1,009 research outputs found

    The Impact of U.S. Tort Law in Canada

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    This paper briefly summarizes some of the reasons offered by Professor Peter Cane for the minimal impact that U.S. tort law has had on the tort law of Australia and New Zealand. It discusses this matter from the perspective of Canadian tort law. It suggests that, for a variety of reasons, Canada is in a unique position; it shares some of the same characteristics of the Commonwealth countries which discourage the adoption of U.S. tort law, but at the same time is exposed to countervailing factors which tend to bring Canadian and U.S. tort laws closer together. It illustrates this point by identifying a few characteristics of Canadian tort law which are very American

    Introduction of Allen Linden

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    The Need for a Dual Approach to Entrapment

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    10Gb/s Bang-Bang Clock and Data Recovery (CDR) for optical transmission systems

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    A Bang-Bang Clock-Data Recovery (CDR) for 10Gb/s optical transmission systems is presented. A direct modulated architecture is used for the design. Its loop characteristics can be derived using an analogy to Σ Δ theory. The circuit was produced and measured in a commercial 0.25μm BiCMOS technology with a transition frequency <i>f</i><sub><i>T</i></sub>70=GHz

    Quantifying differences in parasite numbers between samples of hosts

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    Abstract An important question in many parasitological studies is the assessment of differences in parasite numbers between samples of hosts. This is not always easy: while almost everybody will agree that the main task consists in deciding whether the values in one sample tend to be higher than the values of the other sample, there is considerable disagreement about what higher (or lower) should mean. In common use as dissimilarity measures are differences between mean values, medians, geometric means, prevalence rates, relative effects, and more. In general, different measures can lead to different conclusions. However, a debate as to which measure is superior is fruitless; it depends on goals and circumstances of the respective study. In our opinion, it is more important to identify situations in which most of the above mentioned measures coincide, and hence, one can confidently claim that the values in one sample are higher than in the other. This is the case when one sample is stochastically larger than the second. It is the aim of this paper to review this concept using distributional and data examples, and of proposing graphical tools for detecting stochastic dominance

    Electron attachment to SF6 and lifetimes of SF6- negative ions

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    We study the process of low-energy electron capture by the SF6 molecule. Our approach is based on the model of Gauyacq and Herzenberg [J. Phys. B 17, 1155 (1984)] in which the electron motion is coupled to the fully symmetric vibrational mode through a weakly bound or virtual s state. By tuning the two free parameters of the model, we achieve an accurate description of the measured electron attachment cross section and good agreement with vibrational excitation cross sections of the fully symmetric mode. An extension of the model provides a limit on the characteristic time of intramolecular vibrational relaxation in highly-excited SF6-. By evaluating the total vibrational spectrum density of SF6-, we estimate the widths of the vibrational Feshbach resonances of the long-lived negative ion. We also analyse the possible distribution of the widths and its effect on the lifetime measurements, and investigate nonexponential decay features in metastable SF6-.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Habitat selection models for European wildcat conservation

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    Populations of the European wildcat (Felis silvestris) are only slowly recovering in Central Europe after a severe decline in the last centuries and require specific conservation plans in many areas. However, detailed information on wildcat occurrence and habitat require- ments is still scarce and controversial. We present a fine-scale habitat selection model for wildcats based on detailed species and land use information and evaluate its accu- racy to predict habitat distribution in new areas. We analysed habitat use within home ranges using single locations of 12 radio-tracked individuals from south western Germany. Several competing models were fitted and compared using generalised linear mixed models (GLMM) and information-theoretic approaches. Radio-tracking data of 9 and 10 wildcats from two distant areas were used to evaluate the models. The selected model predicted habitat associated to close distance to forest, watercourses and mead- ows and a critical distance to villages, single houses and roads. To predict area suitable for home ranges we superimposed rules derived from home range attributes at a higher level of selection. Predictions from the combination of the fine-scale habitat model and home range rules matched well with more than 2000 wildcat observations of south- western Germany. We discuss the application of the model in wildcat conservation for finding potential reintroduction sites, identifying small isolated populations and aiding in the evaluation of the needs of mitigation and compensation within the scope of the European Habitats Directive.Peer Reviewe
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