73 research outputs found

    Trends and transitions in the institutional environment for public and private science

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    The last quarter-century bore witness to a sea change in academic involvement with commerce. Widespread university-based efforts to identify, manage, and market intellectual property (IP) have accompanied broad shifts in the relationship between academic and proprietary approaches to the dissemination and use of science and engineering research. Such transformations are indicators of institutional changes at work in the environment faced by universities. This paper draws upon a fifteen-year panel (1981–1995) of university-level data for 87 research-intensive US campuses in order to document trends and transitions in relationships among multiple indicators of academic and commercial engagement. The institutional environment for public and private science is volatile, shifting in fits and starts from a situation conducive to organizational learning through high volume patenting to a more challenging arrangement that links indiscriminate pursuit of IP with declines in both the volume and impact of academic science. The pattern and timing of these transitions may support an enduring system of stratification that offers increasing returns to first-movers while limiting the opportunities available to universities that are later entrants to the commercial realm. Unpacking the systematic effects of university research commercialization requires focused attention on the sources and trajectories of profound institutional change.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/42839/1/10734_2004_Article_2916.pd

    Determinants of penetrance and variable expressivity in monogenic metabolic conditions across 77,184 exomes

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    Hundreds of thousands of genetic variants have been reported to cause severe monogenic diseases, but the probability that a variant carrier develops the disease (termed penetrance) is unknown for virtually all of them. Additionally, the clinical utility of common polygenetic variation remains uncertain. Using exome sequencing from 77,184 adult individuals (38,618 multi-ancestral individuals from a type 2 diabetes case-control study and 38,566 participants from the UK Biobank, for whom genotype array data were also available), we apply clinical standard-of-care gene variant curation for eight monogenic metabolic conditions. Rare variants causing monogenic diabetes and dyslipidemias display effect sizes significantly larger than the top 1% of the corresponding polygenic scores. Nevertheless, penetrance estimates for monogenic variant carriers average 60% or lower for most conditions. We assess epidemiologic and genetic factors contributing to risk prediction in monogenic variant carriers, demonstrating that inclusion of polygenic variation significantly improves biomarker estimation for two monogenic dyslipidemias

    ATLAS detector and physics performance: Technical Design Report, 1

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    Laser resonance spectroscopy of samarium isotopes

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:D73059/87 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    An appraisal of jet/spray branches Part 1, hydraulic performance

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    Reprint of Scientific Research and Development Branch publication SRDB--18/82SIGLEAvailable from British Library Lending Division - LD:7761.07(22, pt. 1) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    An appraisal of jet/spray branches Part 2, handling, robustness and maintenance

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    Reprint of Scientific Research and Development Branch publication SRDB--66/83SIGLEAvailable from British Library Lending Division - LD:7761.07(22, pt. 2) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
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