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  1. Re:Worldwide or US only? on Paywalls Block Scientific Progress. Research Should Be Open To Everyone (theguardian.com) · · Score: 3, Informative

    The situation is the same with European scientific journals. Elsevier is a Dutch company. I don't know about non-English language journals, but with the possible exception of Chinese journals (which I know very little about), those are much smaller and much less prestigious than English language journals.

  2. Re:Congressional Pressure on Paywalls Block Scientific Progress. Research Should Be Open To Everyone (theguardian.com) · · Score: 2

    A limited version of this is already in effect, as articles that arise from research supported by many (possibly all) US federal government grants must be available on a public access site with 12 months of the official date of publication (links to NIH and NSF policies). Lobbying by publishers blocked an effort for no or a shorter waiting period.

  3. Re:Drivers getting worse and not because of phone on Smartphones Are Killing Americans, But Nobody's Counting (bloomberg.com) · · Score: 1

    If you're coming to a stop at a red light, cars behind you will whip over into the next lane if it's empty ...

    I would call that "using all lanes of a multilane road" rather than aggressive driving, unless there is something unsafe about how those drivers are making the lane change.

  4. Re:It might be better than the Federal Reserve on VC, Entrepreneur Says Basic Income Would Work Even If 90% People 'Smoked Pot' and Didn't Work (techinsider.io) · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately for minarchist libertarians, the money supply is subject to various strong positive and negative feedback loops. If someone is not actively managing it, fluctuations in the money supply lead to large, damaging boom-bust economic cycles. Cycles still occur with active management, but they are much more moderate.

    A modest, stable rate of deflation causes problems not seen with a modest, stable rate of inflation. Disadvantages of deflation include reduced velocity of money with subsequent decreased economic growth, more difficult for central banks to stimulate the economy in a downturn, and the ratchet effect in wages.

  5. Re:Public Access requirement on Should All Research Papers Be Free? (nytimes.com) · · Score: 1

    You are correct that there are journals that both charge to publish (typically called "page fees") and also charge a subscription. In general, those fees are a lot lower than the publication charges at journals that do not charge for subscriptions.

    As far as the selectivity, I don't see that as an intrinsic feature of the open access model, but more a reflection of the fact that right now, open access journals are newer. Since it usually takes time to build up the positive feedback loop that gives a journal high prestige and allows it to be more selective, most open access journals have not been around long enough.

  6. Public Access requirement on Should All Research Papers Be Free? (nytimes.com) · · Score: 4, Informative

    Most US Federal funding sources require that articles about research they support be available for public access by 12 months after publication. The MIT libraries have a good summary of the various rules. This includes the biggest funding sources for biomedical research: NIH and DoD.

    What seems puzzling about the current situation is that because of features unique to academic publishing (the need for researchers to publish to advance their careers, the sources of funding) there is a fairly straightforward way to pay for open access (at least from within academia).

    Under the traditional system, university libraries pay publishers for access to journals. The libraries, in turn, get at least part of their money from "indirect cost" charges from research grants. For those not familiar with that term, it is like a tax that a university (or other research organization) levies on research grants to pay for things that are needed to do research, but not a direct line-item cost included in the grant. For example, the salaries of researchers and research supplies are direct costs. Access to the university library and use of the building that the research is conducted in (and its utilities and maintenance) are indirect costs. Equipment or centralized services (e.g. statistical consulting) may be direct or indirect costs depending on university and the specific grant. Typical indirect cost rates are about 50%, so that if an investigator gets a grant for $200,000 of direct costs, the granting institution will pay the university an additional $100,000 to cover indirect costs.

    Another way to route the money would be for publishers to make journals open access, but charge researches to publish articles. Publishing costs would become a direct cost line item on research grants, but the indirect cost rate would decrease since libraries would no longer be paying for access. For the system as a whole, the ultimate origin (granting agencies) and terminus (publishers) of publication costs would remain the same. I suspect there would also be major changes in how the money was distributed between researchers and institutions. For example, one worry about an open access system is that although it would make it easier for less well funded laboratories (either in less prestigious institutions or headed by junior researchers) to do work, there would be a bigger barrier for them to publish because it would cost a lot more than it does now. It would also require more of a commitment from universities to support publication of research that is not funded by grants (e.g. a lot of clinical research).

