Wide Differences (wide + difference)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Sand in the machinery?

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL RESEARCH, Issue 6 2005
Comparing bureaucrats', politicians' attitudes toward public sector reform
This article addresses the general notion that bureaucrats may oppose the introduction of reforms in the public sector, and that their views concerning reform will differ from that of politicians. Such a situation may create a sense of conflict between the two spheres, but different views on public sector reform can also follow other conflict dimensions. Two such dimensions are outlined: the one between political parties, and the one between a political-administrative elite and a group of more peripheral politicians and administrators. The hypotheses set forward are tested by comparing local authority politicians' and administrative leaders' views on public sector reform. The data does not support the notion of general conflict between politicians and administrators, or that of conflict of interest between an elite and a more peripheral group. In general, politicians and administrators have rather similar views, but there is a wide difference between political parties. The administration places itself somewhat in the middle between political extremes, being moderately positive towards most reforms. [source]


Large predators and their prey in a southern African savanna: a predator's size determines its prey size range

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, Issue 3 2004
Frans G. T. Radloff
Summary 1A long-term (13-year) data set, based on > 4000 kills, was used to test whether a sympatric group of large predators adheres to the theoretical predictions that (1) mean prey body size and (2) prey diversity increase as functions of predator body size. 2All kills observed by safari guides are documented routinely in Mala Mala Private Game Reserve, South Africa. We analysed these records for lion (Panthera leo, Linnaeus), leopard (Panthera pardus, Linnaeus), cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus, Schreber) and African wild dog (Lycaon pictus, Temminck). Males and females of the sexually dimorphic felid species were treated as functionally distinct predator types. Prey types were classified by species, sex and age class. 3Prey profiles were compared among predator types in terms of richness and evenness to consider how both the range of prey types used and the dominance of particular prey types within each range may be influenced by predator size. No significant size-dependent relationships were found, so factors separate from or additional to body size must explain variation in prey diversity across sympatric predators. 4A statistically strong relationship was found between mean prey mass and predator mass (r2 = 0·86, P= 0·002), although pairwise comparisons showed that most predators killed similar prey despite wide differences in predator size. Also, minimum prey mass was independent of predator mass while maximum prey mass was strongly dependent on predator mass (r2 = 0·71, P= 0·017). The ecological significance is that larger predators do not specialize on larger prey, but exploit a wider range of prey sizes. [source]


SOIL EROSION AND SEDIMENT YIELD PREDICTION ACCURACY USING WEPP,

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION, Issue 2 2004
John M. Laflen
ABSTRACT: The objectives of this paper are to discuss expectations for the Water Erosion Prediction Project (WEPP) accuracy, to review published studies related to WEPP goodness of fit, and to evaluate these in the context of expectations for WEPP's goodness of fit. WEPP model erosion predictions have been compared in numerous studies to observed values for soil loss and sediment delivery from cropland plots, forest roads, irrigated lands and small watersheds. A number of different techniques for evaluating WEPP have been used, including one recently developed where the ability of WEPP to accurately predict soil erosion can be compared to the accuracy of replicated plots to predict soil erosion. In one study involving 1,594 years of data from runoff plots, WEPP performed similarly to the Universal Soil Loss Erosion (USLE) technology, indicating that WEPP has met the criteria of results being "at least as good with respect to observed data and known relationships as those from the USLE," particularly when the USLE technology was developed using relationships derived from that data set, and using soil erodibility values measured on those plots using data sets from the same period of record. In many cases, WEPP performed as well as could be expected, based on comparisons with the variability in replicate data sets. One major finding has been that soil erodibility values calculated using the technology in WEPP for rainfall conditions may not be suitable for furrow irrigated conditions. WEPP was found to represent the major storms that account for high percentages of soil loss quite well,a single storm application that the USLE technology is unsuitable for,and WEPP has performed well for disturbed forests and forest roads. WEPP has been able to reflect the extremes of soil loss, being quite responsive to the wide differences in cropping, tillage, and other forms of management, one of the requirements for WEPP validation. WEPP was also found to perform well on a wide range of small watersheds, an area where USLE technology cannot be used. [source]


