8,141 research outputs found
Do dolphins benefit from nonlinear mathematics when processing their sonar returns?
An interview with author Tim Leighton about the paper
Opportunities for linking young surveyors across professional surveying member organisations and FIG
Tim Di Muzio on 'Sabotage'
In a series of essays published in 2013 and 2014 on capitaspower.com, political economist Tim Di Muzio explored the concept of ‘sabotage’ as it applies to capitalist power. I recently rediscovered these essays and was so impressed by them that I have reposted them here as a single piece.
About the author: Tim Di Muzio is a researcher at the University of Wollongong. He is the author of numerous books, including Debt as power, Carbon capitalism, and The 1% and the Rest of us
Replication Data for: Extreme weather events do not increase political parties' environmental attention
Replication files for "Extreme weather events do not increase political parties' environmental attention
HHpred searches carried out for 1st submission
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Supplemental Material - Reduced adaptive thermogenesis to acute, protein-imbalanced overfeeding is a metabolic hallmark of the human thrifty phenotype
Supplemental Materia
Supplemental Material - Recharacterizing the metabolic state of energy balance in thrifty and spendthrift phenotypes
Supplemental Material for: Hollstein et al. Recharacterizing the metabolic state of energy balance in thrifty and spendthrift phenotype
Supplemental Material - Urinary norepinephrine is a metabolic determinant of 24-h energy expenditure and sleeping metabolic rate in adult humans
Supplemental Material of the manuscript "Urinary norepinephrine is a metabolic determinant of 24-h energy expenditure and sleeping metabolic rate in adult humans
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Replication data for "The political consequences of labour market dualization"
This article explores empirically how different types of labour market inequality affect policy preferences in post-industrial societies. I argue that the two main conceptualisations of labour market vulnerability identified in the insider-outsider literature are complementary: Labour market risks are shaped by both labour market status – whether an individual is unemployed, in a temporary or permanent contract – and occupational unemployment – whether an individual is in an occupation with high or low unemployment. As a result, both status and occupation are important determinants of individual labour market policy preferences. In what follows, I first briefly conceptualise the link between labour market divides, risks and policy preferences and then use cross-national survey data to investigate the determinants of preferences
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