2,763 research outputs found

    Is the US Population Behaving Healthier?

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    In the past few decades, some measures of population risk have improved, while others have deteriorated. Understanding the health of the population requires integrating these different trends. We compare the risk factor profile of the population in the early 1970s with that of the population in the early 2000s and consider the impact of a continuation of recent trends. Despite substantial increases in obesity in the past three decades, the overall population risk profile is healthier now than it was formerly. For the population aged 25-74, the 10 year probability of death fell from 9.8 percent in 1971-75 to 8.4 percent in 1999-2002. Among the population aged 55-74, the 10 year risk of death fell from 25.7 percent to 21.7 percent. The largest contributors to these changes were the reduction in smoking and better control of blood pressure. Increased obesity increased risk, but not by as large a quantitative amount. In the future, however, increased obesity may play a larger role than continued reductions in smoking. We estimate that a continuation of trends over the past three decades to the next three decades might offset about a third of the behavioral improvements witnessed in recent years.

    Rolling-contact bearing reference summary

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    Design and performance of rolling contact bearing

    Design of an electron microscope phase plate using a focused continuous-wave laser

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    We propose a Zernike phase contrast electron microscope that uses an intense laser focus to convert a phase image into a visible image. We present the relativistic quantum theory of the phase shift caused by the laser-electron-interaction, study resonant cavities for enhancing the laser intensity, and discuss applications in biology, soft materials science, and atomic and molecular physics.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Collective states in social systems with interacting learning agents

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    We consider a social system of interacting heterogeneous agents with learning abilities, a model close to Random Field Ising Models, where the random field corresponds to the idiosyncratic willingness to pay. Given a fixed price, agents decide repeatedly whether to buy or not a unit of a good, so as to maximize their expected utilities. We show that the equilibrium reached by the system depends on the nature of the information agents use to estimate their expected utilities.Comment: 18 pages, 26 figure

    CoVault: A Secure Analytics Platform

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    In a secure analytics platform, data sources consent to the exclusive use oftheir data for a pre-defined set of analytics queries performed by a specificgroup of analysts, and for a limited period. If the platform is secure under asufficiently strong threat model, it can provide the missing link to enablingpowerful analytics of sensitive personal data, by alleviating data subjects'concerns about leakage and misuse of data. For instance, many types of powerfulanalytics that benefit public health, mobility, infrastructure, finance, orsustainable energy can be made differentially private, thus alleviatingconcerns about privacy. However, no platform currently exists that issufficiently secure to alleviate concerns about data leakage and misuse; as aresult, many types of analytics that would be in the interest of data subjectsand the public are not done. CoVault uses a new multi-party implementation offunctional encryption (FE) for secure analytics, which relies on a uniquecombination of secret sharing, multi-party secure computation (MPC), anddifferent trusted execution environments (TEEs). CoVault is secure under a verystrong threat model that tolerates compromise and side-channel attacks on anyone of a small set of parties and their TEEs. Despite the cost of MPC, we showthat CoVault scales to very large data sizes using map-reduce based queryparallelization. For example, we show that CoVault can perform queries relevantto epidemic analytics at scale.<br

    Civil conflict, federalism and strategic delegation of leadership

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    This article analyzes negative externalities that policymakers in one region or group may impose upon the citizens of neighboring regions or groups. These externalities may be material, but they may also be psychological (in the form of envy). The latter form of externality may arise from the production of 'conspicuous' public goods. As a result, decentralized provision of conspicuous public goods may be too high. Potentially, a centralized legislature may internalize negative externalities. However, in a model with strategic delegation, we argue that the median voter in each jurisdiction may anticipate a reduction in local public goods supply and delegate to a policymaker who cares more for public goods than she does herself. This last effect mitigates the expected benefits of policy centralization. The authors' theory is then applied to the setting of civil conflict, where they discuss electoral outcomes in Northern Ireland and Yugoslavia before and after significant institutional changes that affected the degree of centralization. These case studies provide support for the authors' theoretical predictions

    Polymorphic variants in the human bile salt export pump (BSEP; ABCB11): Functional characterization and interindividual variability

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    OBJECTIVES: Our aims were to identify and functionally characterize coding region nonsynonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms in the hepatic efflux transporter, bile salt export pump (BSEP; ABCB11), and to assess interindividual variability in BSEP expression. METHODS: We identified 24 single nucleotide polymorphisms, including nine nonsynonymous variants, in ABCB11 from genomic DNA of ∼250 ethnically diverse healthy individuals using denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography analysis and DNA sequencing. Wild type and variant BSEP were generated and functionally characterized for taurocholate transport activity in vitro in HeLa cells using a recombinant vaccinia-based method. BSEP expression was assessed by real-time mRNA analysis, western blot analysis, and immunofluorescence confocal microscopy. RESULTS: For the most part, polymorphisms were rare and ethnic-dependent. In vitro functional studies revealed several rare variants, including 616A\u3eG, 1674G\u3eC, 1772A\u3eG, and 3556G\u3eA, to be associated with significantly impaired taurocholate transport activity while the 890A\u3eG variant trended towards impaired function but was not statistically significant. The 3556G\u3eA variant was associated with reduced cell surface to total protein expression compared with wild-type BSEP. Expression of BSEP by mRNA and protein analysis was determined from a bank of human liver samples. Wide interindividual variability was noted in both mRNA (19-fold) and protein (31-fold) expression levels. The common variant 1331T\u3eC was associated with significantly reduced hepatic BSEP mRNA levels. CONCLUSION: Accordingly, our study indicates there are functionally relevant polymorphisms in ABCB11 which may be of potential relevance in the predisposition to acquired liver disorders such as drug-induced cholestasis. © 2010 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

    Local governance and business performance in Vietnam:the transaction costs’ perspective

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    Local governance and business performance in Vietnam: the transaction costs’ perspective. Regional Studies. This paper adopts a transaction costs’ perspective to explain why the growth of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) may vary across regions of an emerging economy. Furthermore, it is argued that young and small firms gain more from the improvement of local governance than do old and large firms. In addition, depending on the institutional history, SMEs will respond differently to the incentives provided by local governance. Analysing more than 300,000 SMEs in Vietnam during 2006–12, it is shown that higher-quality local governance positively influences local SME revenue growth; this effect is stronger for young and small firms, and matters more where institutional history suggests there is less support for entrepreneurship

    Structure of an Early Intermediate in the M-State Phase of the Bacteriorhodopsin Photocycle

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    AbstractThe structure of an early M-intermediate of the wild-type bacteriorhodopsin photocycle formed by actinic illumination at 230K has been determined by x-ray crystallography to a resolution of 2.0Å. Three-dimensional crystals were trapped by illuminating with actinic light at 230K, followed by quenching in liquid nitrogen. Amide I, amide II, and other infrared absorption bands, recorded from single bacteriorhodopsin crystals, confirm that the M-substate formed represents a structure that occurs early after deprotonation of the Schiff base. Rotation about the retinal C13—C14 double bond appears to be complete, but a relatively large torsion angle of 26° is still seen for the C14—C15 bond. The intramolecular stress associated with the isomerization of retinal and the subsequent deprotonation of the Schiff base generates numerous small but experimentally measurable structural changes within the protein. Many of the residues that are displaced during the formation of the late M (MN) substate formed by three-dimensional crystals of the D96N mutant (Luecke et al., 1999b) are positioned, in early M, between their resting-state locations and the ones which they will adopt at the end of the M phase. The relatively small magnitude of atomic displacements observed in this intermediate, and the well-defined positions adopted by nearly all of the atoms in the structure, may make the formation of this structure favorable to model (simulate) by molecular dynamics
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