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Access to legal information in Korea
The aim of this project is to establish a desirable information environment adjusting to need and behaviour of legal professional in Korea. For this purpose, present situation of information sources in printed form and computerised systems were examined. Printed sources were evaluated based on commonly used criteria title by title. Operation of the two systems, LIRES and SCS, was described based on written documents and on interview with the system designers. Professional's attitudes toward legal information, information sources, and computerisation were surveyed. Responses made a distinction between groups of practitioners and professors to compare the results. Differences in attitudes towards library, information sources, and information seeking habits between two groups were identified. Capabilities of the computerised systems were analysed and compared with the potential users' needs and behaviours as found by the survey. Also, functions of the two systems were analysed by practical use of them, which was carried out by application of five legal questions to each system. According to the analysis, it was identified that the problem of search method which was a main factor of users' dissatisfaction with the printed information sources, could not be completely cleared up by the systems. For development of the information sources, improvement of search method of printed sources was suggested. Also, advancement of the two systems in the direction of utilisation of computer capacity for searching and of expansion of input data adjusting to potential users' needs was recommended. In addition, in order to maximise the use of the two systems, integration of them, by connecting them to the Dacom-Net, and then to the distributed database system as an efficient interface was recommended. The configuration required of such an interface was demonstrated by the example of an experimental system, CONIT
Deuteron Electroweak Disintegration
We study the deuteron electrodisintegration with inclusion of the neutral
currents focusing on the helicity asymmetry of the exclusive cross section in
coplanar geometry. We stress that a measurement of this asymmetry in the quasi
elastic region is of interest for an experimental determination of the weak
form factors of the nucleon, allowing one to obtain the parity violating
electron neutron asymmetry. Numerically, we consider the reaction at low
momentum transfer and discuss the sensitivity of the helicity asymmetry to the
strangeness radius and magnetic moment. The problems coming from the finite
angular acceptance of the spectrometers are also considered.Comment: 30 pages, Latex, 7 eps figures, submitted to Phys.Rev.C e-mail:
[email protected] , [email protected]
Density functional theory calculations of adsorption-induced surface stress changes
Density functional theory calculations of adsorbate-induced surface stress changes have been performed for a number of adsorbate and overlayer systems for which experimental data exists, namely: oxygen and sulphur adsorption on Ni(1 0 0); oxygen adsorption on W(1 1 0); pseudomorphic growth of Ni on Cu(1 0 0) and of Fe on W(1 1 0); oxygen adsorption on a 5 ML pseudomorphic film of Ni(1 0 0) grown on Cu(1 0 0). The theoretical calculations reproduce all the qualitative features of the experimental data, but there are some significant quantitative differences, most notably for the two atomic adsorbates on the bulk Ni(1 0 0) surface, for which the theoretical stress changes are substantially smaller than the experimental ones, a situation not obviously attributable to experimental error. For the W(1 1 0)/Fe system there is also a marked difference between experiment and theory in the coverage at which key surface stress changes occur
A role for SUMO modification in transcriptional repression and activation
Since the discovery of the SUMO (small ubiquitin-like modifier) family of proteins just over a decade ago, a plethora of substrates have been uncovered including many regulators of transcription. Conjugation of SUMO to target proteins has generally been considered as a repressive modification. However, there are now a growing number of examples where sumoylation has been shown to activate transcription. Here we discuss whether there is something intrinsically repressive about sumoylation, or if the outcome of this modification in the context of transcription will prove to be largely substrate-dependent. We highlight some of the technical challenges that will be faced by attempting to answer this question
Density waves in dry granular media falling through a vertical pipe
We report experimental measurements of density waves in granular materials
flowing down in a capillary tube. The density wave regime occurs at
intermediate flow rates between a low density free fall regime and a high
compactness slower flow.Comment: LaTeX file, 17 pages, 6 EPS figures, Phys.Rev.E (Feb.1996
Systematic risk at the industry level: A case study of Australia
