1,895 research outputs found
Making Free Speech Affordable: A Discussion of Legislation to Provide Public Funding to Candidates for the U.S. Congress
This article discusses a recent attempt by the U.S. Congress to provide for public financing of campaigns for the House of Representatives. Although a good start, this legislation would not go far enough to ensure that every voice has an opportunity to be heard in federal elections. My article discusses the strengths and weaknesses of this legislation and also provides suggested amendments to make this bill more effective should it become law.
Making Free Speech Affordable provides an in-depth comparison of this proposed legislation with current law at the state level providing for public financing of campaigns. This discussion includes an examination of state law in Massachusetts, Nebraska, Michigan, and Florida. A discussion of current federal campaign financing law is also included. At the conclusion of this article, a version of the proposed bill with all amendments suggested in the article is reprinted
The Global Star Formation Rate from the 1.4 GHz Luminosity Function
The decimetric luminosity of many galaxies appears to be dominated by
synchrotron emission excited by supernova explosions. Simple models suggest
that the luminosity is directly proportional to the rate of supernova
explosions of massive stars averaged over the past 30 Myr. The proportionality
may be used together with models of the evolving 1.4 GHz luminosity function to
estimate the global star formation rate density in the era z < 1. The local
value is estimated to be 0.026 solar masses per year per cubic megaparsec, some
50% larger than the value inferred from the Halpha luminosity density. The
value at z ~ 1 is found to be 0.30 solar masses per year per cubic megaparsec.
The 10-fold increase in star formation rate density is consistent with the
increase inferred from mm-wave, far-infrared, ultra-violet and Halpha
observations.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, Astrophysical Journal Letters (in press); new PS
version has improved figure placemen
Taxonomy Induction using Hypernym Subsequences
We propose a novel, semi-supervised approach towards domain taxonomy
induction from an input vocabulary of seed terms. Unlike all previous
approaches, which typically extract direct hypernym edges for terms, our
approach utilizes a novel probabilistic framework to extract hypernym
subsequences. Taxonomy induction from extracted subsequences is cast as an
instance of the minimumcost flow problem on a carefully designed directed
graph. Through experiments, we demonstrate that our approach outperforms
stateof- the-art taxonomy induction approaches across four languages.
Importantly, we also show that our approach is robust to the presence of noise
in the input vocabulary. To the best of our knowledge, no previous approaches
have been empirically proven to manifest noise-robustness in the input
vocabulary
Relation between hospital orthopaedic specialisation and outcomes in patients aged 65 and older: retrospective analysis of US Medicare data
Objective To explore the relation between hospital orthopaedic specialisation and postoperative outcomes after total hip or knee replacement surgery
Observations of the Extended Distribution of Ionized Hydrogen in the Plane of M31
We have used the Wisconsin H-Alpha Mapper (WHAM) to observe the spatially
extended distribution of ionized hydrogen in M31 beyond the stellar disk. We
obtained five sets of observations, centered near the photometric major axis of
M31, that extend from the center of the galaxy to just off the edge of the
southwestern HI disk. Beyond the bright stellar disk, but within the HI disk,
weak H-alpha is detected with an intensity I(H-alpha) = 0.05 (+0.01 / -0.02)
Rayleighs. Since M31 is inclined 77 degrees with respect to the line of sight,
this implies that the ambient intergalactic ionizing flux onto each side of M31
is Phi_0 <= 1.6 x 10^4 photons cm^-2 s^-1. Just beyond the outer boundary of
the HI disk we find no significant detection of H-alpha and place an upper
limit I(H-alpha) <= 0.019 Rayleighs.Comment: To appear in ApJ Letters; 12 pages, 4 figure
Usable Space Versus Food Quantity in Bobwhite Habitat Management
We studied the response of northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) foods (plants and invertebrates), usable space, and populations following thinning and burning on the 60,000-ha pine (Pinus spp.)-grassland restoration area in the Ouachita National Forest, Arkansas, to examine 2 hypotheses commonly used to manage bobwhite habitat: 1) usable space (suitable permanent cover) and 2) food quantity (an element of habitat quality). We estimated invertebrate food abundance using sweep nets and abundance of food-producing plants using herbaceous and woody stem counts. The disk of vulnerability was used to index usable space. We used whistling-male counts to index population response. Relative abundance, mass, and frequency of occurrence of invertebrate foods and richness, density, and frequency of occurrence of bobwhite food-producing plants increased following thinning and fire. Relative abundance of whistling males was greatest in thinned stands 3 growing seasons post-burn and in thinned but unburned stands. We found food supply was related to usable space following treatment. However, food abundance alone did not explain bobwhite population response, whereas, usable space was predictive for bobwhite response. By comparing treated stands with similar usable space but different food quantity, we observed no differences in bobwhite abundance. Neural models suggested bobwhite population response was less sensitive to changes in food supply relative to changes in usable space. We recommend that managers should seek first to provide usable space (suitable permanent cover in low basal area stands), recognizing that adequate food supply will likely be a side effect of management to this end
