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result(s) for
"Furukawa, Yuichi"
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Two-dimensional constrained chaos and industrial revolution cycles
2023
Since the 1760s, at least three industrial revolutions have occurred. To explain this phenomenon, we introduce two-dimensional (2D) constrained chaos. Using a model of innovation dynamics, we show that an industrial-revolution-like technology burst, driven by investment/saving motives for R&D activities, recurs about every one hundred years if the monopolistic use of a new technology lasts about 8 y.
Journal Article
Dynamic effects of patent policy on innovation and inequality in a Schumpeterian economy
by
Mallick, Sushanta
,
Furukawa, Yuichi
,
Peretto, Pietro
in
Economic growth
,
Economic theory
,
Economic Theory/Quantitative Economics/Mathematical Methods
2021
This study explores the dynamic effects of patent policy on innovation and income inequality in a Schumpeterian growth model with endogenous market structure and heterogeneous households. We find that strengthening patent protection has a positive effect on economic growth and a positive or an inverted-U effect on income inequality when the number of differentiated products is fixed in the short run. However, when the number of products adjusts endogenously, the effects of patent protection on growth and inequality become negative in the long run. We also calibrate the model to US data to perform a quantitative analysis and find that the long-run negative effect of patent policy on inequality is much larger than its short-run positive effect. This result remains consistent with our empirical finding from a panel vector autoregression.
Journal Article
Love of novelty: a source of innovation-based growth… or underdevelopment traps?
2024
This study develops a new dynamic general equilibrium model to explore the role of people’s love of novelty as a cultural preference in innovation and innovation-based growth. The model considers (a) an infinitely lived representative consumer who has standard love-of-variety preferences for differentiated products and additional love-of-novelty preferences for new products and (b) technological progress driven by two costly and time-consuming innovation activities, new product development and existing product development. We demonstrate that consumers’ love of novelty is a source of innovation-based growth, wherein economies with a moderate love of novelty can achieve innovation and long-run growth through endogenous cycles between periods in which new product development is active and those in which existing product development is active. However, if love of novelty preference is too weak or too strong, the economy is caught in an underdevelopment trap with less innovation and no long-run growth. We also provide some suggestive empirical evidence that supports our theoretical predictions.
Journal Article
Telmisartan Induces Growth Inhibition, DNA Double-Strand Breaks and Apoptosis in Human Endometrial Cancer Cells
by
Furukawa, Yuichi
,
Yoshida, Toshie
,
Narahara, Hisashi
in
Angiotensin
,
Angiotensin II
,
Animal experimentation
2014
Telmisartan, an angiotensin II receptor type 1 blocker, is often used as an antihypertension drug, and it has also been characterized as a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPARγ) ligand. The purpose of this study was to elucidate the antitumor effects of telmisartan on endometrial cancer cells. We treated three endometrial cancer cell lines with various concentrations of telmisartan, and we investigated the effects of the telmisartan on the cell proliferation, apoptosis, and their related measurements in vitro. We also administered telmisartan to nude mice with experimental tumors to determine its in vivo effects and toxicity. All three endometrial cancer cell lines were sensitive to the growth-inhibitory effect of telmisartan. The induction of apoptosis was confirmed in concert with the altered expression of genes and proteins related to the apoptosis. We also observed that DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) were induced in HHUA (human endometrial cancer) cells by telmisartan treatment. In addition, experiments in nude mice showed that telmisartan significantly inhibited human endometrial tumor growth, without toxic side effects. Our results suggest that telmisartan might be a new therapeutic option for the treatment of endometrial cancers.
Journal Article
Should the government subsidize innovation or automation?
by
Furukawa, Yuichi
,
Cozzi, Guido
,
Liao, Chih-Hsing
in
Automation
,
Capital depreciation
,
Consumption
2023
This study introduces automation into a Schumpeterian growth model to explore the effects of R&D and automation subsidies. R&D subsidy increases innovation and growth but decreases the share of automated industries and the degree of capital intensity in the aggregate production function. Automation subsidy has the opposite effects on these macroeconomic variables. Calibrating the model to US data, we find that raising R&D subsidy increases the welfare of high-skill workers but decreases the welfare of low-skill workers and capital owners, whereas increasing automation subsidy increases the welfare of high-skill workers and capital owners but decreases the welfare of low-skill workers. Therefore, whether the government should subsidize innovation or automation depends on how it evaluates the welfare gains and losses of different agents in the economy.
