75,410 research outputs found
Synchronous servo loop control system Patent
Design and development of synchronous servo loop control syste
Burdens and Restrictions of Workplace Regulations on Small Business: Statement of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Before the Commission on the Future of Worker-Management Relations
Testimony_Stone_121593.pdf: 276 downloads, before Oct. 1, 2020
Reports on a Course for Prospective High School Mathematics Teachers
The author describes his design for a course entitled Secondary School Mathematics from an Advanced Viewpoint. He adds subjective comments on how his design has worked in practice
Parental Conversation Styles and Learning Science With Preschoolers
Preschool children participated in a science-learning event about light in their own classroom. The same day as the event, parents or caregivers were instructed to converse with their children at home in the evening about either the science learning event or another ‘special or fun’ event that happened to them recently in whatever way was natural for them. One week later, a researcher interviewed children to examine what they remembered about the science-learning event. Analyses focused on the impact of the topic and degree of elaboration of parent-child conversations on children’s memory for the science-learning event a week later. The findings have implications for best practices in preschool education
Totally Class-Less?: Examining Bristol-Myer\u27s Applicability to Class Actions
In June 2017, the U.S. Supreme Court tightened the specific jurisdiction doctrine when it dismissed several plaintiffs’ claims in a mass tort action against pharmaceutical company Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS) for lack of personal jurisdiction. The action was brought in a California state court and involved several hundred plaintiffs alleging that they were injured by Plavix, a drug BMS manufactures. The Supreme Court held that California could not constitutionally exercise personal jurisdiction over BMS as to the nonresident plaintiffs, who did not have an independent connection to California. While the nonresident plaintiffs argued that California had specific jurisdiction because their claims were identical to the California residents’ claims (with the only difference being that their experience with Plavix occurred in other states), the Court held that these claims did not arise out of BMS’s contacts with California, but rather out of BMS’s contacts with the particular states in which these plaintiffs were injured. In so holding, the Court emphasized that enabling California to exercise jurisdiction in this context would infringe on the sovereignty of other states—more specifically, the states who housed the nonresident plaintiffs involved in the action. This Note explores whether class actions should be bound by this decision. The fundamental question, then, is whether class actions are meaningfully distinguishable from mass tort actions such that they avoid Bristol-Myers’s reach
Electron Population Aging Models for Wide-Angle Tails
Color-color diagrams have been useful in studying the spectral shapes in
radio galaxies. At the workshop we presented color-color diagrams for two
wide-angle tails, 1231+674 and 1433+553, and found that the standard aging
models do not adequately represent the observed data. Although the JP and KP
models can explain some of the observed points in the color-color diagram, they
do not account for those found near the power-law line. This difficulty may be
attributable to several causes. Spectral tomography has been previously used to
discern two separate electron populations in these sources. The combination
spectra from two such overlying components can easily resemble a range of
power-laws. In addition, any non-uniformity in the magnetic field strength can
also create a power-law-like spectrum. We will also discuss the effects that
angular resolution has on the shape of the spectrum.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, proceedings from 1999 'Life Cycles of Radio
  Galaxies' workshop at STScI in Baltimore, M
The black-white gap in non marital fertility education and mates in segmented marriage markets
This study is the first to find that mate availability explains much of the race gap in non marital fertility in the United States. Both a general and an education-based metric have strong effects. The novel statistical power arises from difference-indifferences for blacks and whites, multiple cohorts, periods, and coefficient restrictions consistent with both the data and models in which differences in mate availability can induce blacks and whites to respond in opposite directions to changes in mate availability. Results are robust to several alternative specifications and tests and appear relevant where marriages are segmented along racial, religious, or other lines.fertility marriage education
An assessment of nitrogen fixation in 'organically managed' spring-sown lupins and leaching under a following winter cereal
Three spring-sown species of lupins (Bora, Prima and Wodjil) and peas were compared in terms of N fixation and subsequent leaching under a following winter cereal crop. Although peas out-yielded lupins (5.4 t compared with ca 3.5 t grain, respectively), the yellow lupin (Wodjil) fixed more N than peas (180 compared with 120 kg N ha-1) and all three lupins contained more protein (> 30%) than the peas (22%). Wodjil was the most effective at suppressing weeds, carrying only 12% of the weed burden found in fallow plots, followed by peas (19%). Winter leaching amounted to > 50 kg nitrate-N ha-1 from under the winter cereal, regardless of whether the previous treatment was a legume crop or was left fallow. There were no significant differences in leaching between the three species of lupin. Leachate in the first 350 mm of drainage under the winter cereal exceeded the EU limit on nitrate in drinking water in all treatments. This work is part of a wider collaborative study supported by Defra which covers a range of UK sites
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