396 research outputs found
A Behavioral Observation Study of Turkish Drivers’ and Children\u27s Safety Belt Use
Researchers focused on child restraint use in vehicles travelling along Turkish roadways. Field observations occurred at 1.5 - 2 hour intervals during daylight hours between 1130 and 1930 in January 2009. Overall, 1,423 vehicles with children 8 years old and younger were observed completely. Drivers’ belt use was 52.1%. Children\u27s use rate (over all age categories and restraint systems) was even lower at 29.4%. Unfortunately, 29.4% of these vehicles also had a child riding on another occupant\u27s lap. The findings supported researchers’ concerns that children are at risk for traffic crash injuries and fatalities in Turkey, and that occupant protection intervention should be strengthened and evaluated among this country\u27s population
LISA observations of massive black hole mergers: event rates and issues in waveform modelling
The observability of gravitational waves from supermassive and
intermediate-mass black holes by the forecoming Laser Interferometer Space
Antenna (LISA), and the physics we can learn from the observations, will depend
on two basic factors: the event rates for massive black hole mergers occurring
in the LISA best sensitivity window, and our theoretical knowledge of the
gravitational waveforms. We first provide a concise review of the literature on
LISA event rates for massive black hole mergers, as predicted by different
formation scenarios. Then we discuss what (in our view) are the most urgent
issues to address in terms of waveform modelling. For massive black hole binary
inspiral these include spin precession, eccentricity, the effect of high-order
Post-Newtonian terms in the amplitude and phase, and an accurate prediction of
the transition from inspiral to plunge. For black hole ringdown, numerical
relativity will ultimately be required to determine the relative quasinormal
mode excitation, and to reduce the dimensionality of the template space in
matched filtering.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures. Added section with conclusions and outlook.
Matches version to appear in the proceedings of 10th Annual Gravitational
Wave Data Analysis Workshop (GWDAW 10), Brownsville, Texas, 14-17 Dec 200
An Extensive Evaluation of the Internet's Open Proxies
Open proxies forward traffic on behalf of any Internet user. Listed on open
proxy aggregator sites, they are often used to bypass geographic region
restrictions or circumvent censorship. Open proxies sometimes also provide a
weak form of anonymity by concealing the requestor's IP address.
To better understand their behavior and performance, we conducted a
comprehensive study of open proxies, encompassing more than 107,000 listed open
proxies and 13M proxy requests over a 50 day period. While previous studies
have focused on malicious open proxies' manipulation of HTML content to
insert/modify ads, we provide a more broad study that examines the
availability, success rates, diversity, and also (mis)behavior of proxies.
Our results show that listed open proxies suffer poor availability--more than
92% of open proxies that appear on aggregator sites are unresponsive to proxy
requests. Much more troubling, we find numerous examples of malicious open
proxies in which HTML content is manipulated to mine cryptocurrency (that is,
cryptojacking). We additionally detect TLS man-in-the-middle (MitM) attacks,
and discover numerous instances in which binaries fetched through proxies were
modified to include remote access trojans and other forms of malware. As a
point of comparison, we conduct and discuss a similar measurement study of the
behavior of Tor exit relays. We find no instances in which Tor relays performed
TLS MitM or manipulated content, suggesting that Tor offers a far more reliable
and safe form of proxied communication
In the dedicated pursuit of dedicated capital: restoring an indigenous investment ethic to British capitalism
Tony Blair’s landslide electoral victory on May 1 (New Labour Day?) presents the party in power with a rare, perhaps even unprecedented, opportunity to revitalise and modernise Britain’s ailing and antiquated manufacturing economy.* If it is to do so, it must remain true to its long-standing (indeed, historic) commitment to restore an indigenous investment ethic to British capitalism. In this paper we argue that this in turn requires that the party reject the very neo-liberal orthodoxies which it offered to the electorate as evidence of its competence, moderation and ‘modernisation’, which is has internalised, and which it apparently now views as circumscribing the parameters of the politically and economically possible
The effect of grounding on radiated emissions from heatsinks
The paper presents results which demonstrate that radiated emissions from heatsinks are reduced by an amount that depends upon the distribution and impedance of the grounding structure. Results are also presented which show the effect on radiated emissions of the presence of conductors (e.g. PCB tracks) passing under the heatsink. The presence of conductors reduces the effectiveness of the heatsink grounding but, in most case, emissions at high frequencies do not exceed those without conductors attached
Spillback Effects of Expansion When Product-Types and Firm-Types Differ
Contrary to perspectives that credit firms with only limited abilities to undertake significant change successfully, recent research has demonstrated that firms often improve their performance after undertaking major expansion to their operations. In this paper, we build on a study by Mitchell and Singh (1993) to test for differences in expansion effects, depending on whether the new goods substitute for old products and whether the firm is a generalist or specialist participant in the industry. The analysis helps us understand when a business can undertake major change successfully. The results have implications for ecological and other definitions of the core of a business and highlight the necessity for firms to undertake changes even at considerable risk to their existing operations.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68398/2/10.1177_014920639502100105.pd
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