19,775 research outputs found
Introduction: The Debate Over Independent Agencies in Light of Empirical Evidence
Constitutional theory has rediscovered the problem of governmental structure. As the rights revolution has matured and entered the mainstream, the debate is returning to the question that preoccupied the Founding Fathers: what organization of government is most likely to establish justice, promote the general welfare, provide for the common defense, and secure the blessings of liberty? The overriding contemporary problem is how to treat the administrative state
Free Bosonic Vertex Operator Algebras on Genus Two Riemann Surfaces I
We define the partition and -point functions for a vertex operator algebra
on a genus two Riemann surface formed by sewing two tori together. We obtain
closed formulas for the genus two partition function for the Heisenberg free
bosonic string and for any pair of simple Heisenberg modules. We prove that the
partition function is holomorphic in the sewing parameters on a given suitable
domain and describe its modular properties for the Heisenberg and lattice
vertex operator algebras and a continuous orbifolding of the rank two fermion
vertex operator super algebra. We compute the genus two Heisenberg vector
-point function and show that the Virasoro vector one point function
satisfies a genus two Ward identity for these theories.Comment: 57 Pages, 5 figures. This is an extended version of roughly one half
of arXiv:0712.062
Nonpecuniary Class Action Settlements
Miller and Singer offer a theoretical and empirical analysis of nonpecuniary class action settlements, including coupons, securities and fluid recoveries
The President’s Power of Interpretation: Implications of a Unified Theory of Constitutional Law
Identifying the information for the visual perception of relative phase
The production and perception of coordinated rhythmic movement are very specifically structured. For production and perception, 0° mean relative phase is stable, 180° is less stable, and no other state is stable without training. It has been hypothesized that perceptual stability characteristics underpin the movement stability characteristics, which has led to the development of a phase-driven oscillator model (e.g., Bingham, 2004a, 2004b). In the present study, a novel perturbation method was used to explore the identity of the perceptual information being used in rhythmic movement tasks. In the three conditions, relative position, relative speed, and frequency (variables motivated by the model) were selectively perturbed. Ten participants performed a judgment task to identify 0° or 180° under these perturbation conditions, and 8 participants who had been trained to visually discriminate 90° performed the task with perturbed 90° displays. Discrimination of 0° and 180° was unperturbed in 7 out of the 10 participants, but discrimination of 90° was completely disrupted by the position perturbation and was made noisy by the frequency perturbation. We concluded that (1) the information used by most observers to perceive relative phase at 0° and 180° was relative direction and (2) becoming an expert perceiver of 90° entails learning a new variable composed of position and speed
Mr. Stewart and Mr. Colbert Go to Washington: Television Satirists Outside the Box
The political satirists Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert are largely celebrated for their nightly television programs, which use humor to offer useful political information, provide important forums for deliberation and debate, and serve as sites for alternative interpretations of political reality. Yet, when the two satirists more directly intervene in the field of politics—which they increasingly do—they are often met by a chorus of criticism that suggests they have improperly crossed normative boundaries. This article explores Stewart and Colbert’s “out of the box” political performances, which include, among others, the 2010 Rally to Restore Sanity, Colbert’s testimony before Congress in the same year, and his on-going efforts to run an actual Super PAC that raises and spends money to influence (and critique) the political process. Examining these and other examples of non-traditional, and clearly border-crossing political satire, we consider the ways in which such multi-modal performances--in and off the television screen--work together to provide information, critique, and commentary, as well as a significant form of moral voice and ethical imperative. In turn, we examine the responses from the political and journalistic establishment, which more often than not, constitutes a form of boundary maintenance that seeks to delegitimize such alternative modes of political engagement. Finally, we discuss the significance of the developing relationship between television entertainment and political performance for our understanding of contemporary political practice
870 micron Imaging of a Transitional Disk in Upper Scorpius: Holdover from the Era of Giant Planet Formation?
We present 880 micron images of the transition disk around the star [PZ99]
J160421.7-213028, a solar-mass star in the nearby Upper Scorpius association.
With a resolution down to 0.34 arcsec, we resolve the inner hole in this disk,
and via model fitting to the visibilities and spectral energy distribution we
determine both the structure of the outer region and the presence of sparse
dust within the cavity. The disk contains about 0.1 Jupiter masses of
mm-emitting grains, with an inner disk edge of about 70 AU. The inner cavity
contains a small amount of dust with a depleted surface density in a region
extending from about 20-70 AU. Taking into account prior observations
indicating little to no stellar accretion, the lack of a binary companion, and
the presence of dust near 0.1 AU, we determine that the most likely mechanism
for the formation of this inner hole is the presence of one or more giant
planets.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures. To appear in the Astrophysical Journa
Binary-black-hole initial data with nearly-extremal spins
There is a significant possibility that astrophysical black holes with
nearly-extremal spins exist. Numerical simulations of such systems require
suitable initial data. In this paper, we examine three methods of constructing
binary-black-hole initial data, focusing on their ability to generate black
holes with nearly-extremal spins: (i) Bowen-York initial data, including
standard puncture data (based on conformal flatness and Bowen-York extrinsic
curvature), (ii) standard quasi-equilibrium initial data (based on the
extended-conformal-thin-sandwich equations, conformal flatness, and maximal
slicing), and (iii) quasi-equilibrium data based on the superposition of
Kerr-Schild metrics. We find that the two conformally-flat methods (i) and (ii)
perform similarly, with spins up to about 0.99 obtainable at the initial time.
However, in an evolution, we expect the spin to quickly relax to a
significantly smaller value around 0.93 as the initial geometry relaxes. For
quasi-equilibrium superposed Kerr-Schild (SKS) data [method (iii)], we
construct initial data with \emph{initial} spins as large as 0.9997. We evolve
SKS data sets with spins of 0.93 and 0.97 and find that the spin drops by only
a few parts in 10^4 during the initial relaxation; therefore, we expect that
SKS initial data will allow evolutions of binary black holes with relaxed spins
above 0.99. [Abstract abbreviated; full abstract also mentions several
secondary results.
Bias in judgement: Comparing individuals and groups
The relative susceptibility of individuals and groups to systematic judgmental biases is considered. An overview of the relevant empirical literature reveals no clear or general pattern. However, a theoretical analysis employing J. H. Davis's (1973) social decision scheme (SDS) model reveals that the relative magnitude of individual and group bias depends upon several factors, including group size, initial individual judgment, the magnitude of bias among individuals, the type of bias, and most of all, the group-judgment process. It is concluded that there can be no simple answer to the question, "Which are more biased, individuals or groups?," but the SDS model offers a framework for specifying some of the conditions under which individuals are both more and less biased than groups
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