    So my conclusion is that although open access is a viable alternative, changing completely to that model would involve a lot of disruption and would inevitably create winners and losers (both academically and financially) compared to the current model. Resistance on the part of the potential losers and inertia are what is slowing down or holding back the switch.

  7. Re:faster than light = time travel on Ways To Travel Faster Than Light Without Violating Relativity · · Score: 1

    There are a few ways (completely hypothetical) ways to salvage this situation, by imposing another limitation that allow FTL travel, but prevents the set up that allows causality violation. A (probably incomplete) list:

    1. Preferred FTL reference frame - The "default" proposition for an FTL jump-type drive is that you move across space in no time (or a very short time) as measured in the reference frame of the drive when you engage it. The fact that those reference frames can be different for two FTL drives moving at relativistic normal space velocities (or for one drive making successive jumps after a relativistic-scale velocity change) is what allows you to turn FTL travel into causality-violating time travel. If instead, all FTL travel takes place in a single, preferred reference frame (for example, the frame in which the cosmic microwave background radiation has no dipole component) regardless of the velocity of the drive when engaged, it is impossible to create those causality-violating paths.
    2. Virtual particle censorship of wormholes - A similar causality violation can occur with wormhole FTL if you have two wormholes (each with two ends), where the ends are moving at relativistic speeds relative to each other. The limitation that could prevent this is caused by virtual particles in vacuum (which are responsible for things like the Casimir effect). Simplifying greatly, you can "borrow" energy from vacuum to create a virtual particle pair (usually a particle and its antiparticle) as long as the virtual particle lifetime is short enough that the product of the that time and the "borrowed" energy is less than the Plank constant. Since the Plank constant is so small, that means that macroscopically observable virtual particle effects are typically secondary. However, as two wormholes move closer and closer to a condition in which you can loop through both of them and arrive at your start point in zero time, ever greater numbers of virtual particles will make that round trip, which increases the mass moving through the wormholes enough to collapse them before you get to a configuration that allows a zero or negative travel time (and thus leads to a causality violation).
  8. Re:Knowledge is the solution on Time To Remove 'Philosophical' Exemption From Vaccine Requirements? · · Score: 2

    I am a physician who also performs clinical research. You have a naive faith in the ability of the United States health care system to collected aggregated data like this. There are a few diseases and complications which are reportable to public heath services (these are state-level government agencies) and also some mandatory reporting that occurs to Federal agencies, but it is very limited. There are some voluntary reporting programs, for example the FDA Medwatch site allows reporting of drug complications, but only a tiny fraction of them get reported.

    I don't know off the top of my head, but I suspect a few of the vaccine-preventable diseases are rare enough that they are reportable. Most of the other data (specifically any data on complications) is not something that anyone aggregates. See Estimating Seasonal Influenza-Associated Deaths in the United States: CDC Study Confirms Variability of Flu to see the trouble the CDC has getting something as simple as the number of people in the US who die from influenza.

  9. Re:Knowledge is the solution on Time To Remove 'Philosophical' Exemption From Vaccine Requirements? · · Score: 1

    You say, "government won't take responsibility for the (admittedly unlikely) consequences of a bad result." Please read up on the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, through which the United States Federal Government provides no-fault compensation to people injured by vaccines. The program is funded by a tax on vaccines.

    Also, we are not talking about "making sure a few children don't get sick". Without vaccines, annual United States deaths from vaccine-preventable illnesses would likely range from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands (higher in epidemic years). See What Would Happen If We Stopped Vaccinations? on the CDC web site for some data on historical death rates. The cost of treating people who came down with these infections would also lead to a massive spike in the cost of health care, which everyone would wind up paying for in the form of higher premiums, lower salaries (since employers would have to pay higher premiums), and higher taxes.

  10. Re:Kerbal problem on Saturn's 'Death Star' Moon May Hide Subsurface Ocean · · Score: 1

    Same here - along with a mental picture of the minty green color.

  11. Fee rather than market on How California's Carbon Market Actually Works · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem described in the OP is one of several reasons why setting a fee for each ton of carbon dioxide emission is a much better idea that a cap-and-trade scheme. There are numerous other reasons, but I will only highlight the most important.

