9,463 research outputs found
The Lobbying Bill is a missed opportunity
In response to recent lobbying scandals, the government has introduced the Transparency of Lobbying, Non-party Campaigning and Trade Union Administration Bill, which had its first reading in Parliament earlier this month. The Bill seeks to introduce a register of consultant lobbyists and deals with issues relating to election finance. Robert Barrington, Executive Director of Transparency International UK, sets out his views
Device for measuring light scattering wherein the measuring beam is successively reflected between a pair of parallel reflectors Patent
Coherent light beam device and method for measuring gas density in vacuum chamber
Instantaneous monitoring of multicomponent expired gases
Expired air analyzers with time-of-flight and magnetic deflection mass spectrometers for spacecraft us
Measurement of upper atmosphere helium profile Final report
Mass spectrometer for measuring helium and hydrogen profiles in upper atmosphere, to be used with Javelin sounding rocke
Veblen goods and neighbourhoods: endogenising consumption reference groups
One of the significant developments in the last four decades of economics is the growing empirical evidence that individual consumption preferences, as mea- sured by self-reported life satisfaction, are neither fixed nor self-centred but are instead overwhelmingly dominated by externalities, partly in the form of reference levels set by others and by one’s own experience. Welfare analysis recognising this fact is likely to indicate enormous revisions for macroeconomic policy and social objectives as well as for what is taught in economics at all levels. Yet the task of constructing general equilibrium models based on this microeconomic re- ality is still in its infancy. In this work I take the conventional stance that decision makers understand their own utility function. Therefore, they can choose the mi- lieu in which they immerse themselves with the sophisticated understanding that it will affect their own consumption reference levels and therefore the degree of satisfaction they derive from their private consumption. At the same time, their private consumption will help to set the reference level for others in their chosen group. I treat theoretically the problem of such endogenous formation of consump- tion reference groups in the context of a simultaneous choice of neighbourhoods and home consumption amongst a heterogenous population. For both discrete and continuous distributions of types, I find general equilibrium outcomes in which differentiation of neighbourhoods occurs endogenously and I compare the welfare implications of growth in such economies.reference income; veblen goods; consumption reference groups; club goods
Sorption vacuum trap Patent
Describing sorption vacuum trap having housing with group of reentrant wall portions projecting into internal gas-pervious container filled with gas and vapor sorbent materia
Sorption vacuum trap
Modified sorption trap for use in high vacuum systems contains provisions for online regeneration of sorbent material. Trap is so constructed that it has a number of encapsulated resistance heaters and a valving and pumping device for removing gases from heated sorbing material. Excessive downtime is eliminated with this trap
Effects of oral creatine supplementation on high intensity, intermittent exercise performance in competitive squash players
The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of oral creatine supplementation on high intensity, intermittent exercise performance in competitive squash players. Nine squash players (mean ± SEM V˙O2max = 61.9 ± 2.1ml · kg-1 · min-1; body mass = 73 ± 3 kg) performed an on-court “ghosting” routine that involved 10 sets of 2 repetitions of simulated positional play, each set interspersed with 30 s passive recovery. A double blind, crossover design was utilised whereby experimental and control groups supplemented 4 times daily for 5 d with 0.075 g · kg-1 body mass of creatine monohydrate and maltodextrine, respectively, and a 4 wk washout period separated the crossover of treatments. The experimental group improved mean set sprint time by 3.2 ± 0.8 % over and above the changes noted for the control group (P = 0.004 and 95 % Cl = 1.4 to 5.1 %). Sets 2 to 10 were completed in a significantly shorter time following creatine supplementation compared to the placebo condition (P < 0.05). In conclusion, these data support existing evidence that creatine supplementation improves high intensity, intermittent exercise performance. In addition, the present study provides new evidence that oral creatine supplementation improves exercise performance in competitive squash players
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