6,456 research outputs found
Fresh Start: The Impact of Public Campaign Financing in Connecticut
Connecticut has offered a voluntary public financing system for state-wide constitutional and General Assembly offices since 2008. Through financing from the Citizens' Election Fund, candidates that obtain the required number of small donations can receive a lump sum to fund their campaign. The program is very popular and in 2012, 77 percent of successful candidates were publicly financed. This report looks at the impact public financing has had on campaigning, the legislative process, policy outcomes, and the dynamics of the legislature. Empirical data is supplemented with interviews with current and former legislators from both Republican and Democratic parties, elected state officials, and advocates to highlight the impact of public financing in the state. While only a few electoral cycles in, it is clear that public financing is a fundamental step towards a more representative legislative process that is more responsive to constituents
Development of the children's eating behaviour questionnaire
Individual differences in several aspects of eating style have been implicated in the development of weight problems in children and adults, but there are presently no reliable and valid scales that assess a range of dimensions of eating style. This paper describes the development and preliminary validation of a parent-rated instrument to assess eight dimensions of eating style in children; the Children's Eating Behaviour Questionnaire (CEBQ). Constructs for inclusion were derived both from the existing literature on eating behaviour in children and adults, and from interviews with parents. They included reponsiveness to food, enjoyment of food, satiety responsiveness, slowness in eating, fussiness, emotional overeating, emotional undereating, and desire for drinks. A. large pool of items covering each of these: constructs was developed. The number of items was then successively culled through analysis of responses from three samples of families of young children (N = 131; N = 187, N = 218), to produce a 35-item instrument with eight scales which were internally valid and had good test-retest reliability. Investigation of variations by gender and age revealed only minimal gender differences in any aspect of eating style. Satiety responsiveness and slowness in eating diminished from age 3 to 8. Enjoyment of food and food responsiveness increased over this age range. The CEBQ should provide a useful measure of eating style for research into the early precursors of obesity or eating disorders. This is especially important in relation to the growing evidence for the heritability of obesity, where good measurement of the associated behavioural phenotype will be crucial in investigating the contribution of inherited variations in eating behaviour to the process of weight gain
Affine Deligne-Lusztig varieties in affine flag varieties
This paper studies affine Deligne-Lusztig varieties in the affine flag
manifold of a split group. Among other things, it proves emptiness for certain
of these varieties, relates some of them to those for Levi subgroups, extends
previous conjectures concerning their dimensions, and generalizes the superset
method.Comment: 44 pages, 4 figures. Minor changes to font, references, and
acknowledgments. Improved introduction, other improvements in exposition, and
two new figures added, for a total of
An arithmetic Hilbert-Samuel theorem for singular hermitian line bundles and cusp forms
We prove an arithmetic Hilbert-Samuel type theorem for semi-positive singular
hermitian line bundles of finite height. In particular, the theorem applies to
the log-singular metrics of Burgos-Kramer-K\"uhn. Our theorem is thus suitable
for application to some non-compact Shimura varieties with their bundles of
cusp forms. As an application, we treat the case of Hilbert modular surfaces,
establishing an arithmetic analogue of the classical result expressing the
dimensions of spaces of cusp forms in terms of special values of Dedekind zeta
functions
Spreading gossip in social networks
We study a simple model of information propagation in social networks, where
two quantities are introduced: the spread factor, which measures the average
maximal fraction of neighbors of a given node that interchange information
among each other, and the spreading time needed for the information to reach
such fraction of nodes. When the information refers to a particular node at
which both quantities are measured, the model can be taken as a model for
gossip propagation. In this context, we apply the model to real empirical
networks of social acquaintances and compare the underlying spreading dynamics
with different types of scale-free and small-world networks. We find that the
number of friendship connections strongly influences the probability of being
gossiped. Finally, we discuss how the spread factor is able to be applied to
other situations.Comment: 10 pages, 16 figures, Revtex; Virt.J. of Biol. Phys., Oct.1 200
Growing Scale-Free Networks with Tunable Clustering
We extend the standard scale-free network model to include a ``triad
formation step''. We analyze the geometric properties of networks generated by
this algorithm both analytically and by numerical calculations, and find that
our model possesses the same characteristics as the standard scale-free
networks like the power-law degree distribution and the small average geodesic
length, but with the high-clustering at the same time. In our model, the
clustering coefficient is also shown to be tunable simply by changing a control
parameter - the average number of triad formation trials per time step.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Non-ergodicity of the motion in three dimensional steep repelling dispersing potentials
It is demonstrated numerically that smooth three degrees of freedom
Hamiltonian systems which are arbitrarily close to three dimensional strictly
dispersing billiards (Sinai billiards) have islands of effective stability, and
hence are non-ergodic. The mechanism for creating the islands are corners of
the billiard domain.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Chao
Network dynamics of ongoing social relationships
Many recent large-scale studies of interaction networks have focused on
networks of accumulated contacts. In this paper we explore social networks of
ongoing relationships with an emphasis on dynamical aspects. We find a
distribution of response times (times between consecutive contacts of different
direction between two actors) that has a power-law shape over a large range. We
also argue that the distribution of relationship duration (the time between the
first and last contacts between actors) is exponentially decaying. Methods to
reanalyze the data to compensate for the finite sampling time are proposed. We
find that the degree distribution for networks of ongoing contacts fits better
to a power-law than the degree distribution of the network of accumulated
contacts do. We see that the clustering and assortative mixing coefficients are
of the same order for networks of ongoing and accumulated contacts, and that
the structural fluctuations of the former are rather large.Comment: to appear in Europhys. Let
Disgust implicated in obsessive-compulsive disorder
Psychiatric classificatory systems consider obsessions and compulsions as forms of anxiety disorder. However, the neurology of diseases associated with obsessive-compulsive symptoms suggests the involvement of fronto-striatal regions likely to be involved in the mediation of the emotion of disgust, suggesting that dysfunctions of disgust should be considered alongside anxiety in the pathogenesis of obsessive-compulsive behaviours. We therefore tested recognition of facial expressions of basic emotions (including disgust) by groups of participants with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and with Gilles de la Tourette's syndrome (GTS) with and without co-present obsessive-compulsive behaviours (GTS with OCB; GTS without OCB). A group of people suffering from panic disorder and generalized anxiety were also included in the study. Both groups with obsessive-compulsive symptoms (OCD; GTS with OCB) showed impaired recognition of facial expressions of disgust. Such problems were not evident in participants with panic disorder and generalized anxiety, or for participants with GTS without obsessions or compulsions, indicating that the deficit is closely related to the presence of obsessive-compulsive symptoms. Participants with OCD were able to assign words to emotion categories without difficulty, showing that their problem with disgust is linked to a failure to recognize this emotion in others and not a comprehension or response criterion effect. Impaired recognition of disgust is consistent with the neurology of OCD and with the idea that abnormal experience of disgust may be involved in the genesis of obsessions and compulsions
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