195 research outputs found

    No Such Thing as ‘Attorney Estoppel’: Ethical Conflicts and Attorney Prior Publications

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    Law school graduates today are increasingly freighted with Internet-accessible and readily searchable publication records. Can these publications create actionable conflicts of interest for attorneys later on? Assessing the relevance of attorney publications requires balancing clients’ entitlement to adequate and zealous representation against the rights of lawyers to express opinions and participate freely in social discourse. The Model Rules offer little guidance, and academics have largely skirted the issue. This paper presents the Publication Conflicts test, a framework for inquiry to assess the impact of prior publications. Then, informed by interviews with judges, ethics experts, law professors and practitioners, this paper presents the view that in general, an attorney’s prior publications lie outside the ‘bounded exclusivity’ that attorneys owe their clients, and thus, do not amount to meaningful conflicts of interest

    Uncovering trends in gene naming

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    A survey of unusual gene names reveals trends underlying their choice

    Genomic analysis of insertion behavior and target specificity of mini-Tn7 and Tn3 transposons in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

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    Transposons are widely employed as tools for gene disruption. Ideally, they should display unbiased insertion behavior, and incorporate readily into any genomic DNA to which they are exposed. However, many transposons preferentially insert at specific nucleotide sequences. It is unclear to what extent such bias affects their usefulness as mutagenesis tools. Here, we examine insertion site specificity and global insertion behavior of two mini-transposons previously used for large-scale gene disruption in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: Tn3 and Tn7. Using an expanded set of insertion data, we confirm that Tn3 displays marked preference for the AT-rich 5 bp consensus site TA[A/T]TA, whereas Tn7 displays negligible target site preference. On a genome level, both transposons display marked non-uniform insertion behavior: certain sites are targeted far more often than expected, and both distributions depart drastically from Poisson. Thus, to compare their insertion behavior on a genome level, we developed a windowed Kolmogorov–Smirnov (K–S) test to analyze transposon insertion distributions in sequence windows of various sizes. We find that when scored in large windows (>300 bp), both Tn3 and Tn7 distributions appear uniform, whereas in smaller windows, Tn7 appears uniform while Tn3 does not. Thus, both transposons are effective tools for gene disruption, but Tn7 does so with less duplication and a more uniform distribution, better approximating the behavior of the ideal transposon

    Broadening the Scope of Nanopublications

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    In this paper, we present an approach for extending the existing concept of nanopublications --- tiny entities of scientific results in RDF representation --- to broaden their application range. The proposed extension uses English sentences to represent informal and underspecified scientific claims. These sentences follow a syntactic and semantic scheme that we call AIDA (Atomic, Independent, Declarative, Absolute), which provides a uniform and succinct representation of scientific assertions. Such AIDA nanopublications are compatible with the existing nanopublication concept and enjoy most of its advantages such as information sharing, interlinking of scientific findings, and detailed attribution, while being more flexible and applicable to a much wider range of scientific results. We show that users are able to create AIDA sentences for given scientific results quickly and at high quality, and that it is feasible to automatically extract and interlink AIDA nanopublications from existing unstructured data sources. To demonstrate our approach, a web-based interface is introduced, which also exemplifies the use of nanopublications for non-scientific content, including meta-nanopublications that describe other nanopublications.Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the 10th Extended Semantic Web Conference (ESWC 2013
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