94 research outputs found

    Basic Concepts in Understanding Recovery of Function in Vestibular Reflex Networks during Vestibular Compensation

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    Unilateral peripheral vestibular lesions produce a syndrome of oculomotor and postural deficits with the symptoms at rest, the static symptoms, partially or completely normalizing shortly after the lesion due to a process known as vestibular compensation. The symptoms are thought to result from changes in the activity of vestibular sensorimotor reflexes. Since the vestibular nuclei must be intact for recovery to occur, many investigations have focused on studying these neurons after lesions. At present, the neuronal plasticity underlying early recovery from the static symptoms is not fully understood. Here we propose that knowledge of the reflex identity and input–output connections of the recorded neurons is essential to link the responses to animal behavior. We further propose that the cellular mechanisms underlying vestibular compensation can be sorted out by characterizing the synaptic responses and time course for change in morphologically defined subsets of vestibular reflex projection neurons. Accordingly, this review focuses on the perspective gained by performing electrophysiological and immunolabeling studies on a specific subset of morphologically defined, glutamatergic vestibular reflex projection neurons, the principal cells of the chick tangential nucleus. Reference is made to pertinent findings from other studies on vestibular nuclei neurons, but no comprehensive review of the literature is intended since broad reviews already exist. From recording excitatory and inhibitory spontaneous synaptic activity in principal cells, we find that the rebalancing of excitatory synaptic drive bilaterally is essential for vestibular compensation to proceed. This work is important for it defines for the first time the excitatory and inhibitory nature of the changing synaptic inputs and the time course for changes in a morphologically defined subset of vestibular reflex projection neurons during early stages of vestibular compensation

    Spooked

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    There’s always something a bit scary about a ghost story. Somehow, though, when you read a collection of them you’re expecting to meet a spook or two. It takes a little more effort to frighten the reader. We hope we’ve managed to do just that with this bunch of tales and our striking cover. We hope as well you’ll find the stories as different from each other as they are from the normal ghost story. You’ll come across some old friends amongst the authors in this volume. Bridge House is beginning to es-tablish a brand and we have several writers now who have the measure of what we’re looking for. You’ll also meet some new names and writing styles. We’re sure both will please. And now to the ghosts…. They too have a life of their own … precisely drawn by our authors. It’s that time of year isn’t it? When the nights are getting longer, the days are getting shorter, when strange shadows lurk and you begin to hear noises you don’t understand. We have traditional ghosts, more subtle ghosts, naughty ghosts, nice ghost, nasty ghost and in one or two of our stories it’s a little difficult to work out who is haunting whom. Stoke up the fire, sit back, enjoy and prepare to be: Spooked

    Privatization and State Capacity in Postcommunist Society

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    Economists have used cross-national regression analysis to argue that postcommunist economic failure is the result of inadequate adherence liberal economic policies. Sociologists have relied on case study data to show that postcommunist economic failure is the outcome of too close adherence to liberal policy recommendations, which has led to an erosion of state effectiveness, and thus produced poor economic performance. The present paper advances a version of this statist theory based on a quantitative analysis of mass privatization programs in the postcommunist world. We argue that rapid large-scale privatization creates severe supply and demand shocks for enterprises, thereby inducing firm failure. The resulting erosion of tax revenues leads to a fiscal crisis for the state, and severely weakens its capacity and bureaucratic character. This, in turn, reacts back on the enterprise sector, as the state can no longer support the institutions necessary for the effective functioning of a modern economy, thus resulting in deindustrialization. Using cross-national regression techniques we find that the implementation of mass privatization programs negatively impacts measures of economic growth, state capacity and the security of property rights.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/40192/3/wp806.pd

    ‘Down with communism – Power to the people’: The legacies of 1989 and beyond

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    This special issue brings together reflections on the thirtieth anniversary of the revolutions of 1989 and considers their consequences for our understandings of European and global society. What seemed for some at least the surprising and rapid collapse of Eastern European state socialism prompted rethinking in social theory about the potential for emancipatory politics and new modes of social and political organization. At the same time, there was increased reflection on the nature of varieties of capitalism and the meaning of socialism beyond the failure of at least its etatist and autarkic mode. The five articles here and the editors’ introduction address themes such as utopian hopes, civil society, the transformation of Europe, the world beyond 1989, and new configurations of power and conflict

    Russia’s Legal Transitions: Marxist Theory, Neoclassical Economics and the Rule of Law

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    We review the role of economic theory in shaping the process of legal change in Russia during the two transitions it experienced during the course of the twentieth century: the transition to a socialist economy organised along the lines of state ownership of the means of production in the 1920s, and the transition to a market economy which occurred after the fall of the Soviet Union in the 1990s. Despite differences in methodology and in policy implications, Marxist theory, dominant in the 1920s, and neoclassical economics, dominant in the 1990s, offered a similarly reductive account of law as subservient to wider economic forces. In both cases, the subordinate place accorded to law undermined the transition process. Although path dependence and history are frequently invoked to explain the limited development of the rule of law in Russia during the 1990s, policy choices driven by a deterministic conception of law and economics also played a role.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40803-015-0012-

    Historical Research Approaches to the Analysis of Internationalisation

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    Historical research methods and approaches can improve understanding of the most appropriate techniques to confront data and test theories in internationalisation research. A critical analysis of all “texts” (sources), time series analyses, comparative methods across time periods and space, counterfactual analysis and the examination of outliers are shown to have the potential to improve research practices. Examples and applications are shown in these key areas of research with special reference to internationalisation processes. Examination of these methods allows us to see internationalisation processes as a sequenced set of decisions in time and space, path dependent to some extent but subject to managerial discretion. Internationalisation process research can benefit from the use of historical research methods in analysis of sources, production of time-lines, using comparative evidence across time and space and in the examination of feasible alternative choices

    The role of accounting information in the management of winery SMEs: a review of the broader existing literature and its implications for Australia's wine industry

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    PURPOSE This paper argues that our current lack of understanding about the management accounting practices of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) is of particular relevance to the Australian wine industry because industry conditions are such that management accounting information can be expected to be of significant importance. DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: A review of existing knowledge as detailed in the management accounting literature is provided, with methodological concerns and theoretical inconsistencies highlighted. FINDINGS The management accounting practices of Australian SME wineries are yet to be explored. As a body, literature addressing the role of management accounting in the management of SMEs is contradictory and lacking synthesis. Paradigm related issues have been identified as a significant driver of contradictory findings, and other practical considerations have also been implicated. There is a clear need for further research to clarify, synthesise and extend current knowledge. PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS Our lack of knowledge about the role that accounting information plays in the management of SMEs is of important practical relevance to the Australian wine industry because industry level stakeholders are engaged in initiatives to support and develop the business management practices of SMEs, and it is possible that such initiatives are based on invalid assumptions about how and why SMEs make use of management accounting information.Melanie Reddaway, Steve Goodman and Chris Grave

    Overview of Air Traffic Control Using an SIMD COTS System

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    https://kent-islandora.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/node/17410/87337-thumbnail.jpgAir traffic control is an important application with demanding real-time database processing requirements. Systems that have been implemented using current approaches have typically been expensive, late, over-budget and have not performed up to specification. In part this is because, in attempting to meet the real-time requirements, developers have been driven to use complex algorithms and software for what are inherently relatively simple requirements. Our analysis indicates that the use of modern SIMD COTS systems enables guaranteed real-time performance to be achieved with simpler algorithms on modest amounts of hardware. This paper covers the system, the approach to the application and some of the solution details.</p
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