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Design Example: Analyzing Capacity Contours for Flood Risk Assessment01:17

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Flood risk assessment involves careful planning and analysis to ensure the safety of communities near water retention structures. Capacity contours are a vital tool in this process, as they illustrate the potential spread of water at specific levels in a given area. In the context of building a bund across a small valley, these contours play a critical role in evaluating the safety of nearby residential areas.In this example, the bund is intended to store stormwater in the valley. The engineers...
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Radicals adjacent to electron-donating groups are called nucleophilic radicals. These radicals readily react with electrophilic alkenes. The SOMO–LUMO interactions are the driving force for the reaction, where the high-energy SOMO of the electron-rich, nucleophilic radicals interacts with the low-energy LUMO of the electron-deficient, electrophilic alkenes. Such SOMO–LUMO interactions are the basis of reactive radical traps, affecting the selectivity in radical reactions. For...
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Radicals adjacent to electron‐withdrawing groups are called electrophilic radicals. These radicals readily react with nucleophilic alkenes. For example, the malonate radical, in which the radical center is flanked by two electron‐withdrawing groups, reacts readily with butyl vinyl ether, which consists of an electron‐donating oxygen substituent. The reaction between electrophilic malonate radical and nucleophilic vinyl ether is favored because the radical has a...
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Roots, often written as radicals, identify the quantity that must be raised to a specific exponent to produce a given value. A radical expression consists of two main components: the radicand, which is the value placed inside the root symbol, and the index, which indicates the degree of the root being taken. The notation n√a indicates the principal nth root of a. If n equals 2, the operation is the square root, while n = 3 defines the cube root. When n is even, a negative radicand does...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Feb 3, 2026

Assessment and Evaluation of the High Risk Neonate: The NICU Network Neurobehavioral Scale
19:15

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Radicalized risk assessment.

Anders Kaye1

  • 1Thomas Jefferson School of Law, San Diego, CA, USA.

Behavioral Sciences & the Law
|November 1, 2018
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Empirically-informed risk assessment technologies are poised to transform criminal justice. By providing concrete data on the causes of criminal behavior, these tools will challenge retributive justice and promote a more understanding system.

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Area of Science:

  • Criminology
  • Legal Studies
  • Sociology

Background:

  • The current criminal justice system is largely based on retributivism, focusing on blameworthiness and desert.
  • There is an ongoing paradigm shift in how criminal justice is conceptualized and practiced.
  • The transition from the current system to a future model presents opportunities for study.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the potential impact of empirically-informed risk assessment technologies on the future of criminal justice.
  • To analyze how these technologies may challenge the foundations of retributive justice.
  • To understand the drivers of change in criminal justice paradigms.

Main Methods:

  • Conceptual analysis of the role of technology in legal systems.
  • Examination of the integration of empirical data into criminal justice.
  • Exploration of the ethical and moral implications of risk assessment technologies.

Main Results:

  • Risk assessment technologies introduce transformative information about the causes of criminal behavior.
  • These technologies provide concrete, data-driven narratives of criminogenesis (genetic, environmental, cultural, experiential factors).
  • The influx of such information is likely to create moral anxieties surrounding retributivism.

Conclusions:

  • Empirically-informed risk assessment technologies are a significant driver for change in criminal justice.
  • These technologies challenge the core tenets of retributive justice by highlighting causal factors.
  • The cumulative impact of such data may lead to the eventual rejection of retributive criminal justice in favor of a more nuanced approach.