3,057 research outputs found
Interaction effects of a child tax credit, national health insurance, and assured child support
If the government offered a refundable tax credit for children, national health insurance, and an assured child support benefit to all families with children - poor families as well as nonpoor families - what would happen to poverty, welfare dependency, and other related issues? The authors simulate the effects of each program operating on its own and of all three acting in concert. They find that the impacts of the programs interacting with one another would be much larger than the sum of the impacts produced by each program alone. With the three programs in place, the poverty rate would fall by 43 percent, the AFDC caseload would shrink by 22 percent, and the annual incomes of poor families would rise by $2500. In addition, AFDC recipients would work more hours. Data come from the 1987 Survey of Income and Program Participation.
Design Principles for Aqueous Interactive Materials: Lessons from Small Molecules and Stimuli-Responsive Systems.
Interactive materials are at the forefront of current materials research with few examples in the literature. Researchers are inspired by nature to develop materials that can modulate and adapt their behavior in accordance with their surroundings. Stimuli-responsive systems have been developed over the past decades which, although often described as "smart," lack the ability to act autonomously. Nevertheless, these systems attract attention on account of the resultant materials' ability to change their properties in a predicable manner. These materials find application in a plethora of areas including drug delivery, artificial muscles, etc. Stimuli-responsive materials are serving as the precursors for next-generation interactive materials. Interest in these systems has resulted in a library of well-developed chemical motifs; however, there is a fundamental gap between stimuli-responsive and interactive materials. In this perspective, current state-of-the-art stimuli-responsive materials are outlined with a specific emphasis on aqueous macroscopic interactive materials. Compartmentalization, critical for achieving interactivity, relies on hydrophobic, hydrophilic, supramolecular, and ionic interactions, which are commonly present in aqueous systems and enable complex self-assembly processes. Relevant examples of aqueous interactive materials that do exist are given, and design principles to realize the next generation of materials with embedded autonomous function are suggested.JAM thanks ESPRC for an IAA KTF
M is grateful for a Newton International Fellowship
OAS is thankful to ERC Consolidator Grant CAM-RI
Diagnosis and Decision-Making in Telemedicine
This article provides an analysis of the skills that health professionals and patients employ in reaching diagnosis and decision-making in telemedicine consultations. As governmental priorities continue to emphasize patient involvement in the management of their disease, there is an increasing need to accurately capture the providerâpatient interactions in clinical encounters. Drawing on conversation analysis of 10 video-mediated consultations in 3 National Health Service settings in England, this study examines the interaction between patients, General Practitioner (GPs), nurses, and consultants during diagnosis and decision-making, with the aim to identify the range of skills that participants use in the process and capture the interprofessional communication and patient involvement in the diagnosis and decision-making phases of telemedicine consultations. The analysis shows that teleconsultations enhance collaborative working among professionals and enable GPs and nurses to develop their skills and actively participate in diagnosis and decision-making by contributing primary careâspecific knowledge to the consultation. However, interprofessional interaction may result in limited patient involvement in decisionmaking. The findings of this study can be used to inform training programs in telemedicine that focus on the development of effective skills for professionals and the provision of information to patients
Child support reform: some analysis of the 1999 white paper
This paper uses a sample of lone mothers (and former lone mothers who are now repartnered) drawn from the 1997 Family Resources Survey to analyse the potential effects of reforming the UK system of Child Support. The main deficiency of the data is that non-resident fathers cannot be matched to the mothers in the data and this is overcome by exploiting information from another dataset which gives the joint distribution of the characteristics of separated parents. The effects of reforming the Child Support system is simulated for the amount of maintenance liabilities, the amount paid and the net incomes of households containing mothers with care and households containing non-resident fathers. The likely effects of the reform are simulated at various levels of compliance. The analysis highlights the need for further research into the incentive effects of Child Support on individual behaviour
Generation of finite wave trains in excitable media
Spatiotemporal control of excitable media is of paramount importance in the
development of new applications, ranging from biology to physics. To this end
we identify and describe a qualitative property of excitable media that enables
us to generate a sequence of traveling pulses of any desired length, using a
one-time initial stimulus. The wave trains are produced by a transient
