0000000000088965

AUTHOR

Julia Jakobi

The Egalitarian Quality of Lottocracy

Abstract. Recently, political models which employ lottery-selection instead of ballot voting have been proposed. Proponents argue that such  lottocratic models can improve the representation of the population and reduce undemocratic influences. In this paper, I argue that these proposals also satisfy the egalitarian requirement of democracy. I claim that having an  equal chance to be selected by lot  is equally egalitarian as having  an equally weighed vote  for two reasons: first, having a chance to be selected by lot satisfies the requirement for  political justice better than electoral democracy and second, it provides citizens with equal political  influence  and not merely equal  impac…

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Impact of medical imaging on the epigenome – low-dose exposure in the course of computed tomography does not induce detectable changes of DNA-methylation profiles in peripheral blood cells

Computed tomography (CT) is a main contributor to artificial low-dose exposure. Understanding the biological effects induced by CT exposure and their dependency on the characteristics of photon spectra is essential for knowledge-driven risk assessment. In a previous gene expression study, we have identified upregulation of AEN, BAX, DDB2, EDA2R and FDXR after ex vivo exposure with single-energy CT and dual-energy CT (DECT). In this study, we focused on CT-induced changes of DNA methylation. This epigenetic modification of DNA is a central regulator of gene expression and instrumental in preserving genome integrity. Previous studies reported focal hypermethylation and global hypomethylation …

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