4,084 research outputs found

    Sale by Owner at Lower Price

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    Sale by Owner at Lower Price

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    The Slip and Fall Case in Montana and the Doctrine of Constructive Notice as Applied in Accidents in the Supermarket

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    The Slip and Fall Case in Montana and the Doctrine of Constructive Notice as Applied in Accidents in the Supermarke

    Joint Adventure or Joint Enterprise—Two Theories of Vicarious Liability

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    The Use of Gruesome Photographs in Criminal and Civil Cases in Montana

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    The Slip and Fall Case in Montana and the Doctrine of Constructive Notice as Applied in Accidents in the Supermarket

    Get PDF
    The Slip and Fall Case in Montana and the Doctrine of Constructive Notice as Applied in Accidents in the Supermarke

    Nest sanitation behavior does not increase the likelihood of parasitic egg rejection in herring gulls

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    Birds’ behavioral response to brood parasitism can be influenced not only by evolution but also by context and individual experience. This could include nest sanitation, in which birds remove debris from their nests. Ultimately, nest sanitation behavior might be an evolutionary precursor to the rejection of parasitic eggs. Proximately, the context or experience of performing nest sanitation behavior might increase the detection or prime the removal of parasitic eggs, but evidence to date is limited. We tested incubation-stage nests of herring gulls Larus argentatus to ask whether nest sanitation increased parasitic egg rejection. In an initial set of 160 single-object experiments, small, red, blocky objects were usually rejected (18 of 20 nests), whereas life-sized, 3D-printed herring gull eggs were not rejected whether red (0 of 20) or the olive-tan base color of herring gull eggs (0 of 20). Next, we simultaneously presented a red, 3D-printed gull egg and a small, red block. These nests exhibited frequent nest sanitation (small, red block removed at 40 of 48 nests), but egg rejection remained uncommon (5 of those 40) and not significantly different from control nests (5 of 49) which received the parasitic egg but not the priming object. Thus, performance of nest sanitation did not shape individuals’ responses to parasitism. Interestingly, parents were more likely to reject the parasitic egg when they were present as we approached the nest to add the experimental objects. Depending on the underlying mechanism, this could also be a case of experience creating variation in responses to parasitism

    A single structured light beam as an atomic cloud splitter

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    We propose a scheme to split a cloud of cold non-interacting neutral atoms based on their dipole interaction with a single structured light beam which exhibits parabolic cylindrical symmetry. Using semiclassical numerical simulations, we establish a direct relationship between the general properties of the light beam and the relevant geometric and kinematic properties acquired by the atomic cloud as its passes through the beam.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
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