    The entire purpose of either a fee or cap-and-trade scheme is to get carbon consumers to change their behavior (either doing less of things that emit greenhouse gases or by reducing the carbon intensity of the same activities). But almost all the reasonable mitigation measures have long time horizons (years to decades). In cap-and-trade, it is very difficult to predict what the price signal will be at any time in the future. So how can I, as a consumer, decide if it is worth it to buy a more efficient or electric car if there is great uncertainty in how much the carbon control scheme is going to add to my gasoline cost?

  12. Mass versus rest mass on 'Unparticles' May Hold the Key To Superconductivity · · Score: 1

    The summary (and the referenced Wikipedia article) are sloppy about the use of the term "mass", sometimes using it when they should use the term "rest mass". Zero rest mass particles, such as photons, always move at the speed of light in vacuum. Moving at that speed, they do have mass. The relationship between their energy (E), mass (m), and momentum (p) is:

    E = pc = mc^2,

    where c is the speed of light in vacuum. They fit the definition of uniparticles because those three quantities all scale linearly relative to each other; if you double the momentum, you also double the energy and the mass.

    In contrast, particles with non-zero rest masses (e.g. electrons) follow the equation:

    E^2 = (pc)^2 + ((m0)c^2)^2 = (mc^2)^2,

    where m0 is the rest mass of the particle. The rest mass of these particles does not change, but their mass does change when they are accelerated. Because of the presence of the rest mass term, the relationship between energy, momentum and mass is no longer linear.

  13. Re:Subsidies on The College-Loan Scandal · · Score: 1

    This is an example of price discrimination / price differentiation. It allows the seller (the college in this case) to increase revenue compared to charging the same price for everyone. This is a separate issue from student loans. See the Wikipedia article (or a microeconomics textbook) for a detailed explanation.

  14. Re:How about some other ideas on Project Envisions Modular Aircraft That Double as Train Cars · · Score: 1

    I think an issue with the gull wing design would be that it would significantly complicate and perhaps also weaken the design of the fuselage, especially given the need for it to be pressure tight. My idea for a similar concept would be to have a circular seam at the back of the fuselage. The plane would be backed into the gate, the seam opened, and the tail swung out of the way (I've seen cargo planes that have that kind of hatch). Then the entire inside of the fuselage (passengers and baggage) would be pulled out the back onto a receiver structure in the terminal.

    You would need a system of rails to allow for this movement and to couple the interior to the fuselage shell. There would also be a safety issue during the movement (since the fuselage moves relative to the passengers next to it in the window seats). A lightweight, non-structural shell that is part of the inside could be used. Alternatively, if the inner surface of the fuselage was completely smooth, with nothing that passengers or gear could catch on, perhaps it would be safe to slowly move the interior out of the fuselage.

    Regarding the boarding order, what you are forgetting is that because of the scramble for overhead bin space, airlines allow higher priority passengers (more expensive tickets, frequent fliers, etc) to board first, and those people tend to have the better seats near the front of the plane. I never understood why when the airlines started charging for baggage, they didn't charge for carry on and make checked baggage free (or at least significantly cheaper than carry on). The current system on most US airlines (charge for checked baggage, carry on is free) obviously encourages people to carry more bags on the plane and, IMHO, is a major source of boarding delays.

  15. Re:Hexapodia as the key insight. on MA Hackerspace Building Rideable Hexapod · · Score: 1

    AFotD reference == win

  16. Clinical Perspective on Drug-Free Organ Transplants From Unrelated Donors · · Score: 3, Informative

    I am a pediatric blood & marrow transplant physician. I have read the article abstract, but I don't subscribe to Science Translational Medicine, so I won't be able to read the article until my hospital library orders & acquires the article. These comments are based only on the abstract.

    The Slashdot summary is misleading about what is novel in research. Unrelated donor bone marrow transplants (or hematopoietic stem cell transplants (HSCT), which are a superset) have been done routinely since the 1990's.

    Allogeneic (meaning the stem cell source is another person, rather than the patient himself/herself) HSCT patients take immunosupressive medications to try to prevent (or to treat) graft versus host disease (GVHD). If the patient does not develop GVHD, they are usually weaned off the immunosuppressive medications by 6 months after transplant. Patients who do develop GVHD can require years (sometimes 5-10 years) of immunosuppression. In contrast, patients who receive common solid organ transplants (heart, liver, kidney) are usually on immunosuppressive medications for life, although the immunosuppression is typically stronger for the first few months after transplant. The article reports on patients who received simultaneous kidney and HSC transplants from the same donor. Some of these patients could be weaned off of immunosuppression. Although this type of simultaneous transplant is not common, it has been reported before, as well as the finding that patients could come off immunosuppression.

