for individuals with chronic pain. In analogy to
augmentation of the hedonic experience (“liking”) of a reward by the motivation to obtain a reward (“wanting”), the
seeking of pain relief in a motivated state might increase the experience of pain relief when obtained. We tested
this hypothesis in a psychophysical experiment in healthy human subjects, by assessing potential pain-inhibitory
effects of pain relief “won” in a wheel of fortune game compared with pain relief without winning, exploiting the
fact that the mere chance of winning induces a motivated state. The results show pain-inhibitory effects of pain
relief obtained by winning in behaviorally assessed pain perception and ratings of pain intensity. Further, the
higher participants scored on the personality trait novelty seeking, the more pain inhibition was induced. These
results provide evidence that pain relief, when obtained in a motivated state, engages endogenous pain-inhibitory
systems beyond the pain reduction that underlies the relief in the first place. Consequently, such pain relief might
be used to improve behavioral pain therapy, inducing a positive, perhaps self-amplifying feedback loop of
reduced pain and improved functionality
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The Finance Act 1998: can the owners of agricultural land continue to gain from their capital disposals?
This paper seeks to analyse and discuss, from the perspective of the owners of agricultural land, the main changes to the Capital Gains Tax regime introduced in the Budget of March 1998 and contained in the Finance Act
1998. The immediate replacement of indexation with a new Taper relief is examined, along with the phasing out of Retirement relief, and the interaction of Taper relief with Rollover relief
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The Finance Acts 1998 and 2000: can the owners of agricultural land continue to gain from their capital disposals?
This paper seeks to analyse and discuss, from the perspective of the owners of agricultural land, the main changes to the Capital Gains Tax regime introduced in the Finance Act 1998 and subsequently amended in the Finance Act 2000. The replacement of indexation with a new Taper relief is examined, along with the phasing out of Retirement relief, and the interaction of Taper relief with Rollover relief. The opportunity for tax mitigation by the owners of agricultural land is critically examined
Debt relief as a platform for reform: the case of Nigeria's virtual poverty fund
In June 2005 the Paris Club group of creditors announced a US18 billion debt write off.
This paper describes how these debt relief savings have been managed and spent, with a focus on the development and implementation of a comprehensive tracking system that aimed to effectively monitor debt relief expenditures. The paper argues that the Nigerian case implies debt relief can be a valuable tool for supporting public sector reform
“For the Relief of Human Suffering”: The Methodist Committee for Overseas Relief in the Context of Cold War Initiatives in Development, 1940–1968
The Methodist Committee for Overseas Relief (MCOR) was one of the first and largest denominational relief and development agencies in the nation from 1940 to 1968. Its ecumenical engagement was robust from the start; it was one of the largest donors to United China Relief, Church World Service, and other ecumenical overseas relief organizations during this time. This article provides a decade by decade assessment of MCOR’s work with particular attention to (1) its ecumenical engagement in relief and development efforts; (2) the relationship of MCOR’s work to the wider context of overseas relief and development efforts by nongovernmental, bilateral, and multilateral agencies; (3) the stated theological justification of MCOR’s work as it related to the wider mission of the church and specifically the Methodist Board of Missions and Church Extension. The article concludes with reflections on the implications of this study for the future work of the United Methodist Committee on Relief
Intelligent Disaster Response via Social Media Analysis - A Survey
The success of a disaster relief and response process is largely dependent on
timely and accurate information regarding the status of the disaster, the
surrounding environment, and the affected people. This information is primarily
provided by first responders on-site and can be enhanced by the firsthand
reports posted in real-time on social media. Many tools and methods have been
developed to automate disaster relief by extracting, analyzing, and visualizing
actionable information from social media. However, these methods are not well
integrated in the relief and response processes and the relation between the
two requires exposition for further advancement. In this survey, we review the
new frontier of intelligent disaster relief and response using social media,
show stages of disasters which are reflected on social media, establish a
connection between proposed methods based on social media and relief efforts by
first responders, and outline pressing challenges and future research
directions.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, 104 references, accepted in SIGKDD Exploration
The Dynamics of Relief Spending and the Private Urban Labor Market During the New Deal
During the New Deal the Roosevelt Administration dramatically expanded relief spending to combat extraordinarily high rates of unemployment. We examine the dynamic relationships between relief spending and local private labor markets using a new panel data set of monthly relief, private employment and private earnings for major U.S. cities in the 1930s. Impulse response functions derived from a panel VAR model that controls for time and city fixed effects show that a work relief shock in period t-1 led to a decline in private employment and a rise in private monthly earnings. The finding offers evidence consistent with contemporary employers' complaints that work relief made it more difficult to hire, even though work relief officials followed their stated policies to avoid affecting private labor markets directly. Meanwhile, negative shocks to private employment led to increases in work relief, consistent with Roosevelt's stated goal of using relief to promote relief and recovery.
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