1,022 research outputs found

    Capital Punishment - The Issues and the Evidence

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    Report On The Acculturation Of Potential World Class Research Programmes At Usm.

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    1. Introduction 1.1 The Vice Chancellor outlined his vision that USM will be · a research-based teaching university, working towards world class research and academic programmes. To this end he appointed a professorial committee comprising five senior professors to conduct an in-dept audit and submit a report for further action. 1.2 A world class programme is taken to mean a programme which appears to be at the cutting edge of scientific and/or technological discovery generating innovative high impact products or scholarly activity. 1.3 The move towards making USM a world class university is by transforming USM into a research-intensified university. 2. Terms of Reference 2.1 The Committee was responsible for assessing submitted programmes for impact and sustainability of research activities and also to identify programmes which have potential to be nurtured as world class programmes. 2.2 The Committee considered teaching and research as the two major functions of the university. But for the purposes of this report the Committee will focus only on research activities. 3. Criteria for Excellence 3.1 The Committee Identified two major criteria that world class programmes have to fulfill : sustainability and impacl 3.2 In order to be sustainable the programme must have: a sufficient human resources with critical mass and generation cohorts, b research funds from multiple sources and continuing programmes, c physical facilities including buildings, laboratories, equipment and support resources, d networking within USM and externally with other research institutions. 3.3 The impdCt of research was assessed on: a publications b patents/! P/products/copyrights c training and technology transfer d consultancy e policy and regulatory implications f awards and honour

    Cutting the Electric Bill for Internet-Scale Systems

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    Energy expenses are becoming an increasingly important fraction of data center operating costs. At the same time, the energy expense per unit of computation can vary significantly between two different locations. In this paper, we characterize the variation due to fluctuating electricity prices and argue that existing distributed systems should be able to exploit this variation for significant economic gains. Electricity prices exhibit both temporal and geographic variation, due to regional demand differences, transmission inefficiencies, and generation diversity. Starting with historical electricity prices, for twenty nine locations in the US, and network traffic data collected on Akamai's CDN, we use simulation to quantify the possible economic gains for a realistic workload. Our results imply that existing systems may be able to save millions of dollars a year in electricity costs, by being cognizant of locational computation cost differences.NokiaNational Science Foundatio

    「中国ビジネス最前線視察団」に参加して

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    1.はじめに 2. 旅程 3. テレビ番組 4. 上海および広州の水 5. 中国で活躍する日本企業 6. おわりに

    Present and Future CP Measurements

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    We review theoretical and experimental results on CP violation summarizing the discussions in the working group on CP violation at the UK phenomenology workshop 2000 in Durham.Comment: 104 pages, Latex, to appear in Journal of Physics

    The political economy of the disability insurance: theory and evidence of gubernatorial learning

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    Abstract The dramatic rise in the disability insurance (DI) rolls in the last 20 years has been the subject of much controversy. While the relationship between DI and labor force participation has been the subject of a growing literature, the mechanism of this transition from employment to DI remains unclear. We hypothesize that one mechanism is the state-level administration of the program which creates a classic principal-agent problem. We analyze the conflict of interests for Disability Determination Services agencies between Social Security Administration (SSA) standards and state gubernatorial political interests interacted with the increased demand for disability insurance as an alternative for low-skilled employment during the period of 1982 to 2013. We find evidence that multi-term governors allow a greater fraction of applicants than do first-term governors, but only up to year 2000, when allowance rates started to decrease over time. We develop a model that illustrates how these differences can be due to the type of monitoring conducted by the SSA. We provide additional evidence supporting this hypothesis analyzing how the effects interact with economic and political constraints. JEL codes H55, I18, I38, G22</jats:p

    Following the impact factor: Utilitarianism or academic compliance?

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    The use of impact factors has grown substantially in academia and publishing far beyond their original intended use. They are now used extensively in academic and research assessments as well as in the promotion of journals, publishers, institutions and individuals. The implications of such metricisation for understandings of research quality are discussed as well as for research strategies, the commercialisation of academic publishing, the disciplining of academic knowledge and publishing strategies, knowledge development and the further neoliberalisation of higher education. The paradoxes and problems of current and potential future directions are discussed including with respect to the development of open access publications

    Health Research Profile to assess the capacity of low and middle income countries for equity-oriented research

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    BACKGROUND: The Commission on Health Research for Development concluded that "for the most vulnerable people, the benefits of research offer a potential for change that has gone largely untapped." This project was designed to assess low and middle income country capacity and commitment for equity-oriented research. METHODS: A multi-disciplinary team with coordinators from each of four regions (Asia, Latin America, Africa and Central and Eastern Europe) developed a questionnaire through consensus meetings using a mini-Delphi technique. Indicators were selected based on their quality, validity, comprehensiveness, feasibility and relevance to equity. Indicators represented five categories that form the Health Research Profile (HRP): 1) Research priorities; 2) Resources (amount spent on research); 3) Production of knowledge (capacity); 4) Packaging of knowledge and 5) Evidence of research impact on policy and equity. We surveyed three countries from each region. RESULTS: Most countries reported explicit national health research priorities. Of these, half included specific research priorities to address inequities in health. Data on financing were lacking for most countries due to inadequate centralized collection of this information. The five main components of HRP showed a gradient where countries scoring lower on the Human Development Index (HDI) had a lower capacity to conduct research to meet local health research needs. Packaging such as peer-reviewed journals and policy forums were reported by two thirds of the countries. Seven out of 12 countries demonstrated impact of health research on policies and reported engagement of stakeholders in this process. CONCLUSION: Only one out of 12 countries indicated there was research on all fronts of the equity debate. Knowledge sharing and management is needed to strengthen within-country capacity for research and implementation to reduce inequities in health. We recommend that all countries (and external agencies) should invest more in building a certain minimum level of national capacity for equity-oriented research
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