2,995 research outputs found
Title page of Can the monopoly lawfully be abolished? / by Henry Charles Carey.
Reprinted from the Burlington gazette
Anderson, Bailey, and Coleman
(l to r) Author John Aubrey Anderson, President of the G.V. Sonny Montgomery Foundation Bob Bailey, and Dean of Libraries Frances Coleman share remarks.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/libep-events-booksignings-anderson/1021/thumbnail.jp
Bailey, Coleman, and Anderson
(l to r) Dean of Libraries Frances Coleman and author John Aubrey Anderson listen as President of the G.V. Sonny Montgomery Foundation Bob Bailey introduces Anderson.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/libep-events-booksignings-anderson/1010/thumbnail.jp
Supplemental Material - Regulatory Experience Assessing the Carcinogenic Potential of a Monoclonal Antibody Inhibiting PCSK9, Bococizumab, Including a 2-Year Carcinogenicity Study in Rats
Supplemental Material for Regulatory Experience Assessing the Carcinogenic Potential of a Monoclonal Antibody Inhibiting PCSK9, Bococizumab, Including a 2-Year Carcinogenicity Study in Rats by Bernard S. Buetow, Gregg D Cappon, Laura M. Aschenbrenner, Lawrence Updyke, Vince R. Torti, Mark Evans6\, Shana R. Dalton, Steven Bailey, and Christopher J Bowman in International Journal of Toxicology</p
sj-pdf-1-jfm-10.1177_1098612X16643252 – Supplemental material for 2016 AAFP Guidelines for the Management of Feline Hyperthyroidism
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-jfm-10.1177_1098612X16643252 for 2016 AAFP Guidelines for the Management of Feline Hyperthyroidism by Hazel C Carney, Cynthia R Ward, Steven J Bailey, David Bruyette, Sonnya Dennis, Duncan Ferguson, Amy Hinc and A Renee Rucinsky in Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery</p
sj-pdf-2-jfm-10.1177_1098612X16643252 – Supplemental material for 2016 AAFP Guidelines for the Management of Feline Hyperthyroidism
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-2-jfm-10.1177_1098612X16643252 for 2016 AAFP Guidelines for the Management of Feline Hyperthyroidism by Hazel C Carney, Cynthia R Ward, Steven J Bailey, David Bruyette, Sonnya Dennis, Duncan Ferguson, Amy Hinc and A Renee Rucinsky in Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery</p
Regulatory systems, institutions and practices
Regulation is a fact of life. It affects the food we eat, the safety of our workplace, the goods and services we buy and sell and the quality of our natural environment. It plays an important role in guarding New Zealanders from harm, protecting our rights, and ensuring that markets work fairly and efficiently. However, when regulation is badly designed or implemented it can fail to provide these protections, or place unnecessary burdens on personal freedoms and business efficiency. So is the New Zealand regulatory system as good as it should be, and how could it be improved?
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Steven Bailey is a director at the Productivity Commission and led the commission’s inquiry into regulatory institutions and practices. Judy Kavanagh is a principal advisor at the New Zealand Productivity Commission
Prognostic accuracy of SIRS, SOFA and qSOFA in the ICU
Eamon Raith, Andrew Udy, Michael Bailey, Steven McGloughlin, Christopher MacIsaac, Rinaldo Bellomo, David Pilche
Critical Trends Assessment Program 2002 Report
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Previous issue date: 2003-07Introduction -- Creating a Report Card for RiverWatch Stream Quality: Multi-Metric Biological Score / David Baker -- Creating a Report Card for RiverWatch Stream Quality: Multi-Metric Habitat Score / David Baker -- Aquatic Insects Report: Biological and Habitat Condition of Illinois Streams / R. Edward DeWalt -- What Are the Discarded Sites of CTAP Terrestrial Monitoring Telling Us About Illinois Habitats? / Rhetta Jack -- Ornithological Report: The Depauperate Nature of the Average Illinois Bird Community:
A CTAP Study from 1997-2001 / Steven Bailey and Rhetta Jack -- ForestWatch Fall 2001 - Spring 2002 / Matt Buffington -- PrairieWatch 2001 and 2002 / Matt Buffington -- RiverWatch Data Summary Results for 2002 / Alice Brandon -- Botanical Report: Floristic Quality Assessment (FQA) as a Measure of the Naturalness of the Grasslands and Wetlands of Illinois / Greg Spyreas, Connie Carroll, James Ellis, and Brenda Molano-Flores -- Terrestrial Insect Report: The Importance of Leafhoppers (Hemiptera:Cicadellidae) collected by the Critical Trends Assessment Program / Wallner, AdamOpe
Task design influences prosociality in captive chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).
Chimpanzees confer benefits on group members, both in the wild and in captive populations. Experimental studies of how animals allocate resources can provide useful insights about the motivations underlying prosocial behavior, and understanding the relationship between task design and prosocial behavior provides an important foundation for future research exploring these animals' social preferences. A number of studies have been designed to assess chimpanzees' preferences for outcomes that benefit others (prosocial preferences), but these studies vary greatly in both the results obtained and the methods used, and in most cases employ procedures that reduce critical features of naturalistic social interactions, such as partner choice. The focus of the current study is on understanding the link between experimental methodology and prosocial behavior in captive chimpanzees, rather than on describing these animals' social motivations themselves. We introduce a task design that avoids isolating subjects and allows them to freely decide whether to participate in the experiment. We explore key elements of the methods utilized in previous experiments in an effort to evaluate two possibilities that have been offered to explain why different experimental designs produce different results: (a) chimpanzees are less likely to deliver food to others when they obtain food for themselves, and (b) evidence of prosociality may be obscured by more "complex" experimental apparatuses (e.g., those including more components or alternative choices). Our results suggest that the complexity of laboratory tasks may generate observed variation in prosocial behavior in laboratory experiments, and highlights the need for more naturalistic research designs while also providing one example of such a paradigm
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