251 research outputs found

    The concentration of media ownership in Australia- from the media moguls to the money men?

    Get PDF
    It is well known that Australia has one of the highest concentrations of media ownership in the world. One is entitled to ask why this matters. The answers are several; some universal and others particular to the Australian setting. It is generally thought that liberal, \u27fourth estate\u27 standards of journalistic independence and diversity of opinion are essential conditions for both informed citizenship and freedom of speech and hence for the proper functioning of liberal democracy. Judged by those standards Australia compares poorly with most other developed OECD nations; especially those nations that are normally assumed to characterise the Liberal model (Hallin and Mancini 2004)

    Tax-planning techniques for individuals; Studies in federal taxation 2

    Get PDF
    https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aicpa_guides/1248/thumbnail.jp

    Correlates of individual participation in boundary patrols by male chimpanzees

    Get PDF
    Group territory defense poses a collective action problem: individuals can free-ride, benefiting without paying the costs. Individual heterogeneity has been proposed to solve such problems, as individuals high in reproductive success, rank, fighting ability, or motivation may benefit from defending territories even if others free-ride. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed 30 years of data from chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) in the Kasekela community, Gombe National Park, Tanzania (1978-2007). We examined the extent to which individual participation in patrols varied according to correlates of reproductive success (mating rate, rank, age), fighting ability (hunting), motivation (scores from personality ratings), costs of defecting (the number of adult males in the community), and gregariousness (sighting frequency). In contrast to expectations from collective action theory, males participated in patrols at consistently high rates (mean ± S.D. = 74.5 ± 11.1% of patrols, n=23 males). The best predictors of patrol participation were sighting frequency, age, and hunting participation. Current and former alpha males did not participate at a higher rate than males that never achieved alpha status. These findings suggest that the temptation to free-ride is low, and that a mutualistic mechanism such as group augmentation may better explain individual participation in group territorial behavior.README File: README_MASSARO_2022_DATA_updated04mar2022.txt R-code for data analysis: CodeforCorrelatesofBoundaryPatrols.R Datasets: PPdata.xlsx, PatrolsandPeriph.xlsx, PP5yearPlots.xlsx, WholeStudyPatrolRate.xlsx We do not provide access to the raw data used in some of these analyses, as this raw data represent a substantial fraction of the long-term data from Gombe, which are not publicly available at this time due to multiple ongoing studies, but are available from the corresponding author on reasonable requestAttached data files include summary data collected at Gombe National Park (1998-2007). For detailed methodology, please see the associated manuscript

    Non--Newtonian viscosity of interacting Brownian particles: comparison of theory and data

    Full text link
    A recent first-principles approach to the non-linear rheology of dense colloidal suspensions is evaluated and compared to simulation results of sheared systems close to their glass transitions. The predicted scenario of a universal transition of the structural dynamics between yielding of glasses and non-Newtonian (shear-thinning) fluid flow appears well obeyed, and calculations within simplified models rationalize the data over variations in shear rate and viscosity of up to 3 decades.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures; J. Phys. Condens. Matter to be published (Jan. 2003

    Rotational Diffusion in a Chain of Particles

    Full text link
    We study the coupled rotational diffusion in a two-particle chain on the basis of a Smoluchowski equation and calculate time-correlation functions that are measurable in an experiment. This might be used to explore hydrodynamic interactions in the limit where lubrication theory is valid.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, to be published in J. Phys.: Condens. Matte

