12,747 research outputs found
Let the consumer decide? The regulation of commercial genetic testing.
Objectives—The development of predictive genetic tests provides a new area where consumers can gain knowledge of their health status and commercial opportunities. "Over-the-counter" or mail order genetic tests are most likely to provide information on carrier status or the risk of developing a multifactorial disease. The paper considers the social and ethical implications of individuals purchasing genetic tests and whether genetic information is different from other types of health information which individuals can obtain for themselves. Design—The discussion is illustrated by findings from a questionnaire survey of university students as potential consumers. Topics covered included what health tests they had already used, expectations of genetic tests, willingness to pay, who should have access to the results and whether there need to be restrictions on such tests. Sample—Six hundred and fifteen first-year students in the universities of Leuven, Cardiff, Central Lancashire, Vienna and Nijmegen studying either medicine or a non-science subject. Results—Students were enthusiastic about genetic tests and had high expectations of their accuracy and usefulness but most thought they should be available through the health service and a minority thought that some tests, for example for sex selection, should not be available at all. There were few differences in responses by sex or subject of study but some by country. The paper also considers ethical and social issues outside the scope of a questionnaire survey of this type. Conclusion—To address some of these issues the sale of genetic tests to individuals can be made subject to ethical guidelines or codes of practice, for example to protect vulnerable groups, but there are fundamental social and ethical questions which such guidelines cannot address
An optimised scalable synthesis of H2O@C60and a new synthesis of H2@C60
New high-yielding synthetic routes to the small-molecule endofullerenes H2O@C60, D2O@C60 and H2@C60 are described. The use of high temperatures and pressures for the endohedral molecule incorporation are avoided. A new partial closure step using PPh3, and final suturing using a novel Diels–Alder/retro-Diels–Alder sequence are amongst the advances reported
Compressive Fourier Transform Spectroscopy
We describe an approach based on compressive-sampling which allows for a
considerable reduction in the acquisition time in Fourier-transform
spectroscopy. In this approach, an N-point Fourier spectrum is resolved from
much less than N time-domain measurements using a compressive-sensing
reconstruction algorithm. We demonstrate the technique by resolving sparse
vibrational spectra using <25% of the Nyquist rate samples in single-pulse CARS
experiments. The method requires no modifications to the experimental setup and
can be directly applied to any Fourier-transform spectroscopy measurement, in
particular multidimensional spectroscopy
Tree-irreducible automorphisms of free groups
We introduce a new class of automorphisms of the non-abelian free
group of finite rank which contains all iwips (= fully
irreducible automorphisms), but also any automorphism induced by a
pseudo-Anosov homeomorphism of a surface with arbitrary many boundary
components. More generally, there may be subgroups of of rank on
which restricts to the identity.
We prove some basic facts about such {\em tree-irreducible} automorphisms,
and show that, together with Dehn twist automorphisms, they are the natural
basic building blocks from which any automorphism of \FN can be constructed
in a train track set-up. We then show:
{\bf Theorem:} {\it Every tree-irreducible automorphism of has induced
North-South dynamics on the Thurston compactification of Outer
space.}
Finally, we define a "blow-up" construction on the vertices of a train track
map, which, starting from iwips, produces tree-irreducible automorphisms which
in general are not iwip
Some major impacts of the national space program. 3 - Astronomy as an example of scientific impacts
Impact of space exploration on astronomy and human cultur
Non-Markovian entanglement dynamics in the presence of system-bath coherence
A complete treatment of the entanglement of two-level systems, which evolves
through the contact with a thermal bath, must include the fact that the system
and the bath are not fully separable. Therefore, quantum coherent
superpositions of system and bath states, which are almost never fully included
in theoretical models, are invariably present when an entangled state is
prepared experimentally. We show their importance for the time evolution of the
entanglement of two qubits coupled to independent baths. In addition, our
treatment is able to handle slow and low-temperature thermal baths.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett
Fault tolerant architectures for integrated aircraft electronics systems
Work into possible architectures for future flight control computer systems is described. Ada for Fault-Tolerant Systems, the NETS Network Error-Tolerant System architecture, and voting in asynchronous systems are covered
Congressional Distributive Politics and State Economic Performance
This paper tests several theories of the effects of congressional representation on state economic growth. States that were represented by very senior Democratic congressmen grew more quickly during the 1953-1990 period than states that were represented by more junior congressional delegations. We find some, but weaker, evidence that states with a high fraction of their delegation on particularly influential committees also exhibit above-average growth. We also test partisan models of distributive politics by studying the relationship between a state's degree of political competition and its growth rate. Our findings support both nonpartisan and partisan models of congressional distributive politics. In spite of our findings with respect to economic growth, we can not detect any substantively important association between congressional delegation seniority, the degree of state political competition, and the geographic distribution of federal funds. The source of the growth relationships we identify therefore remains an open question.
ELSA: An Integrated, Semi-Automated Nebular Abundance Package
We present ELSA, a new modular software package, written in C, to analyze and
manage spectroscopic data from emission-line objects. In addition to
calculating plasma diagnostics and abundances from nebular emission lines, the
software provides a number of convenient features including the ability to
ingest logs produced by IRAF's splot task, to semi-automatically merge spectra
in different wavelength ranges, and to automatically generate various data
tables in machine-readable or LaTeX format. ELSA features a highly
sophisticated interstellar reddening correction scheme that takes into account
temperature and density effects as well as He II contamination of the hydrogen
Balmer lines. Abundance calculations are performed using a 5-level atom
approximation with recent atomic data, based on R. Henry's ABUN program.
Improvements planned in the near future include use of a three-region
ionization model, similar to IRAF's nebular package, error propagation, and the
addition of ultraviolet and infrared line analysis capability. Detailed
documentation for all aspects of ELSA are available at
http://www.williams.edu/Astronomy/research/PN .Comment: 2 pages, contributed paper, IAU Symp. 234, Planetary Nebulae in Our
Galaxy and Beyon
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