7,077 research outputs found
Let them brew! Reflexivity, and division of labour in deliberation for science and technology governance
This thesis examines the theoretical premises of and ways that macro deliberative approaches to decision making function in application to specific instances of science and technology governance. Macro-level deliberations constitute complex, extended, distributed decision making processes, in contrast to individual micro deliberation exercises undertaken in particular settings. Macro deliberations employ the mechanism of âdivision of labourâ in terms of actors, tasks and methods in order to secure the two essential qualities of âinclusivenessâ and âdeliberativenessâ â thus resolving the inherent tension between number of participants and deep discussion. Accordingly, the thesis focuses on the ways in which this paradoxical mechanism of âinclusion by divisionâ functions in macro deliberations. An interrogation of two UK nationwide public deliberation cases â GM Dialogue (on GM crops) and the CoRWM process (on radioactive waste) â sheds light on the significant role of reflexivity in such macro deliberative approaches to decision making.
The thesis adopts a triangulated approach towards both documents and interviews employing contending representations to cross-check the one with the other. In considering the ways in which reflexivity constitutes a critical quality of the process and outcome of division of labour in macro deliberations, the thesis argues that the notion of reflexivity is central to explaining how macro deliberation functions:
The reflective and self-contingent feature of reflexivity enables participants to explore diverse rationales on division of labour through continuous generation of new rationales; this recursive self-reconfiguration process of rationales on division of labour entails an evolutionary development of division of labour. As division of labour is played out not in a static, exogenous fashion, but through a dynamic, endogenous construction process, reflexivity in real-world macro deliberations illuminates some significant contrasts in the ways that âdeliberationâ and âinclusionâ take place to those characterised in theory.
Indeed, deliberation emerges in practice as more than just open rational dialogue. In order to understand this more fully, it must be seen in terms of diversity of material, social and political interactions, and relationships â referred to here as âdiscursive relationsâ. In reality, then, inclusion occurs in more emergent ways than intended by design, rather, unfolding as participants engage with each other. In this way, actorsâ divergent views are cross-reflected and mutually influence each other, not through theoretically-envisaged top-down aggregation but via a kind of endogenous âfermentationâ process. In this way, reflexivity actually makes macro public deliberation a more effectively inclusive and deliberative decision making process.
In short, recognition of this inherent reflexivity in macro deliberations offers practically to aid improved understanding of the complex process of engagement in science and technology governance. It suggests that we would benefit from shifting our attention somewhat away from the direct provision of strictly prescriptive design protocols towards the construction of better general environments for facilitating more reflexivity, which should enable actors to shape their own reflexive deliberation.
Then let them brew
Phosphorylated claspin interacts with a phosphate-binding site in the kinase domain of Chk1 during ATR-mediated activation
Claspin is essential for the ATR-dependent activation of Chk1 in Xenopus egg extracts containing incompletely replicated or UV-damaged DNA. The activated form of Claspin contains two repeated phosphopeptide motifs that mediate its binding to Chk1. We show that these phosphopeptide motifs bind to Chk1 by means of its N-terminal kinase domain. The binding site on Chk1 involves a positively charged cluster of amino acids that contains lysine 54, arginine 129, threonine 153, and arginine 162. Mutagenesis of these residues strongly compromises the ability of Chk1 to interact with Claspin. These amino acids lie within regions of Chk1 that are involved in various aspects of its catalytic function. The predicted position on Chk1 of the phosphate group from Claspin corresponds to the location of activation-loop phosphorylation in various kinases. In addition, we have obtained evidence that the C-terminal regulatory domain of Chk1, which does not form a stable complex with Claspin under our assay conditions, nonetheless has some role in Claspin-dependent activation. Overall, these results indicate that Claspin docks with a phosphate-binding site in the catalytic domain of Chk1 during activation by ATR. Phosphorylated Claspin may mimic an activating phosphorylation of Chk1 during this process
The PCA Filtering method for an unbiased spectral survey of Complex Organic Molecules (COMs)
A variety of interstellar complex organic molecules (COMs) have been detected
in various physical conditions. However, in the protostellar and protoplanetary
environments, their complex kinematics make line profiles blend each other and
the line strength of weak lines weaker. In this paper, we utilize the principal
component analysis (PCA) technique to develop a filtering method which can
extract COM spectra from the main kinematic component associated with COM
emission and increase the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of spectra. This
filtering method corrects non-Gaussian line profiles caused by the kinematics.
For this development, we adopt the ALMA BAND 6 spectral survey data of V883
Ori, an eruptive young star with a Keplerian disk. A filter was, first, created
using 34 strong and well-isolated COM lines and then applied to the entire
spectral range of the dataset. The first principal component (PC1) describes
the most common emission structure of the selected lines, which is confined
within the water sublimation radius ( 0.3 arcsec) in the Keplerian disk
of V883 Ori. Using this PC1 filter, we extracted high-SNR kinematics-corrected
spectra of V883 Ori over the entire spectral coverage of 50 GHz. The
PC1-filtering method reduces the noise by a factor of 2 compared to the
average spectra over the COM emission region. One important advantage of this
PC1-filtering method over the previously developed matched filtering method is
to preserve the original integrated intensities of COM lines.Comment: 24 pages, 13 figure
Topology of Luminous Red Galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We present measurements of the genus topology of luminous red galaxies (LRGs)
from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 7 catalog, with
unprecedented statistical significance. To estimate the uncertainties in the
measured genus, we construct 81 mock SDSS LRG surveys along the past light cone
from the Horizon Run 3, one of the largest N-body simulations to date that
evolved 7210^3 particles in a 10815 Mpc/h size box. After carefully modeling
and removing all known systematic effects due to finite pixel size, survey
boundary, radial and angular selection functions, shot noise and galaxy
biasing, we find the observed genus amplitude to reach 272 at 22 Mpc/h
smoothing scale with an uncertainty of 4.2%; the estimated error fully
incorporates cosmic variance. This is the most accurate constraint of the genus
amplitude to date, which significantly improves on our previous results. In
particular, the shape of the genus curve agrees very well with the mean
topology of the SDSS LRG mock surveys in the LCDM universe. However, comparison
with simulations also shows small deviations of the observed genus curve from
the theoretical expectation for Gaussian initial conditions. While these
discrepancies are mainly driven by known systematic effects such as those of
shot noise and redshift-space distortions, they do contain important
cosmological information on the physical effects connected with galaxy
formation, gravitational evolution and primordial non-Gaussianity. We address
here the key role played by systematics on the genus curve, and show how to
accurately correct for their effects to recover the topology of the underlying
matter. In a forthcoming paper, we provide an interpretation of those
deviations in the context of the local model of non-Gaussianity.Comment: 23 pages, 18 figures. APJ Supplement Series 201
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