Kinematics and Metallicity of M31 Red Giants: The Giant Southern Stream and Discovery of a Second Cold Component at R = 20 kpc
We present spectroscopic observations of red giant branch (RGB) stars in the
Andromeda spiral galaxy (M31), acquired with the DEIMOS instrument on the Keck
II 10-m telescope. The three fields targeted in this study are in the M31
spheroid, outer disk, and giant southern stream. In this paper, we focus on the
kinematics and chemical composition of RGB stars in the stream field located at
a projected distance of R = 20 kpc from M31's center. A mix of stellar
populations is found in this field. M31 RGB stars are isolated from Milky Way
dwarf star contaminants using a variety of spectral and photometric
diagnostics. The radial velocity distribution of RGB stars displays a clear
bimodality -- a primary peak centered at v = -513 km/s and a secondary one at v
= -417 km/s -- along with an underlying broad component that is presumably
representative of the smooth spheroid of M31. Both peaks are found to be
dynamically cold with intrinsic velocity dispersions of sigma(v) = 16 km/s. The
mean metallicity and metallicity dispersion of stars in the two peaks is also
found to be similar: [Fe/H] = -0.45 and sigma([Fe/H]) = 0.2. The observed
velocity of the primary peak is consistent with that predicted by dynamical
models for the stream, but there is no obvious explanation for the secondary
peak. The nature of the secondary cold population is unclear: it may represent:
(1) tidal debris from a satellite merger event that is superimposed on, but
unrelated to, the giant southern stream; (2) a wrapped around component of the
giant southern stream; (3) a warp or overdensity in M31's disk at R > 50 kpc
(this component is well above the outward extrapolation of the smooth
exponential disk brightness profile).Comment: 32 pages, 13 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in Ap
Contribution to the modeling of solar spicules
Solar limb and disc spicule quasi- periodic motions have been reported for a
long time, strongly suggesting that they are oscillating. In order to clear up
the origin and possibly explain some solar limb and disc spicule quasi-periodic
recurrences produced by overlapping effects, we present a simulation model
assuming quasi- random positions of spicules. We also allow a set number of
spicules with different physical properties (such as: height, lifetime and tilt
angle as shown by an individual spicule) occurring randomly.
Results of simulations made with three different spatial resolutions of the
corresponding frames and also for different number density of spicules, are
analyzed. The wavelet time/frequency method is used to obtain the exact period
of spicule visibility. Results are compared with observations of the
chromosphere from i/ the Transition Region and Coronal Explorer (TRACE)
filtergrams taken at 1600 angstrom, ii/ the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) of
Hinode taken in the Ca II H-line and iii/ the Sac-Peak Dunn's VTT taken in
H{\alpha} line. Our results suggest the need to be cautious when interpreting
apparent oscillations seen in spicule image sequences when overlapping is
present, i.e.; when the spatial resolution is not enough to resolve individual
components of spicules.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
Bitter-blockers as a taste masking strategy: a systematic review towards their utility in pharmaceuticals
Acceptable palatability of an oral dosage form is crucial to patient compliance. Excipients can be utilised within a formulation to mask the bitterness of a drug. One such category is the bitter-blockers. This term is used inconsistently within the literature and has historically been used to describe any additive which alters the taste of an unpleasant compound. This review defines a bitter-blocker as a compound which interacts with the molecular pathway of bitterness at a taste-cell level and compiles data obtained from publication screening of such compounds. Here, a novel scoring system is created to assess their potential utility in a medicinal product using factors such as usability, safety, efficacy and quality of evidence to understand their taste-masking ability. Sodium acetate, sodium gluconate and adenosine 5'monophophate each have a good usability and safety profile and are generally regarded as safe and have shown evidence of bitter-blocking in human sensory panels. These compounds could offer a much needed option to taste-mask particularly aversive medicines where traditional methods alone are insufficient
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