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Discourse, transgression and difference: Rethinking criminology

William Tyler
- 01 Jan 2000 - 
- Vol. 33, Iss: 2, pp 109-117
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This article is published in Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology.The article was published on 2000-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 34 citations till now.

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Effects of hyperthermia on DNA repair pathways: one treatment to inhibit them all

TL;DR: This review attempts to summarize the known effects of hyperthermia on DNA repair pathways relevant in clinical treatment of cancer and outlines the relationships between the effects of heat onDNA repair and sensitization of cells to various DNA damaging agents.
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Expectation Shocks and Learning as Drivers of the Business Cycle

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate the empirical role of expectational shocks on business cycle fluctuations and uncover a crucial role for these novel expectations shocks as a major driving force of the U.S. business cycle.
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Stardust in Stardust—The C, N, and O isotopic compositions of Wild 2 cometary matter in Al foil impacts

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used two NanoSIMS ion microprobes to perform C, N, and O isotope imaging measurements on four large (59-295 micrometer diameter) and on 47 small (0.32-1.9 mm diameter) impact craters as part of the Stardust preliminary examination.
DissertationDOI

MRDTL: A multi-relational decision tree learning algorithm

TL;DR: Preliminary results indicate that MRDTL, when augmented with principled methods for handling missing attribute values, could be competitive with the state-of-the-art algorithms for learning classifiers from multiple relations on real-world data sets such as those used in the KDD Cup 2001 data mining competition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unifying design and runtime software adaptation using aspect models

TL;DR: An approach to unify adaptation at design and at runtime based on Aspect Oriented Modeling is introduced and is used in a Dynamic Software Product Line which derives products that can be configured at design time and adapted at runtime in order to dynamically fit new requirements or resource changes.