4,706 research outputs found

    The Multinational Enterprise in the Context of Latin American Economic Integration: The Andean Agreement Model

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    Latin America is indubitably experiencing a new wave of economic nationalism. This has been reflected most poignantly in recent free trade and economic integration efforts as well as the more dramatic actions such as expropriations and natinalizations of American subsidiaries in Chile and Peru. The ramifications of this modern era of ecoomic independence is of pressing importance to foreign investors. Therefore, an examination of the multinational enterprise in the context of recent economic integration efforts is crucial to an understanding of the foreign investor\u27s future in Latin America

    The Gay Man\u27s Burden: Wilde, Dandyism, and the Labors of Gay Selfhood

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    Recently, much attention has been devoted to the subject of lesbian and gay \u27visibility\u27 in the contemporary media and marketplace. Journalists, activists, and scholars alike have either bemoaned or celebrated the increasing appearance of gay and lesbian people in TV shows, films, and advertisements. For some, the visible presence of lesbians and gays in the media is a key factor in social awareness and gay rights advancement, while for others this \u27visibility\u27 reifies stereotypes of gay and lesbian identity and limits the public image of LGBT people to a resoundingly white, urban, upper-middle class (and typically male) segment of its population. Likewise, some have praised the development of gay and lesbian marketing niches, attributing the power of the purse to the solidification of social agency outside the market, while others have critiqued such developments as the potential downfall of subversive \u27queer\u27 identities. Naturally, I simplify this dialogue, reducing arguments and their proponents to two extremes. It would be more accurate to state that the gay and lesbian community finds itself at odds in a debate centered on the question of how gay and lesbian identity and rights discourses should situate themselves in relation to \u27mainstream\u27 culture and its modus operandi, consumer capitalism. For many, if not most, gay visibility is a double-edged sword: the \u27consciousness raising\u27 that such visibility affords us is accompanied by the marginalization of those who do not fit into the \u27charmed circle\u27 of marketability, along with the loss of a discrete subcultural identity

    Satellite microwave sensing of oceanic cloud liquid water: application to the earth radiation budget and climate

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    March 1995.Sponsored by NASA Graduate Student Fellowship in Global Change Research NGT-30046.Sponsored by NASA Research NAG-8-981.Sponsored by NOAA NA37RJ0202

    Horava-Lifshitz gravity: tighter constraints for the Kehagias-Sfetsos solution from new solar system data

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    We analytically work out the perturbation induced by the Kehagias-Sfetsos (KS) space-time solution of the Horava-Lifshitz (HL) modified gravity at long distances on the two-body range for a pair of test particles A and B orbiting the same mass M. We apply our results to the most recently obtained range-residuals \delta\rho for some planets of the solar system (Mercury, Mars, Saturn) ranged from the Earth to effectively constrain the dimensionsless KS parameter \psi_0 for the Sun. We obtain \psi_0 >= 7.2 x 10^-10 (Mercury), \psi_0 >= 9 x 10^-12 (Mars), \psi_0 >= 1.7 x 10^-12 (Saturn). Such lower bounds are tighter than other ones existing in literature by several orders of magnitude. We also preliminarily obtain \psi_0 >= 8 x 10^-10 for the system constituted by the S2 star orbiting the Supermassive Black Hole (SBH) in the center of the Galaxy.Comment: LaTex2e, 15 pages, 1 table, 3 figures, 31 references. Version matching the one at press in International Journal of Modern Physics D (IJMPD

    A Preliminary Study of Trunk Kinematics during Walking in Normal Subjects

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    The purpose of this study was to systematically describe the three-dimensional trunk kinematics in normal subjects, to establish a baseline for comparison to future research in gait analysis and aid in the identification of pathological gait. Seventeen volunteers between the ages of twenty and fifty, who met criteria for normal subjects, participated in this study. Trunk kinematic data were collected using an optoelectronic technique. An ensemble average of trunk kinematic data in each of the cardinal planes was plotted in degrees of motion versus percentage of gait cycle. A distinct pattern of trunk kinematics during gait was found in this study. Trunk motion relative to the pelvis was of greater magnitude than motion relative to the lab in the frontal and transverse planes. Inter-subject variability ranged from 37% to 644%, with the greatest amount of variability occurring in measurements of trunk movement relative to the lab in all three planes. Stride to stride variability within subjects ranged from 28% to 182%, with the greatest amount of intra-subject variability in trunk movements relative to the pelvis