    What is novel is the ability to perform unrelated donor transplants using donors who were not good HLA matches (the matching system that is used for HSCT) and not have the recipients develop GVHD. This was accomplished by manipulating the stem cell product after it had been collected from the donor, but before it was infused into the recipient. The majority of HSCT done today are done with unmanipulated stem cell products (I'm not counting processing that often needs to be done when the donor and recipient don't have the same red cell type - which is controlled by a different genetic system than HLA). However, some forms of stem cell product manipulation (T-cell negative selection and CD34+ cell positive selection) have been around for a few decades. They can be successfully used to decrease the risk of GVHD, but at the price of increasing the risk of graft rejection, relapse (for leukemias) and infection. In the end, almost all studies of those methods show that the overall survival or disease-free survival is unchanged.

    This article describes a more sophisticated form of stem cell manipulation, in which the graft is enriched in hematopoietic stem cells and tolerogenic graft facilitating cells. There have been past reports of other sophisticated stem cell manipulations giving good results in a study, but these techniques require elaborate facilities to perform, and often when they have been replicated by groups other than the original group, the patient outcomes have not been as good as those in the original report.

    So my bottom line is that this result is exciting, but needs at minimum validation in a multicenter study before it starts to look like a game changer.

    To address some of the other comments:

    1) The concern about graft-versus-leukemia effects is a valid one and it will need to be studied. However, that is not an issue when doing a transplant for a non-malignant disease, so it would be a definite win for those patients. For leukemias, the GVL effect is strongest in CML, then AML, and weakest in ALL (kids don't get CLL, so I don't know much about that disease). Ultimately it would take clinical trials to determine if the benefit from less GVHD outweighs increased relapse risk (if any) from decreased GVL.

    2) The article uses reduced-intensity radiation / chemotherapy, which isn't exactly a picnic, but it is less toxic than standard-dose (10-14 Gy) total body irradiation and 120 mg/kg cyclophosphamide (or 4 day busulfan and 120-200 mg/kg cyclophosphamide).

  17. Re:One question on Judge Makes Divorcing Couple Swap Facebook Passwords · · Score: 1

    IANAL, but the short answer is basically judges can order whatever they want in theory, although in practice there are significant limitations (more on that below). Another big point to mention is that the United States uses a common law system, meaning that large parts of the law have never been defined by a statute (i.e. a law passed by a legislature). The major limitations:

    1. The judicial selection process almost always picks people who are not going to go off the deep end and start issuing crazy orders, but generally stick close to what is authorized by statutory, regulatory, or case law.

    2. Orders from lower courts can be appealed and overturned by appellate courts.

    3. There are mechanisms in place to impeach judges.

    Within the law, there are various factors that limit orders judge are supposed to issue, and I suspect a relevant one here is jurisdiction. Divorce is a matter for state courts, and if the divorce is occurring in a state where Facebook doesn't have enough of a presence to bring it under the judge's jurisdiction, ordering the parties to swap passwords may be a lot simpler (from a legal perspective) compared to whatever they would have to do to bring another action in Federal court or in a state court with jurisdiction over Facebook to compel Facebook to turn over the data. I'm not sure why the court didn't just ask Facebook to turn over the relevant data. Of course it's also possible they did and Facebook refused, or the court knows that Facebook has refused similar requests (as distinguished from orders) in the past.

  18. Re:Inflation on Seigniorage Hack Could Resolve Debt Limit Crisis · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is a very good point. The Federal Reserve currently holds about $1.6 trillion in U.S. Treasury securities. So it would be possible to sell those securities (which pulls the money that others use to buy them out of the economy) so that the the coin hack had no net effect on the money supply until the Federal government spent more than $1.6 trillion.

    I would argue that we need the additional fiscal stimulus given the weakness in the economy, and that stimulus would not be inflationary. For the people worried about inflation, though, having the Federal Reserve sell Treasury securities would delay any theoretically possible inflationary impact of the coin hack for about a year.

