1,078 research outputs found
Substantially Mutated: Are Genetic Mutations “Disabilities” Under the Americans with Disabilities Act?
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability to ensure that disabled Americans are given equal opportunity to participate in all aspects of life. Title I of the ADA, in particular, prohibits employers from discriminating against employees because of a disability in all employment matters. Courts have struggled to consistently define which impairments constitute a disability under the statute. In June 2020, in Darby v. Childvine, Inc., the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit seemingly expanded ADA coverage by holding that Sherryl Darby plausibly alleged that she was disabled due to a genetic mutation. This Comment argues that the Sixth Circuit properly allowed Darby’s claim to survive a motion to dismiss, echoing the legislative intent behind the ADA Amendments Act of 2008
Pandemic knowledge and regulation effectiveness: Evidence from COVID-19
The spread of COVID-19 led countries around the world to adopt lockdown measures of varying stringency, with the purpose of restricting the movement of people. However, the effectiveness of these measures on mobility has been markedly different. Employing a difference-in-differences design, we analyse the effectiveness of movement restrictions across different countries. We disentangle the role of regulation (stringency measures) from the role of people's knowledge about the spread of COVID-19. We proxy COVID-19 knowledge by using Google Trends data on the term “Covid”. We find that lockdown measures have a higher impact on mobility the more people learn about COVID-19. This finding is driven by countries with low levels of trust in institutions and low levels of education
Customer E-Loyalty of Muslim Millennials in Indonesia: Integrated Model of Trust, User Experience and Branding in E-Commerce Webstore
Muslims have unique characters which are closely related to their religious background. With the high growth of e-commerce in Indonesia, it is important to study Muslim market segments where Indonesia itself is a country with the largest Muslim population in the World. The progress of the halal financial industry and business also triggers the e-commerce development among Muslim Millennials. Muslim Millennials will become the main market and the largest customer segment In Indonesia since one-third of its population is dominated by millennials. The aim of this research is to develop and test a comprehensive model that explains how Muslim Millennials develop loyalty to online shopping websites (e-commerce). To test the research model, the online survey was distributed to a random sample of highly educated Muslim Millennials. The results found that positive online experience (flow) is the most important antecedent of e-loyalty in e-commerce websites for Muslim Millennials. Brand equity is also a key precursor of e-loyalty. However, trust is not a significant precursor of e-loyalty for Muslim Millennials in Indonesia
A pre seismic radio anomaly revealed in the area where the Abruzzo earthquake ( M =6.3) occurred on 6 April 2009
Abstract. On 6 April 2009 a strong (Mw=6.3) earthquake occurred in the Abruzzo region (central Italy). Since 1996, the intensity of CLT (f=189 kHz, Sicily, Italy), MCO (f=216 kHz, France) and CZE (f=270 kHz, Czech Republic) broadcast signals has been collected with a ten minutes sampling rate by a receiver operating in a place located about 13 km far from the epicenter. During March 2009, the old receiver was substituted with a new one able to measure, with one minute sampling rate, the intensity of five VLF signals and five LF signals radiated by transmitters located in different zones of Europe. The MCO and CZE transmitters mentioned above are included among them. From 31 March to 1 April the intensity of the MCO radio signal dropped and this drop was observed only in this signal. The possibility that the drop was connected to problems in the transmitter or in the receiver was investigated and excluded. So, the drop indicates a defocusing of the radiated signal. Since no particular meteorological situation along the path transmitter-receiver happened, the defocusing must be related to other causes, and a possibility is presented that it is a precursor of the Abruzzo earthquake
Disturbances in a VLF radio signal prior the M =4.7 offshore Anzio (central Italy) earthquake on 22 August 2005
Abstract. On 22 August 2005 an earthquake with magnitude M=4.7 occurred in the Anzio (central Italy) offshore area. From 2002, a VLF-LF radio receiver is into operation in Bari (southern Italy). The intensity and the phase of the signals transmitted by GB (f=16 kHz, United Kingdom), FR (f=20.9 kHz, France), GE (f=23.4 kHz, Germany), IC (f=37.5 kHz, Island) and IT (f=54 kHz, Sicily, Italy) has been monitored with a 5 s sampling rate. The previous epicenter is near enough to some of the radio paths and the data collected were studied in order to reveal possible seismic effects. The raw analysis revealed a clear drop in the intensity of the FR radio signal on 19 August. Then the wavelet analysis was applied to the intensity and the phase data of the different radio signals. In the mentioned day an increase in the band 60–120 min was revealed in the spectra of the FR signal. Then the principal component analysis was applied and again the 19 August stood up as an anomalous day for the FR radio signal. The path of this signal, among the paths of the five radio signals collected by the Bari receiver, is the nearest to the mentioned epicentre and the anomaly revealed on 19 August appears as a precursor of the earthquake. This result confirms the possible precursor revealed by other researchers in the air Rn content in a site located 5 miles far from the epicenter
Extreme rainfall events in karst environments: the case study of September 2014 in the Gargano area (southern Italy)
In the first week of September 2014, the Gargano Promontory (Apulia, SE Italy) was hit by an extreme rainfall
event that caused several landslides, floods and sinkholes. As a consequence of the floods, two people lost their
lives and severe socio-economic damages were reported. The highest peaks of rainfall were recorded between
September 3rd and 6th at the Cagnano Varano and San Marco in Lamis rain gauges with a maximum daily rainfall
(over 230 mm) that is about 30% the mean annual rainfall.
