7,260 research outputs found
Paintings and their implicit presuppositions : a preliminary report
In a series of earlier papers (Social Science Working Papers 350, 355. 357) we have studied the ways in which differences in "implicit presupposi tions" (i. e •• differences in world views) cause scientists and historians to reach differing conclusions from a consideration of the same evidence. In this paper we show that paintings are characterized by implicit presuppositions similar to those that characterize the written materials -- essays, letters, scientific papers -- we have already studied
Paintings and their implicit presuppositions: High Renaissance and Mannerism
All art historians who are interested in questions of "styles" or "schools" agree in identifying a High Renaissance school of Italian
painting. There is, however, a disagreement, which has seemed nonterminating, regarding Mannerism: Is it another distinct school or
is it merely a late development of the Renaissance school? We believe that this disagreement can be terminated by distinguishing questions of
fact about paintings from questions about the definitions of schools. To this end we have had two representative subsets of paintings--one
earlier, one later--rated on four of the dimensions of implicit presuppositions that we have introduced in other Working Papers. When
the paintings are scaled in this way a very distinct profile emerges for the earlier, or Renaissance, paintings. In contrast, the later, or
Mannerist, paintings are so heterogeneous that we conclude that they are best described as deviations from the Renaissance profile, rather
than a separate school. These results are not unimportant--at least for art historians. But they are more important methodologically
inasmuch as the procedures applied here can be used in classifying and distinguishing from one another all kind of cultural products
An investigation of co-movements among the growth rates of the G-7 countries
Early in 2000, after a decade of economic expansion, growth began to slow simultaneously in the large, advanced economies known as the Group of Seven (G-7)--Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The general slide in GDP growth fueled speculation that a period was emerging in which broad movements in the economies of the industrialized countries would be more closely linked. Proponents of this view argued that greater trade in goods and financial markets was leading to a greater synchronization of national economies. A rise in the co-movement of GDP among countries would have important implications for the making of national economic policies. Governments, for example, would need to take closer account of forecasts for conditions abroad in formulating forecasts for their domestic economies. The authors find, first, that the degree to which enhanced trade and financial linkages might be expected to increase the co-movement, or correlation, of economic growth among countries is far from clear. Then, examining the period from 1970 to the first quarter of 2002, the authors find that, indeed, the estimated correlation of growth across the G-7 has been higher in the current downturn than during the expansion of the 1990s. Rather than signaling a future of permanently higher synchronization, however, the rise is shown to be typical of business cycles over the past thirty years. Furthermore, estimates of correlation have not yet reached the peaks attained after earlier recessions. Overall, despite many changes in the international economy, the evidence does not reveal the arrival of a permanently higher correlation of growth rates among the G-7.Group of Seven countries ; Economic development
Constancy of Expression of the Protein Kinase A Regulatory Subunit Rla in Hepatoma Cell Lines of Different Phenotypes
Viking '75 spacecraft design and test summary. Volume 1: Lander design
The Viking Mars program is summarized. The design of the Viking lander spacecraft is described
Finite time St\"uckelberg interferometry with nanomechanical modes
St\"uckelberg interferometry describes the interference of two strongly
coupled modes during a double passage through an avoided energy level crossing.
In this work, we experimentally investigate finite time effects in
St\"uckelberg interference and provide an exact analytical solution of the
St\"uckelberg problem. Approximating this solution in distinct limits reveals
uncharted parameter regimes of St\"uckelberg interferometry. Experimentally, we
study these regimes using a purely classical, strongly coupled nanomechanical
two-mode system of high quality factor. The classical two-mode system consists
of the in-plane and out-of-plane fundamental flexural mode of a high stress
silicon nitride string resonator, coupled via electric gradient fields. The
dielectric control and microwave cavity enhanced universal transduction of the
nanoelectromechanical system allows for the experimental access to all
theoretically predicted St\"uckelberg parameter regimes. We exploit our
experimental and theoretical findings by studying the onset of St\"uckelberg
interference in dependence of the characteristic system control parameters and
obtain characteristic excitation oscillations between the two modes even
without the explicit need of traversing the avoided crossing. The presented
theory is not limited to classical mechanical two-mode systems but can be
applied to every strongly coupled (quantum) two-level system, for example a
spin-1/2 system or superconducting qubit
Design of a low cost earth resources system
The author has identified the following significant results. Survey results indicated that users of remote sensing data in the Southeastern U.S. were increasingly turning to digital processing techniques. All the states surveyed have had some involvement in projects using digitally processed data. Even those states which do not yet have in-house capabilities for digital processing were extremely interested in and were planning to develop such capabilities
Experimental Studies of the NaCs 53Π0 and a3Σ+ States
We report high resolution measurements of 372 NaCs 53Π0(v, J) ro-vibrational level energies in the range 0 ≤ v ≤ 22. The data have been used to construct NaCs 53Π0 potential energy curves using the Rydberg–Klein-Rees and inverted perturbation approximation methods. Bound-free 53Π0(v, J) → 1(a)3Σ+ emission has also been measured, and is used to determine the repulsive wall of the 1(a)3Σ+ state and the 53Π0 → 1(a)3Σ+ relative transition dipole moment function. Hyperfine structure in the 53Π0 state has not been observed in this experiment. This null result is explained using a simple vector coupling model
Viking '75 spacecraft design and test summary. Volume 3: Engineering test summary
The engineering test program for the lander and the orbiter are presented. The engineering program was developed to achieve confidence that the design was adequate to survive the expected mission environments and to accomplish the mission objective
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