Review article: gall-bladder motor function in obesity

ALIMENTARY PHARMACOLOGY & THERAPEUTICS, Issue 2000
M. L. Petroni
Summary A number of epidemiological studies has established obesity as a risk factor for gallstone disease. More recently, studies have suggested a relationship between gallstone disease and the metabolic syndrome linked to central adiposity, whose cardinal feature is represented by hyperinsulinaemia. Studies on fasting gall-bladder volume in obese subjects show that this parameter correlates with weight, body mass index (BMI) and body surface area; however, this is also true for large-sized non-obese subjects. Gall-bladder volume also correlates with abdominal fat and with impaired glucose tolerance. In contrast to the well-established role of bile supersaturation in the pathogenesis of gallstones in obesity, data are controversial on whether gall-bladder motor function is defective in obese subjects. However, studies were heterogeneous for subjects' BMI, emptying stimulus, technique used and parameters assessed to evaluate gall-bladder motor function. Also, differences in baseline gall-bladder volume may lead to wide differences in bile ,washout' effect despite apparently similar percentage changes in volume or content. Although post-prandial plasma levels of cholecysto- kinin (CCK) are normal in obese subjects, there is some evidence that a sub-group of obese subjects could have decreased sensitivity to CCK, possibly mediated by hyperinsulinaemia. Further studies using standard physiological stimuli and controlling for glucose tolerance, fasting insulin levels and baseline gall-bladder volume are needed to establish the role of gall-bladder motor function in the pathogenesis of gallstone disease in obesity. [source]


Northeast Asian Energy Cooperation: The Irkutsk Pipeline Project,

PACIFIC FOCUS, Issue 2 2004
Euikon Kim
Northeast Asia is a cluster of countries with wide differences in political systems, stages of economic development, levels of technology, and natural resource endowments. In addition, infrastructures of national economies are mutually complementary: Japan and Korea have capital and technology on the one hand and Russia and China enjoy abundant resources and cheap labor. Yet many socio-political elements have so far barred active economic cooperation among Northeast Asian national economies from becoming a reality, such as, North Korean nuclear issues, different ideologies, unstable political systems, and anti-Japanese sentiments. The Irkutsk Pipeline Projects can be a litmus test for the future economic cooperation in the region. Market forces in Russia, Japan, South Korea and China increasingly tend to jump national boundaries and to escape political control, seeking for economic profits, whereas socio-political factors have tendency to restrict and channel the economic activities. Thus, problems of the Irkutsk Pipeline Projects lie in how and where those positive and negative factors are reconciled. [source]


Tradeoffs and sexual conflict over women's fertility preferences in Mpimbwe

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN BIOLOGY, Issue 4 2009
Monique Borgerhoff Mulder
There are two principle evolutionary models for why women reduce their fertility, which can be used to explain the modern demographic transition. The first derives from optimality theory (specifically the "quantity-quality" tradeoff hypothesis), and the second from models of biased cultural transmission ("prestige bias" and "kin influence" hypotheses). Data on family planning preferences collected in 1996 and 1998 in a rural African village (in Mpimbwe, Tanzania) are used to test predictions derived from each hypothesis and show that both "quantity-quality" tradeoffs and biased cultural transmission underlie Pimbwe women's decisions. Reproductive decisions, however, are not made in a vacuum. Men and women's ideal family sizes often differ, and sexual conflict is particularly likely to affect a woman's success in limiting her family size. Pimbwe women's reproductive output between the initial family planning survey in 1996 and the most recent demographic survey (2006) is analyzed in relation to both the woman's preferences to limit her family and her exposure to husbands and husbands' kin. Despite wide differences in desired family sizes between men and women the extent of sexual conflict in this population is restricted to husbands and wives, and affects not a woman's use or planned use of modern contraception but her success in employing such methods effectively. There is also some evidence that a woman's mother and her kin assist in the use and effective use of modern methods, offering a prevailing force to the high-fertility objectives of the husband. Am. J. Hum. Biol., 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


THE DETERMINANTS OF INTERNATIONAL PATENTING FOR NINE AGRICULTURAL BIOTECHNOLOGY FIRMS,

THE JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECONOMICS, Issue 2 2010
H. PHOEBE CHAN
This paper examines international patent application decisions of nine agricultural biotechnology firms from 1990,2000 in Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, the European Patent Office, Japan and South Africa. The data reveal a low frequency of international applications despite an initial United States' application, indicating very low values for patents abroad. The results indicate that invention quality plays an important role in firms' decisions to patent abroad and that a single international application is a good predictor of multiple international applications. Further, significant country fixed effects suggest wide differences in business climates and patent enforcement among countries. [source]