pacemaker generated by a one-time suitably tailored spatially localized finite
amplitude stimulus, and belong to a family of fast pulse trains. A second
family, of slow pulse trains, is also present. The latter are created through a
clumping instability of a traveling wave state (in an excitable regime) and are
inaccessible to single localized stimuli of the type we use. The results
indicate that the presence of a large multiplicity of stable, accessible,
multi-pulse states is a general property of simple models of excitable media.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
The Conformal Penrose Limit and the Resolution of the pp-curvature Singularities
We consider the exact solutions of the supergravity theories in various
dimensions in which the space-time has the form M_{d} x S^{D-d} where M_{d} is
an Einstein space admitting a conformal Killing vector and S^{D-d} is a sphere
of an appropriate dimension. We show that, if the cosmological constant of
M_{d} is negative and the conformal Killing vector is space-like, then such
solutions will have a conformal Penrose limit: M^{(0)}_{d} x S^{D-d} where
M^{(0)}_{d} is a generalized d-dimensional AdS plane wave. We study the
properties of the limiting solutions and find that M^{(0)}_{d} has 1/4
supersymmetry as well as a Virasoro symmetry. We also describe how the
pp-curvature singularity of M^{(0)}_{d} is resolved in the particular case of
the D6-branes of D=10 type IIA supergravity theory. This distinguished case
provides an interesting generalization of the plane waves in D=11 supergravity
theory and suggests a duality between the SU(2) gauged d=8 supergravity of
Salam and Sezgin on M^{(0)}_{8} and the d=7 ungauged supergravity theory on its
pp-wave boundary.Comment: 20 pages, LaTeX; typos corrected, journal versio
BotSwindler: Tamper Resistant Injection of Believable Decoys in VM-Based Hosts for Crimeware Detection
We introduce BotSwindler, a bait injection system designed to delude and detect crimeware by forcing it to reveal during the exploitation of monitored information. The implementation of BotSwindler relies upon an out-of-host software agent that drives user-like interactions in a virtual machine, seeking to convince malware residing within the guest OS that it has captured legitimate credentials. To aid in the accuracy and realism of the simulations, we propose a low overhead approach, called virtual machine verification, for verifying whether the guest OS is in one of a predefined set of states. We present results from experiments with real credential-collecting malware that demonstrate the injection of monitored financial bait for detecting compromises. Additionally, using a computational analysis and a user study, we illustrate the believability of the simulations and we demonstrate that they are sufficiently human-like. Finally, we provide results from performance measurements to show our approach does not impose a performance burden
Winterâspring warming in the North Atlantic during the last 2000Â years: evidence from southwest Iceland
Temperature reconstructions from the Northern Hemisphere (NH)
generally indicate cooling over the Holocene, which is often attributed to
decreasing summer insolation. However, climate model simulations predict
that rising atmospheric CO2 concentrations and the collapse of the
Laurentide Ice Sheet caused mean annual warming during this epoch. This
contrast could reflect a seasonal bias in temperature proxies, and
particularly a lack of proxies that record cold (late fallâearly spring)
season temperatures, or inaccuracies in climate model predictions of NH
temperature. We reconstructed winterâspring temperatures during the Common
Era (i.e., the last 2000Â years) using alkenones, lipids produced by
Isochrysidales haptophyte algae that bloom during spring ice-out, preserved
in sediments from Vestra GĂslholtsvatn (VGHV), southwest Iceland. Our
record indicates that winterâspring temperatures warmed during the last
2000Â years, in contrast to most NH averages. Sensitivity tests with a lake
energy balance model suggest that warmer winter and spring air temperatures
result in earlier ice-out dates and warmer spring lake water temperatures and therefore warming in our proxy record. Regional air temperatures are
strongly influenced by sea surface temperatures during the winter and spring
season. Sea surface temperatures (SSTs) respond to both changes in ocean circulation and gradual
changes in insolation. We also found distinct seasonal differences in
centennial-scale, cold-season temperature variations in VGHV compared to
existing records of summer and annual temperatures from Iceland.
Multi-decadal to centennial-scale changes in winterâspring temperatures were
strongly modulated by internal climate variability and changes in regional
ocean circulation, which can result in winter and spring warming in Iceland
even after a major negative radiative perturbation.</p
A generalized Tullock contest
We construct a generalized Tullock contest under complete information where contingent upon winning or losing, the payoff of a player is a linear function of prizes, own effort, and the effort of the rival. This structure nests a number of existing contests in the literature and can be used to analyze new types of contests. We characterize the unique symmetric equilibrium and show that small parameter modifications may lead to substantially different types of contests and hence different equilibrium effort levels
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