  19. Re:Inflation on Seigniorage Hack Could Resolve Debt Limit Crisis · · Score: 5, Informative

    I am the OP. As several people have posted, this approach is exactly equivalent to printing money. The reason it needs to be platinum coins rather than paper bills is that there is a law that limits the total value of paper bills that can be printed, but there appears to be no limit on the value of platinum coins that can be minted.

    Of course, if you were to print a large enough amount of money, it would lead to inflation (or asset price bubbles, which actually seem to occur first in the current economy). The mechanism by which excess money supply causes inflation is by increasing demand to the point where bottlenecks appear in the economy. For example, people want cars, have money to buy them, but there aren't enough factories right now to supply demand - so the price of the limited pool of available cars is bid up. If labor markets are tight, employers looking for people to work to fill the demand created by the extra money will need to bid up wages to attract workers.

    The key point is that all those mechanisms only work if an economy, or significant parts of it, are operating near peak capacity. This is the complete opposite of the situation we are in right now. Industrial capacity utilization was at 76.7% in June, several percentage points below the 1972-2010 average (80.4%) an well below the 85.1% peak in the 1990's. Unemployment is also high compared to historical averages.

    In the current environment, it is vastly more likely that increasing the money supply will improve economic conditions without triggering inflation. Even at its pre-financial crisis recent peak (when unemployment was much lower than it is now), annual inflation (CPI-U, Dec 2006 to Dec 2007) was only 4.1%. Also keep in mind that the entire amount created ($5 trillion in my example in the OP) will not hit the economy at once. Initially it will be in an account at the Federal Reserve, and only as the government spends the money would it reach the economy.

  20. Re:Postpone only on Seigniorage Hack Could Resolve Debt Limit Crisis · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I am the OP. The reason this approach counts as an 'escape hatch' is that it appears that the executive branch already has the authority to carry it out (in 31 USC 5112(k) ). To stop it, Congress would need to pass a law. To do that in the face of a presidential veto would require 2/3 supermajorities in both the House and Senate. As long as Obama can get 34 of the 51 Democrats in the Senate (or 53 Democrats plus independents who caucus with the Democrats) to back this approach, there is nothing that the House can do to stop it.

  21. Re:Best case scenario? on Judge Rules Against China In 'Green Dam' Suit · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Almost all of the US Treasury debt owned by China (and in general) is in the form of book-entry securities. This means there is no physical document for the treasury bill, note or bond. It exists as an entry in the database of a broker or the US Treasury. The court could simply order ownership of an appropriate value of those securities to be transferred from the Chinese government to the successful plaintiff.

  22. Re:IANAL but... on Judge Rules Against China In 'Green Dam' Suit · · Score: 2
  23. Re:IANAL but... on Judge Rules Against China In 'Green Dam' Suit · · Score: 1

    The posting system mangled the link. I'll try again: Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act.

  24. Re:IANAL but... on Judge Rules Against China In 'Green Dam' Suit · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act is the US federal law that regulates suits in US courts (federal or state) against foreign governments. It lists exceptions to the general rule that foreign states are immune to suit because of sovereign immunity. The exception that this suit is probably based on is the one that says a foreign state can be sued when it is engaged in “commercial activity”.

    Assuming the plaintiff wins the suit, damages would be collected by seizing assets of the foreign state under US jurisdiction. Since US Treasury bonds owned by China are essentially promises by the US Treasury to pay a certain amount of money when the bond comes due, transferring ownership of those bonds to the plaintiff would seem to be a way of collecting damages. Of course, that might have diplomatic consequences.

    IANAL either.

  25. Re:The one they always overlook on The Time Travel Paradoxes of Back To the Future · · Score: 1

    Because gravity is different from all other forces, and in some sense, is not a force at all. Mass (or more precisely, all components of the stress-energy tensor) changes the geometry of space-time so that the distances between objects, free of any forces acting on them, are different than what they would be in a flat Minkowski space-time.

    An analogy is the difference in behavior between objects moving along lines that are initially parallel on a flat 2D plane and the 2D surface of a 3D sphere. On a plane, the objects will never meet. On a sphere, objects that start on adjacent lines of longitude at the equator (assuming the sphere is marked with latitude and longitude lines like the Earth), and move (initially in parallel) North will eventually meet at the North Pole. There is no force that pushes the objects together: they move together because of the geometry of the surface that they travel in.