13,783 research outputs found
Public Preferences about Fairness and the Ethics of Allocating Scarce Medical Interventions
This chapter examines how social- scientific research on public preferences bears on the ethical question of how those resources should in fact be allocated, and explain how social-scientific researchers might find an understanding of work in ethics useful as they design mechanisms for data collection and analysis. I proceed by first distinguishing the methodologies of social science and ethics. I then provide an overview of different approaches to the ethics of allocating scarce medical interventions, including an approach—the complete lives system—which I have previously defended, and a brief recap of social-scientific research on the allocation of scarce medical resources. Following these overviews, I examine different ways in which public preferences could matter to the ethics of allocation. Last, I suggest some ways in which social scientists could learn from ethics as they conduct research into public preferences regarding the allocation of scarce medical resources
Transparency Trade-Offs: Priority Setting, Scarcity, and Health Fairness
This chapter argues that rather than viewing transparency as a right, we should regard it as a finite resource whose allocation involves tradeoffs. It then argues that those tradeoffs should be resolved by using a multi-principle approach to distributive justice. The relevant principles include maximizing welfare, maximizing autonomy, and giving priority to the worst off. Finally, it examines some of the implications for law of recognizing the tradeoffs presented by transparency proposals
Cascaded transformerless DC-DC voltage amplifier with optically isolated switching devices
A very high voltage amplifier is provided in which plural cascaded banks of capacitors are switched by optically isolated control switches so as to be charged in parallel from the preceding stage or capacitor bank and to discharge in series to the succeeding stage or capacitor bank in alternating control cycles. The optically isolated control switches are controlled by a logic controller whose power supply is virtually immune to interference from the very high voltage output of the amplifier by the optical isolation provided by the switches, so that a very high voltage amplification ratio may be attained using many capacitor banks in cascade
Sample positioning in microgravity
Repulsion forces arising from laser beams are provided to produce mild positioning forces on a sample in microgravity vacuum environments. The system of the preferred embodiment positions samples using a plurality of pulsed lasers providing opposing repulsion forces. The lasers are positioned around the periphery of a confinement area and expanded to create a confinement zone. The grouped laser configuration, in coordination with position sensing devices, creates a feedback servo whereby stable position control of a sample within microgravity environment can be achieved
Approach to self-similarity in Smoluchowski's coagulation equations
We consider the approach to self-similarity (or dynamical scaling) in
Smoluchowski's equations of coagulation for the solvable kernels ,
and . In addition to the known self-similar solutions with
exponential tails, there are one-parameter families of solutions with algebraic
decay, whose form is related to heavy-tailed distributions well-known in
probability theory. For K=2 the size distribution is Mittag-Leffler, and for
and it is a power-law rescaling of a maximally skewed
-stable Levy distribution. We characterize completely the domains of
attraction of all self-similar solutions under weak convergence of measures.
Our results are analogous to the classical characterization of stable
distributions in probability theory. The proofs are simple, relying on the
Laplace transform and a fundamental rigidity lemma for scaling limits.Comment: Latex2e, 42 pages with 1 figur
Sufficiency, Comprehensiveness of Health Care Coverage, and Cost-Sharing Arrangements in the Realpolitik of Health Policy
This chapter explores two questions in detail: How should we determine the threshold for costs that individuals are asked to bear through insurance premiums or care-related out-of-pocket costs, including user fees and copayments? and What is an adequate relationship between costs and benefits? This chapter argues that preventing impoverishment is a morally more urgent priority than protecting households against income fluctuations, and that many health insurance plans may not adequately protect individuals from health care costs that threaten to drop their financial status below a decent minimum. A design that places greater emphasis on preventing impoverishment and finances the achievement of that goal by reducing unnecessary subsidies to better-off households would better accord with a sufficientarian approach to health care
Smoothed Analysis for the Conjugate Gradient Algorithm
The purpose of this paper is to establish bounds on the rate of convergence
of the conjugate gradient algorithm when the underlying matrix is a random
positive definite perturbation of a deterministic positive definite matrix. We
estimate all finite moments of a natural halting time when the random
perturbation is drawn from the Laguerre unitary ensemble in a critical scaling
regime explored in Deift et al. (2016). These estimates are used to analyze the
expected iteration count in the framework of smoothed analysis, introduced by
Spielman and Teng (2001). The rigorous results are compared with numerical
calculations in several cases of interest
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