4,589 research outputs found
Discrimination and Strategic Group Division in Tournaments
The contracts we consider in this paper must solve three problems: moral hazard, insurance and discrimination. The moral hazard problem is that of providing the agents with incentives to perform in a way that maximizes the profit to the principal, when the agent's actions are unobservable. The insurance problem is that of minimizing the cost of risk through risk minimization and risk sharing. The issue of discrimination is that of paying agents with different skills sufficiently to participate, without overcompensating other agents. We show how the principal may benefit from a strategic division of the agents into different tournaments or groups. The optimal number of groups from the principal's point of view is determined through a trade-off between moral hazard, insurance and discrimination issues.Agribusiness,
Bursts and Shocks in a Continuum Shell Model
We study a "burst" event, i. e. the evolution of an initial condition having
support only in a finite interval of k-space, in the continuum shell model due
to Parisi. We show that the continuum equation without forcing or dissipation
can be explicitly written in characteristic form and that the right and left
moving parts can be solved exactly. When this is supplemented by the
appropriate shock condition it is possible to find the asymptotic form of the
burst.Comment: 15 pages, 2 eps figures included, Latex 2e. Contribution to the
proceedings of the conference: Disorder and Chaos, in honour of Giovanni
Paladin, September 22-24, 1997, in Rom
Can on-farm bioenergy production make organic farming more sustainable? - A model for energy balance, nitrogen losses, and green house gas emissions in a 1000 ha energy catchment with organic dairy farming and integrated bioenergy production
Can biogas and bioethanol production make organic farming more sustainable?
- Results from a model for the fossil energy balance, Nitrogen losses, and greenhouse gas emissions in a 1000 ha energy catchment with organic dairy farming and integrated biogas and bioethanol production.
Dalgaard T1, Pugesgaard S1, Jørgensen U1, Olesen JE1, Møller HB1 and Jensen ES2
1) Dept. Agroecology and Environment. Faculty of Agricultural Sciences (DJF), University of Aarhus. DK-8830 Tjele. Denmark. Contact: [email protected]
2) Biosystems Department, Risø DTU, The National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy, The Technical University of Denmark DK-4000 Roskilde, Denmark
The vision of organic farming systems, independent of fossil energy resources, with significantly lower nutrient losses, and no net contribution to the greenhouse gas emissions might be fulfilled via the integration of biogas production. This is an important hypothesis investigated in the www.bioconcens.elr.dk/uk/ research project.
This poster illustrates preliminary results from a model for the fossil energy balance, Nitrogen losses, and greenhouse gas emissions in a 1000 ha energy catchment with organic dairy farming and integrated biogas production in Denmark. The model will draw on results from previous models (e.g the farmGHG model), and includes a number of organic dairy farm type components, including information on livestock production, housing, manure storage, manure and fodder import/export, crop rotations, yield levels, and soil types. In addition, a biogas plant model component evaluates effects of the inclusion of variable amounts of manures and crop residues from the specified farm types, into the biogas energy production.
The model is intended to result in an overall catchment balance for the following three types of indicators: 1) the fossil energy use – i.e. the net fossil energy use minus the bioenergy production, 2) losses of Nitrogen in the form of nitrates, ammonia and nitrous oxide, and 3) the emission of the three main greenhouse gasses from agriculture: carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide and methane, measured in carbon dioxide equivalents. Moreover, these indicator values are specified for each of the farm types included in the model, and for the biogas plant component. Finally, selected model results are discussed in relation to the overall hypothesis of the research project, and it is discussed how the integration of biogas production in organic farming, can help to improve the self-sufficiency in Nitrogen, and thereby reduce the import of nutrients to the organic farming systems
Extreme morphologies of mantis shrimp larvae
Larvae of stomatopods (mantis shrimps) are generally categorized into four larval types: antizoea, pseudozoea (both representing early larval stages), alima and erichthus (the latter two representing later larval stages). These categories, however, do not reflect the existing morphological diversity of stomatopod larvae, which is largely unstudied. We describe here four previously unknown larval types with extreme morphologies. All specimens were found in the collections of the Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen and were collected during the Danish Dana Expedition round the world 1928-30. These new larval types all represent erichthus-type larvae, especially differing in their shield morphologies. The shield morphology ranges from almost spherical to rather disc-like, with sometimes extremely elongated spines, but only a general systematic assignment of the larvae was possible. Further investigations of these larvae are crucial to understand their life habits and ecological impact, especially as stomatopod and other crustacean larvae might have a much more important position in the marine ecosystems than their corresponding adults
Exact Periodic Solutions of Shells Models of Turbulence
We derive exact analytical solutions of the GOY shell model of turbulence. In
the absence of forcing and viscosity we obtain closed form solutions in terms
of Jacobi elliptic functions. With three shells the model is integrable. In the
case of many shells, we derive exact recursion relations for the amplitudes of
the Jacobi functions relating the different shells and we obtain a Kolmogorov
solution in the limit of infinitely many shells. For the special case of six
and nine shells, these recursions relations are solved giving specific analytic
solutions. Some of these solutions are stable whereas others are unstable. All
our predictions are substantiated by numerical simulations of the GOY shell
model. From these simulations we also identify cases where the models exhibits
transitions to chaotic states lying on strange attractors or ergodic energy
surfaces.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figure
Electro-hydrodynamics of binary electrolytes driven by modulated surface potentials
We study the electro-hydrodynamics of the Debye screening layer that arises
in an aqueous binary solution near a planar insulating wall when applying a
spatially modulated AC-voltage. Combining this with first order perturbation
theory we establish the governing equations for the full non-equilibrium
problem and obtain analytic solutions in the bulk for the pressure and velocity
fields of the electrolyte and for the electric potential. We find good
agreement between the numerics of the full problem and the analytics of the
linear theory. Our work provides the theoretical foundations of circuit models
discussed in the literature. The non-equilibrium approach also reveals
unexpected high-frequency dynamics not predicted by circuit models.Comment: 9 pages including 4 figures. Accepted for PRE
Calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor antagonist BIBN 4096 BS for the acute treatment of migraine
Background: Calcitonin gene–related peptide (CGRP) may have a causative role in migraine. We therefore hypothesized that a CGRP-receptor antagonist might be effective in the treatment of migraine attacks.
Methods: In an international, multicenter, double-blind, randomized clinical trial of BIBN 4096 BS, a highly specific and potent nonpeptide CGRP-receptor antagonist, 126 patients with migraine received one of the following: placebo or 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2.5, 5, or 10 mg of BIBN 4096 BS intravenously over a period of 10 minutes. A group-sequential adaptive treatment-assignment design was used to minimize the number of patients exposed.
Results: The 2.5-mg dose was selected, with a response rate of 66 percent, as compared with 27 percent for placebo (P=0.001). The BIBN 4096 BS group as a whole had a response rate of 60 percent. Significant superiority over placebo was also observed with respect to most secondary end points: the pain-free rate at 2 hours; the rate of sustained response over a period of 24 hours; the rate of recurrence of headache; improvement in nausea, photophobia, phonophobia, and functional capacity; and the time to meaningful relief. An effect was apparent after 30 minutes and increased over the next few hours. The overall rate of adverse events was 25 percent after the 2.5-mg dose of the drug and 20 percent for the BIBN 4096 BS group as a whole, as compared with 12 percent for placebo. The most frequent side effect was paresthesia. There were no serious adverse events.
Conclusions: The CGRP antagonist BIBN 4096 BS was effective in treating acute attacks of migraine
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