    Price Competition, Fluctuations, and Welfare Guarantees

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    In various markets where sellers compete in price, price oscillations are observed rather than convergence to equilibrium. Such fluctuations have been empirically observed in the retail market for gasoline, in airline pricing and in the online sale of consumer goods. Motivated by this, we study a model of price competition in which an equilibrium rarely exists. We seek to analyze the welfare, despite the nonexistence of an equilibrium, and present welfare guarantees as a function of the market power of the sellers. We first study best response dynamics in markets with sellers that provide a homogeneous good, and show that except for a modest number of initial rounds, the welfare is guaranteed to be high. We consider two variations: in the first the sellers have full information about the valuation of the buyer. Here we show that if there are nn items available across all sellers and nmaxn_{\max} is the maximum number of items controlled by any given seller, the ratio of the optimal welfare to the achieved welfare will be at most log(nnnmax+1)+1\log(\frac{n}{n-n_{\max}+1})+1. As the market power of the largest seller diminishes, the welfare becomes closer to optimal. In the second variation we consider an extended model where sellers have uncertainty about the buyer's valuation. Here we similarly show that the welfare improves as the market power of the largest seller decreases, yet with a worse ratio of nnnmax+1\frac{n}{n-n_{\max}+1}. The exponential gap in welfare between the two variations quantifies the value of accurately learning the buyer valuation. Finally, we show that extending our results to heterogeneous goods in general is not possible. Even for the simple class of kk-additive valuations, there exists a setting where the welfare approximates the optimal welfare within any non-zero factor only for O(1/s)O(1/s) fraction of the time, where ss is the number of sellers

    人工心臓への適用を目的としたダブルステータ型磁気浮上ポンプの開発

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    The clinical pharmacology of fentanyl and alfentanil was examined in opioid-experienced volunteers with agonist and antagonist sensitivity measures. Two studies used within-subject, placebo-controlled, crossover designs. In study 1, fentanyl (0.125, 0.25 mg/70 kg i.v.) was followed at 0, 20, 60 and 180 min by naloxone (10 mg/70 kg i.m.). Agonist effects during 180-min and 0-min (control; simultaneous fentanyl-naloxone i.v. infusion) challenge sessions were compared. Fentanyl rapidly constricted pupils, depressed respiration and produced subjective high and opiate symptoms lasting 60 to 120 min, depending on the measure. Naloxone precipitated withdrawal symptoms of comparable intensity at each challenge point. In study 2, fentanyl (0.125, 0.25 mg/70 kg i.v.), alfentanil (1, 2 mg/70 kg i.v.) and saline were followed at 1 and 6 hr by naloxone (10 mg/70 kg i.m.). Agonist effects were examined during 6-hr challenge sessions. The two drugs produced a comparable range of effects with similar peak magnitude for 0.125 mg/70 kg fentanyl and 1 mg/70 kg alfentanil and for 0.25 mg/70 kg fentanyl and 2 mg/70 kg alfentanil. Alfentanil\u27s duration of action was brief ( \u3c 60 min). Withdrawal was precipitated at 6 hr only after 0.25 mg/70 kg fentanyl. These findings support typical mu opioid characteristics (pleasurable subjective effects, physical dependence) for both drugs, differential duration of action (fentanyl \u3e alfentanil) and peak effects consistent with a 1:8 (fentanyl/alfentanil) potency ratio

    Nimbus-7 observations of the effect of clouds on the earth's radiation budget

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    August 1990.Includes bibliographical references.Outgoing longwave (LW) flux and shortwave (SW) albedo data obtained from narrow field-of-view scanner measurements aboard the Nimbus-7 satellite are used along with coincident cloudiness data to estimate the effect of clouds on the earth's radiation budget (ERB). A simple technique is described to obtain clear sky albedos and LW fluxes using daily Nimbus-7 ERB and total cloud amount data. The analysis is done for the following four seasons: June-August 1979, September-November 1979, December-February 1980, and March-May 1980. When compared with the recent results from the Earth Radiation Budget Experiment (ERBE) the Nimbus-7 derived clear sky LW and SW fluxes are about 5-6 Wm-2 too low and 3-4 Wm-2 too high, respectively, most likely resulting from cloud contamination. The concept of cloud radiative forcing, referred to in this study as cloud effect, can provide a quantitative measure of the impact of clouds on the ERB. It is defined as the difference between the clear sky flux and the cloudy sky flux at the top of the atmosphere. The SW cloud effect is shown to be negative over most of the earth and is greatest in the midlatitudes in areas of stratus clouds and storm tracks. The LW cloud effect, on the other hand, is primarily positive and most significant in the tropics. The net cloud effect is found to be negative over most of the earth, with a near cancellation of the SW and LW effects in the tropics and a significant negative effect in the midlatitudes. Moreover, it is shown that the net cloud effect, when globally averaged, is negative and varies with season. A comparison of the Nimbus-7 derived LW and SW cloud effects to those obtained from ERBE shows, on average, a 5-6 Wm-2 bias resulting from cloud contamination of the Nimbus-7 clear sky fluxes.This research was supported by the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere through the National Park Service Grant #DOC-NOAA-NA85RAH5045 and NASA Grant #NAG-1-865
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