The cornerstone of the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) lies with its beta. The question of whether or not beta is dead has attracted great attention from academics and practitioners in the last 50 years or so, and the debate is still ongoing. Many empirical studies have been conducted to test the validity of beta within the framework of CAPM. However, it is a claim of this paper that beta at the industry level has been largely ignored in the current literature. This study is conducted to examine if beta, proxied for a systematic risk, should be considered valid in the application of the CAPM at the industry level for Australia using daily data on 2200 stocks listed on the Australian Securities Exchange from January 2007 to 31 December 2016. Various portfolio formations are utilized in this paper. General economic conditions such as interest rate, inflation, and GDP are examples of systematic risk. Findings from this study indicate that the selection of portfolio construction, estimation technique, and news about economic conditions significantly affects the view whether or not beta should be considered as a valid measure of systematic risk
Information sharing, bank penetration and tax evasion in emerging markets
Tax evasion, which is typically considered an illegal activity, is a critical problem and is considered a barrier to economic growth. A review of the literature shows that tax and social security contributions, regulations, public sector services, the quality of institutions and tax compliance, play important roles in determining the degree to which firms attempt to evade taxes. Measuring tax evasion is problematic due to data requirements and inadequacies. Few tax evasion indices have been estimated but it appears that they cannot be used for international comparisons across countries. This important issue has largely been ignored in the literature, in particular for emerging markets. Consequently, this paper is conducted to develop a new tax evasion index (TEI) using the most substantial and recent data from the standardized World Bank Enterprises Survey 2006–2017. In addition, using the newly developed TEI, the paper examines the importance and contribution of information sharing and bank penetration to the degree of tax evasion in emerging markets. The paper uses a sample of 112 emerging markets from 2006–2017 and the Tobit model in estimation. The empirical findings from the paper indicate that the average TEI during the 2006– 2017 period for emerging markets is 0.62, with a range of (0.25, 0.75). In addition, we find that information sharing and bank penetration negatively affect the degree of tax evasion, as proxied by the TEI, in emerging markets. The empirical results also confirm the view that large firms are considered to have adopted good tax compliance practices, while firms located in remote areas are more likely to evade taxes. Policy implications have emerged on the basis of the empirical findings from the paper
Parity-violating asymmetry in with a pionless effective theory
Nuclear parity violation is studied with polarized neutrons in the
photodisintegration of the deuteron at low energies. A pionless effective field
theory with di-baryon fields is used for the investigation. Hadronic weak
interactions are treated by parity-violating di-baryon-nucleon-nucleon
vertices, which have undetermined coupling contants. A parity-violating
asymmetry in the process is calculated for the incident photon energy up to 30
MeV. If experimental data for the parity-violating asymmetry become available
in the future, we will be able to determine the unknown coupling contants in
the parity-violating vertices.Comment: 4 pages. A contribution to APFB2011, August 22-26, 2011, Seoul, Kore
Parity violating target asymmetry in electron - proton scattering
We analyze the parity-violating (PV) components of the analyzing power in
elastic electron-proton scattering and discuss their sensitivity to the strange
quark contributions to the proton weak form factors. We point out that the
component of the analyzing power along the momentum transfer is independent of
the electric weak form factor and thus compares favorably with the PV beam
asymmetry for a determination of the strangeness magnetic moment. We also show
that the transverse component could be used for constraining the strangeness
radius. Finally, we argue that a measurement of both components could give
experimental information on the strangeness axial charge.Comment: 24 pages, Latex, 5 eps figures, submitted to Phys.Rev.
Anyonic Bogomol'nyi Solitons in a Gauged O(3) Sigma Model
We introduce the self-dual abelian gauged sigma models where the
Maxwell and Chern-Simons terms constitute the kinetic terms for the gauge
field. These models have quite rich structures and various limits. Our models
are found to exhibit both symmetric and broken phases of the gauge group. We
discuss the pure Chern-Simons limit in some detail and study rotationally
symmetric solitons.Comment: 14 pages, 6 Postscript figures uuencoded, written in REVTe
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