79 research outputs found
Differences in socioeconomic and gender inequalities in tobacco smoking in Denmark and Sweden; a cross sectional comparison of the equity effect of different public health policies
The Importance of Two-Sided Heterogeneity for the Cyclicality of Labour Market Dynamics
Strategic Use of Analytical Information in Transport Planning in China: How Is It Different from Western Democracies?
Making better use of information to drive improvement in local public services: A report for the Audit Commission
This report on making better use of information to drive improvement in local public services was commissioned from the School of Public Policy at the University of Birmingham, by the Audit Commission. It explores how decision makers use information when making decisions. These decision makers can be politicians, top managers, operational managers, planners etc. The focus of this report is not on the use of performance indicators sensu stricto, but on the use of information more generally. Rather than studying how existing information is used or not used in decision making, this report is looking at how decision makers go about searching, analysing, summarising, processing and interpreting information when they need to make a decision.
The report consists of three main chapters.
- A summary of key government policy initiatives in the UK to stimulate the use of information in decision making
- A review of the relevant research literature. This is the main section of the report. In it, we review the role of information in decision making theories, the organisational and structural context of information use, and psychological factors in the use of information in decision making
- A presentation of a number of international perspectives on the use of information in public sector decision makin
The relation between wages and labor market frictions: An empirical analysis based on matched worker-firm data
LNA (locked nucleic acid) and analogs as triplex-forming oligonucleotides
Udgivelsesdato: 2007-Aug-7The triplex-forming abilities of some conformationally restricted nucleotide analogs are disclosed and compared herein. 2'-Amino-LNA monomers proved to be less stabilising to triplexes than LNA monomers when incorporated into a triplex-forming third strand. N2'-functionalisation of 2'-amino-LNA monomers with a glycyl unit induced the formation of exceptionally stable triplexes. Nucleotide analogs containing a C2',C3'-oxymethylene linker (E-type furanose conformation) or a C2',C4'-propylene linker (N-type furanose conformation) had no significant effect on triplex stability proving that conformational restriction per se is insufficient to stabilise triplexes
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