197 research outputs found
Panel discussion: inflation targeting
Monetary policy ; Banks and banking, Central ; European Central Bank
On the new economic philosophy of crisis management in the European Union
This essay attempts to go beyond presenting the bits and pieces of still ongoing crisis management in the EU. Instead it attempts at finding the âred threadâ behind a series of politically improvised decisions. Our fundamental research question asks whether basic economic lessons learned in the 1970s are still valid. Namely, that a crises emanating from either structural or regulatory weaknesses cannot and should not be remedied by demand management. Our second research question is the following: Can lacking internal commitment and conviction in any member state be replaced or substituted by external pressure or formalized procedures and sanctions? Under those angles we analyze the project on establishing a fiscal and banking union in the EU, as approved by the Council in December 2012
Long-range transfer of electron-phonon coupling in oxide superlattices
The electron-phonon interaction is of central importance for the electrical
and thermal properties of solids, and its influence on superconductivity,
colossal magnetoresistance, and other many-body phenomena in
correlated-electron materials is currently the subject of intense research.
However, the non-local nature of the interactions between valence electrons and
lattice ions, often compounded by a plethora of vibrational modes, present
formidable challenges for attempts to experimentally control and theoretically
describe the physical properties of complex materials. Here we report a Raman
scattering study of the lattice dynamics in superlattices of the
high-temperature superconductor and the
colossal-magnetoresistance compound that suggests
a new approach to this problem. We find that a rotational mode of the MnO
octahedra in experiences pronounced
superconductivity-induced lineshape anomalies, which scale linearly with the
thickness of the layers over a remarkably long range of
several tens of nanometers. The transfer of the electron-phonon coupling
between superlattice layers can be understood as a consequence of long-range
Coulomb forces in conjunction with an orbital reconstruction at the interface.
The superlattice geometry thus provides new opportunities for controlled
modification of the electron-phonon interaction in complex materials.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures. Revised version to be published in Nature
Material
Developmental perspectives on Europe
The crisis of 2008â2009 has ended, stockmarkets skyrocketed in 2012â2013, while growth of the real sector remained sluggish in Europe. This article attempts to explain the latter puzzle. Analyzing long term factors, the costs of short-termism in crisis management become obvious. The limitations of EU as a growth engine are highlighted
Expression of nuclear retinoid receptors in normal, premalignant and malignant gastric tissues determined by in situ hybridization
[[abstract]]Retinoids exhibit multiple functions through interaction with nuclear retinoid receptors and have growth-suppressive activity on gastric cancer cells. To better understand the roles of nuclear retinoid receptors during gastric carcinogenesis, we have used in situ hybridization to investigate expression of retinoic acid receptors (RARs) and retinoid x receptors (RXRs) in premalignant and malignant formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded gastric tissues. Histological sections of eight normal, 17 distal normal and nine gastric cancer tissues were hybridized with non-radioactive RNA probes for subtypes of RAR and RXR. Expression of RARα, RARÎČ, RARÎł, RXRα and RXRÎČ was found in most cell types in gastric mucosa tissues from normal individuals as well as in distal normal tissues from cancer patients. Expression of RARα and RARÎČ were found in three and seven cancer tissues, respectively, and levels of RXRα mRNA were significantly decreased in poorly differentiated cancer tissues. Among the five investigated nuclear retinoid receptors, only expression of RARα mRNA was significantly decreased in intestinal metaplasia, dysplasia and cancer tissues when compared to adjacent normal tissues. In conclusion, normal gastric mucosa expressed both RARs and RXRs, which supports the physiological role of retinoic acid on normal gastric mucosa. The decrease in RARα expression in premalignant and malignant gastric tissues suggests a significant role of RARα during gastric carcinogenesis.[[notice]]èŁæŁćźçą[[incitationindex]]SC
Genomic profiling identifies common HPV-associated chromosomal alterations in squamous cell carcinomas of cervix and head and neck
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>It is well known that a persistent infection with high-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) is causally involved in the development of squamous cell carcinomas of the uterine cervix (CxSCCs) and a subset of SCCs of the head and neck (HNSCCs). The latter differ from hrHPV-negative HNSCCs at the clinical and molecular level.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>To determine whether hrHPV-associated SCCs arising from different organs have specific chromosomal alterations in common, we compared genome-wide chromosomal profiles of 10 CxSCCs (all hrHPV-positive) with 12 hrHPV-positive HNSCCs and 30 hrHPV-negative HNSCCs. Potential organ-specific alterations and alterations shared by SCCs in general were investigated as well.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Unsupervised hierarchical clustering resulted in one mainly hrHPV-positive and one mainly hrHPV-negative cluster. Interestingly, loss at 13q and gain at 20q were frequent in HPV-positive carcinomas of both origins, but uncommon in hrHPV-negative HNSCCs, indicating that these alterations are associated with hrHPV-mediated carcinogenesis. Within the group of hrHPV-positive carcinomas, HNSCCs more frequently showed gains of multiple regions at 8q whereas CxSCCs more often showed loss at 17p. Finally, gains at 3q24-29 and losses at 11q22.3-25 were frequent (>50%) in all sample groups.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>In this study hrHPV-specific, organ-specific, and pan-SCC chromosomal alterations were identified. The existence of hrHPV-specific alterations in SCCs of different anatomical origin, suggests that these alterations are crucial for hrHPV-mediated carcinogenesis.</p
Finance as âbizarre bazaarâ: using documents as a source of ethnographic knowledge
Markets and finance have long attracted ethnographic interest but the nature of their activity
-
opaque,
secretive, and increasingly placeless
â
precludes traditional ethnographic fieldwork. In this paper we
propose documents as an
alternative access point to these organisations as an ethnographic object of
enquiry. Documents do not only present a written record, they also enact relationships and encode
tacit understandings. We develop Geertzâs work on the bazaar by taking an indire
ct route to access
the field site
â
Collateral Debt Obligations
â
through documents. In reading these documents, we
assume the position of investors who, in the absence of alternative publicly available information, are
dependent on the documentary accounts
made available to them by the sellers. These media act in
ways that are similar to tourist guidebooks, a comparison we use to reframe the exchange as one that
builds upon sociocultural relations rather than the abstract market relationships described by
m
ainstream economists. We propose that these documents are not merely representational artefacts
of the organisation, but serve to establish and maintain social relationships between buyers and
sellers through the management, standardisation and ritualisati
on of information disclosed to the
investor
- âŠ