    Oral Microbiome Diversity in Chimpanzees from Gombe National Park

    Get PDF
    Historic calcified dental plaque (dental calculus) can provide a unique perspective into the health status of past human populations but currently no studies have focused on the oral microbial ecosystem of other primates, including our closest relatives, within the hominids. Here we use ancient DNA extraction methods, shotgun library preparation, and next generation Illumina sequencing to examine oral microbiota from 19 dental calculus samples recovered from wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) who died in Gombe National Park, Tanzania. The resulting sequences were trimmed for quality, analyzed using MALT, MEGAN, and alignment scripts, and integrated with previously published dental calculus microbiome data. We report significant differences in oral microbiome phyla between chimpanzees and anatomically modern humans (AMH), with chimpanzees possessing a greater abundance of Bacteroidetes and Fusobacteria, and AMH showing higher Firmicutes and Proteobacteria. Our results suggest that by using an enterotype clustering method, results cluster largely based on host species. These clusters are driven by Porphyromonas and Fusobacterium genera in chimpanzees and Haemophilus and Streptococcus in AMH. Additionally, we compare a nearly complete Porphyromonas gingivalis genome to previously published genomes recovered from human gingiva to gain perspective on evolutionary relationships across host species. Finally, using shotgun sequence data we assessed indicators of diet from DNA in calculus and suggest exercising caution when making assertions related to host lifestyle. These results showcase core differences between host species and stress the importance of continued sequencing of nonhuman primate microbiomes in order to fully understand the complexity of their oral ecologies

    From compact to fractal crystalline clusters in concentrated systems of monodisperse hard spheres

    Full text link
    We address the crystallization of monodisperse hard spheres in terms of the properties of finite- size crystalline clusters. By means of large scale event-driven Molecular Dynamics simulations, we study systems at different packing fractions {\phi} ranging from weakly supersaturated state points to glassy ones, covering different nucleation regimes. We find that such regimes also result in different properties of the crystalline clusters: compact clusters are formed in the classical-nucleation-theory regime ({\phi} \leq 0.54), while a crossover to fractal, ramified clusters is encountered upon increasing packing fraction ({\phi} \geq 0.56), where nucleation is more spinodal-like. We draw an analogy between macroscopic crystallization of our clusters and percolation of attractive systems to provide ideas on how the packing fraction influences the final structure of the macroscopic crystals. In our previous work (Phys. Rev. Lett., 106, 215701, 2011), we have demonstrated how crystallization from a glass (at {\phi} > 0.58) happens via a gradual (many-step) mechanism: in this paper we show how the mechanism of gradual growth seems to hold also in super-saturated systems just above freezing showing that static properties of clusters are not much affected by dynamics.Comment: Soft Matter, 201

    Experimentally Bounding Deviations From Quantum Theory in the Landscape of Generalized Probabilistic Theories

    Get PDF
    Many experiments in the field of quantum foundations seek to adjudicate between quantum theory and speculative alternatives to it. This requires one to analyze the experimental data in a manner that does not presume the correctness of the quantum formalism. The mathematical framework of generalized probabilistic theories (GPTs) provides a means of doing so. We present a scheme for determining which GPTs are consistent with a given set of experimental data. It proceeds by performing tomography on the preparations and measurements in a self-consistent manner, i.e., without presuming a prior characterization of either. We illustrate the scheme by analyzing experimental data for a large set of preparations and measurements on the polarization degree of freedom of a single photon. We first test various hypotheses for the dimension of the GPT vector space for this degree of freedom. Our analysis identifies the most plausible hypothesis to be dimension 4, which is the value predicted by quantum theory. Under this hypothesis, we can draw the following additional conclusions from our scheme: (i) that the smallest and largest GPT state spaces that could describe photon polarization are a pair of polytopes, each approximating the shape of the Bloch sphere and having a volume ratio of 0.977±0.001, which provides a quantitative bound on the scope for deviations from the state and effect spaces predicted by quantum theory, and (ii) that the maximal violation of the Clauser, Horne, Shimony, and Holt inequality can be at most 1.3%±0.1 greater than the maximum violation allowed by quantum theory, and the maximal violation of a particular inequality for universal noncontextuality can not differ from the quantum prediction by more than this factor on either side. The only possibility for a greater deviation from the quantum state and effect spaces or for greater degrees of supraquantum nonlocality or contextuality, according to our analysis, is if a future experiment (perhaps following the scheme developed here) discovers that additional dimensions of GPT vector space are required to describe photon polarization, in excess of the four dimensions predicted by quantum theory to be adequate to the task
    corecore