35 research outputs found
Joint Employment: The Unintended and Unpredictable Employment Relationship
The following is a transcript of a 2018 Federalist Society panel entitled Joint Employment: The Unintended and Unpredictable \u27Employment\u27 Relationship. The panel originally occurred on November 15, 2018, during the National Lawyers Convention in Washington, D.C. The panelists were: Richard Epstein, Laurence A. Tisch Professor of Law and Director, Classical Liberal Institute, New York University Law School; Richard F. Griffin, Jr., Of Counsel, Bredhoff & Kaiser, PLLC; and Hon. Philip A. Miscimarra, Partner, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP. The moderator was the Honorable Timothy M. Tymkovich of the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
Studying genetic determinants of natural variation in human gene expression using Bayesian ANOVA
Standard genetic mapping techniques scan chromosomal segments for location of genetic linkage and association signals. The majority of these methods consider only correlations at single markers and/or phenotypes with explicit detailing of the genetic structure. These methods tend to be limited by their inability to consider the effect of large numbers of model variables jointly. In contrast, we propose a Bayesian analysis of variance (ANOVA) method to categorize individuals based on similarity of multidimensional profiles and attempt to analyze all variables simultaneously. Using Problem 1 of the Genetic Analysis Workshop 15 data set, we demonstrate the method's utility for joint analysis of gene expression levels and single-nucleotide polymorphism genotypes. We show that the method extracts similar information to that of previous genetic mapping analyses, and suggest extensions of the method for mining unique information not previously found
Studying genetic determinants of natural variation in human gene expression using Bayesian ANOVA
Convergent genetic linkage and associations to language, speech and reading measures in families of probands with Specific Language Impairment
We analyzed genetic linkage and association of measures of language, speech and reading phenotypes to candidate regions in a single set of families ascertained for SLI. Sib-pair and family-based analyses were carried out for candidate gene loci for Reading Disability (RD) on chromosomes 1p36, 3p12-q13, 6p22, and 15q21, and the speech-language candidate region on 7q31 in a sample of 322 participants ascertained for Specific Language Impairment (SLI). Replication or suggestive replication of linkage was obtained in all of these regions, but the evidence suggests that the genetic influences may not be identical for the three domains. In particular, linkage analysis replicated the influence of genes on chromosome 6p for all three domains, but association analysis indicated that only one of the candidate genes for reading disability, KIAA0319, had a strong effect on language phenotypes. The findings are consistent with a multiple gene model of the comorbidity between language impairments and reading disability and have implications for neurocognitive developmental models and maturational processes
Guns, Firms, and Zeal: Deconstructing Labor-Management Relations and U.S. Employment Policy
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The NLRB and managerial discretion ::plant closings, relocations, subcontracting, and automation /
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