The Gargano Promontory is characterized by complex orographic conditions, with the highest elevation of about
1000 m a.s.l. The geological setting consists of different types of carbonate deposits affected by intensive development
of karst processes. The morphological and climatic settings of the area, associated with frequent extreme
rainfall events can cause various types of geohazards (e.g., landslides, floods, sinkholes). A further element enhancing
the natural predisposition of the area to the occurrence of landslides, floods and sinkholes is an intense
human activity, characterized by an inappropriate land use and management.
In order to obtain consistent and reliable data on the effects produced by the storm, a systematic collection of information
through field observations, a critical analysis of newspaper articles and web-news, and a co-operation with
the Regional Civil Protection and local geologists started immediately after the event. The information collected
has been organized in a database including the location, the occurrence time and the type of geohazard documented
with photographs.
The September 2014 extreme rainfall event in the Gargano Promontory was also analyzed to validate the forecasts
issued by the Italian national early-warning system for rainfall-induced landslides (SANF), developed by the Research
Institute for Geo-Hydrological Protection (IRPI) for the Italian national Department for Civil Protection
(DPC). SANF compares rainfall measurements and forecasts with empirical rainfall thresholds for the prediction
of landslide occurrence. SANF forecasts were compared to the documented landslides and discussed
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Modeling the impact of the 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine serotype catch-up program using United States claims data
Background: Analysis of US claims data from April 2010 to June 2011 estimated that 39% of the 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV13) catch-up eligible cohort would ever receive the catch-up vaccination; a previous analysis assumed 87%. Methods: This updated figure was applied to a previously published 10-year Markov model while holding all other inputs constant. Results: Our model estimated that the catch-up program as currently implemented is estimated to prevent an additional 1.7 million cases of disease in children aged ≤59 months over a 10-year period, compared with routine PCV13 vaccination with no catch-up program. Conclusions: Because 39% catch-up uptake is less than the level of completion of the 4-dose primary PCV13 series, vaccine-preventable cases of pneumococcal disease and related deaths could be decreased further with additional uptake of catch-up vaccination in the catch-up eligible cohort
The European VLF/LF radio network to search for earthquake precursors: setting up and natural/man-made disturbances
In the last years disturbances in VLF/LF radio signals related to seismic activity have been presented. The radio data were collected by receivers located on the ground or on satellites. The ground-based research implies systematic data collection by a network of receivers. Since 2000 the “Pacific VLF network”, conducted by Japanese researchers, has been in operation. During 2008 a radio receiver was developed by the Italian factory Elettronika (Palo del Colle, Bari). The receiver is equipment working in VLF and LF bands. It can monitor 10 frequencies distributed in these bands and, for each of them, it saves the power level. At the beginning of 2009, five receivers were made for the realization of the “European VLF/LF Network”; two were planned for Italy and one for Greece, Turkey and Romania, respectively. In 2010 the network was enlarged to include a new receiver installed in Portugal. In this work, first the receiver and its setting up in the different places are described. Then, several disturbances in the radio signals related to the transmitters, receivers, meteorological/geomagnetic conditions are presented and described
Simulated microgravity induces nuclear translocation of Bax and BCL-2 in glial cultured C6 cells
Alterations in the control of apoptotic processes were observed in cells during space flight or under simulated microgravity, the latter obtained with the 3D-Random Positioning Machine (3D-RPM). Usually the proteins Bax and Bcl-2, act as pro- or anti-apoptotic regulators. Here we investigated the effects of simulated microgravity obtained by the 3D-RPM on cell viability, localization and expression of Bax and Bcl-2 in cultures of glial cancerous cells. We observed for the first time a transient cytoplasmic/nuclear translocation of Bax and Bcl-2 triggered by changing gravity vector. Bax translocates into the nucleus after 1 h, is present simultaneously in the cytoplasm after 6 h and comes back to the cytoplasm after 24 h. Bcl-2 translocate into the nucleus only after 6 h and comes back to the cytoplasm after 24 h. Physiological meaning, on the regulation of apoptotic event and possible applicative outcomes of such finding are discussed
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