2,560 research outputs found
COVID-19 social distancing measures and economic growth: Distinguishing short- and long-term effects
Social distancing policies have been criticized for their adverse effect on economies. However, we evidence that while they have a short-run adverse effect, they also have a long-run recovery effect on economic growth. Utilizing quarterly gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate data from OECD member states, we find that the medium-term recovery effect of stringent social distancing policies on economic growth is three times higher the short-term adverse effect. We additionally investigate social distancing measures with sub-components of GDP, as well as the conditioning roles of institutional factors
Clinical Lecture Delivered November 13, 1889, at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.
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Sensitivity of the creep-rupture properties of nickel-base superalloy sheet to sharp edge-notches in the temperature range of 1000 deg F - 1400 deg F
Edge notch sensitivity in thin sheet nickel alloys under stress at high temperature
Modeling Method for Increased Precision and Scope of Directly Measurable Fluxes at a Genome-Scale
Metabolic flux analysis (MFA) is
considered to be the gold standard
for determining the intracellular flux distribution of biological
systems. The majority of work using MFA has been limited to core models
of metabolism due to challenges in implementing genome-scale MFA and
the undesirable trade-off between increased scope and decreased precision
in flux estimations. This work presents a tunable workflow for expanding
the scope of MFA to the genome-scale without trade-offs in flux precision.
The genome-scale MFA model presented here, iDM2014, accounts for 537
net reactions, which includes the core pathways of traditional MFA
models and also covers the additional pathways of purine, pyrimidine,
isoprenoid, methionine, riboflavin, coenzyme A, and folate, as well
as other biosynthetic pathways. When evaluating the iDM2014 using
a set of measured intracellular intermediate and cofactor mass isotopomer
distributions (MIDs), it was found that
a total of 232 net fluxes of central and peripheral metabolism could
be resolved in the <i>E. coli</i> network. The increase
in scope was shown to cover the full biosynthetic route to an expanded
set of bioproduction pathways, which should facilitate applications
such as the design of more complex bioprocessing strains and aid in
identifying new antimicrobials. Importantly, it was found that there
was no loss in precision of core fluxes when compared to a traditional
core model, and additionally there was an overall increase in precision
when considering all observable reactions
Phycomyces
This monographic review on a fungus is not addressed to mycologists. None of the authors has been trained or has otherwise acquired a general proficiency in mycology. They are motivated by a common interest in the performances of signal handling exhibited by the sense organs of all organisms and by the desire to attack these as yet totally obscure aspects of molecular biology by the study of a microorganism with certain desirable properties.
The sporangiophore of the fungus Phycomyces is a gigantic, single-celled, erect, cylindrical, aerial hypha. It is sensitive to at least four distinct stimuli: light, gravity, stretch, and some unknown stimulus by which it avoids solid objects. These stimuli control a common output, the growth rate, producing either temporal changes in growth rate or tropic responses.
We are interested in the output because it gives us information about the reception of the various signals. In the absence of external stimuli, the growth rate is controlled by internal signals keeping the network of biochemical processes in balance. The external stimuli interact with the internal signals. We wish to inquire into the early steps of this interaction. For light, for instance, the cell must have a receptor pigment as the first
mediator. What kind of a molecule is this pigment? Which organelle contains it? What chemical reaction happens after a light quantum has been absorbed? And how is the information introduced by this primary photochemical event amplified in a controlled manner and processed in the next step? How do a few quanta or a few molecules trigger macroscopic responses? Will we find ourselves confronted with devices wholly distinct from anything now known in biology
Conservation, Restoration, and Monitoring Plan for the Lower White River, Utah
In this report we present a conservation, restoration and monitoring plan for the lower White River, a major tributary of the Green River. The plan is intended to help guide conservation, restoration and management of the lower White River over the next several decades and is also developed as an adaptive management plan to facilitate learning. The recommended conservation and restoration actions are intended to maintain and enhance native riparian vegetation and instream habitat for native desert fishes including federally endangered Colorado Pikeminnow (Ptychocheilus lucius), federally endangered Razorback Sucker (Xyrauchen texanus), Speckled Dace (Rhinichthys osculus), Bluehead Sucker (Catostomus discobolus), Flannelmouth Sucker (C. latipinnis), and Roundtail Chub (Gila robusta). ~~Many mammals, amphibians, migratory birds, and raptors that use the riparian zone or migrate through the riverscape are also anticipated to benefit from the plan. The recommended conservation and restoration actions are based on the best available information regarding the current ecological and geomorphic conditions and restoration recovery potential. We prioritized reaches for conservation and restoration actions using expert opinion and field validation, riparian vegetation density and instream and riparian habitat condition and complexity data. We recommend an experimental design for implementation of conservation and restoration actions. Combined with monitoring, the experimental design is aimed at identifying the most successful conservation and restoration actions for maintaining complex instream habitat and a healthy native riparian community
What determines debt structure in emerging markets: Transaction costs or public monitoring?
We examine the predilection for private bonds over bank financing (debt structure) for emerging markets within the frameworks of both transaction cost economics and a transparency explanation, emphasizing the distinction between public monitoring (bonds) and private monitoring (banks), as well as considering the influence of national culture on institutions. Employing several tests, including structural equation modeling, we find, among many results that in emerging markets bonds are preferred over bank loans when there is less corporate opacity and fewer foreign access restrictions, as well as in environment of greater political instability, transaction cost, and limits to legal protection. Bonds are also favored over banks in cultural environments of greater uncertainty avoidance, masculinity, long-term orientation, and indulgence and less individualism. Overall, we attribute our results to culture and institutional quality together influencing debt structure, particularly by impacting attitudes toward public monitoring. Our results will be of great interest to researchers interested in the legal, social, and cultural environments of emerging markets
What determines debt structure in emerging markets: Transaction costs or public monitoring?
We examine the predilection for private bonds over bank financing (debt structure) for emerging markets within the frameworks of both transaction cost economics and a transparency explanation, emphasizing the distinction between public monitoring (bonds) and private monitoring (banks), as well as considering the influence of national culture on institutions. Employing several tests, including structural equation modeling, we find, among many results that in emerging markets bonds are preferred over bank loans when there is less corporate opacity and fewer foreign access restrictions, as well as in environment of greater political instability, transaction cost, and limits to legal protection. Bonds are also favored over banks in cultural environments of greater uncertainty avoidance, masculinity, long-term orientation, and indulgence and less individualism. Overall, we attribute our results to culture and institutional quality together influencing debt structure, particularly by impacting attitudes toward public monitoring. Our results will be of great interest to researchers interested in the legal, social, and cultural environments of emerging markets
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