Journal Article
Leapfrogging cycles in international competition
2015
Technological leadership has shifted at various times from one country to another. We propose a mechanism that explains this perpetual cycle of technological leapfrogging in a two-country model including the dynamic optimization of an infinitely lived consumer. In the model, each country accumulates knowledge stock over time because of domestic innovation and spillovers from foreign innovation. We show that if the international knowledge spillovers are reasonably efficient, technological leadership may shift first from one country to another, and then alternate between countries along an equilibrium path.
Journal Article
Precipitation Hardening at Elevated Temperatures above 400 °C and Subsequent Natural Age Hardening of Commercial Al–Si–Cu Alloy
2021
The precipitation of intermetallic phases and the associated hardening by artificial aging treatments at elevated temperatures above 400 °C were systematically investigated in the commercially available AC2B alloy with a nominal composition of Al–6Si–3Cu (mass%). The natural age hardening of the artificially aged samples at various temperatures was also examined. A slight increase in hardness (approximately 5 HV) of the AC2B alloy was observed at an elevated temperature of 480 °C. The hardness change is attributed to the precipitation of metastable phases associated with the α-Al15(Fe, Mn)3Si2 phase containing a large amount of impurity elements (Fe and Mn). At a lower temperature of 400 °C, a slight artificial-age hardening appeared. Subsequently, the hardness decreased moderately. This phenomenon was attributed to the precipitation of stable θ-Al2Cu and Q-Al4Cu2Mg8Si6 phases and their coarsening after a long duration. The precipitation sequence was rationalized by thermodynamic calculations for the Al–Si–Cu–Fe–Mn–Mg system. The natural age-hardening behavior significantly varied depending on the prior artificial aging temperatures ranging from 400 °C to 500 °C. The natural age-hardening was found to strongly depend on the solute contents of Cu and Si in the Al matrix. This study provides fundamental insights into controlling the strength level of commercial Al–Si–Cu cast alloys with impurity elements using the cooling process after solution treatment at elevated temperatures above 400 °C.
Journal Article
Augmented O-GlcNAcylation attenuates intermittent hypoxia-induced cardiac remodeling through the suppression of NFAT and NF-κB activities in mice
by
Moriwaki, Kazumasa
,
Yamaguchi, Takehiro
,
Furukawa, Yuichi
in
Acylation
,
Animals
,
Cardiovascular system
2019
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T
DM) has been reported to be associated with cardiac remodeling. Although O-GlcNAcylation is known to be elevated in diabetic and ischemic hearts, the effects of O-GlcNAcylation on cardiac remodeling induced by intermittent hypoxia (IH), such as sleep apnea syndrome (SAS), remain unknown. To evaluate the effects, we induced IH in wild-type (WT) and transgenic O-GlcNAc transferase (Ogt-Tg) mice. Two weeks of IH increased O-GlcNAcylation in the heart tissues of both strains of mice, whereas O-GlcNAcylation in Ogt-Tg mice was significantly higher than that in WT mice under both normoxic and IH conditions. WT mice exhibited cardiac remodeling after IH, whereas cardiac remodeling was significantly attenuated in Ogt-Tg mice. Oxidative stress and apoptosis increased after IH in both strains of mice, whereas the rate of increase in these processes in Ogt-Tg mice was significantly lower than that in WT mice. To examine the mechanism of cardiac remodeling attenuation in Ogt-Tg mice after IH, the effects of O-GlcNAcylation on the activities of the master regulators nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) and NF-κB were determined. The O-GlcNAcylation of GSK-3β, a negative regulator of NFAT, was significantly increased in Ogt-Tg mice, whereas the phosphorylation of GSK-3β was reciprocally reduced. The same result was observed for NF-κB p65. An in vitro reporter assay showed that the augmentation of O-GlcNAcylation by an O-GlcNAcase inhibitor suppressed NFAT and NF-κB promoter activity. These data suggest that augmented O-GlcNAcylation mitigates IH-induced cardiac remodeling by suppressing NFAT and NF-κB activities through the O-GlcNAcylation of GSK-3β and NF-κB p65.
Journal Article
Tourism, Capital and Labor Inflows and Regional Development
2019
The paper considers an open rural region of a developed country with two sectors, an environmentally sensitive agricultural industry and locally operated tourism that generates pollution. We find that if the representative resident’s preference for environmentally friendly tourism services is low, the introduction of additional capital, labor, and tourists promoted by the local government may harm native inhabitants’ economic welfare. Even if tourism is environmentally friendly, the inflow of capital or labor may still have negative effects. On the contrary, if each resident’s preference for tourism service is high, an increased flow of tourists from outside may have positive effects.
Journal Article
Therapeutic dilemma in twin reversed arterial perfusion sequence
by
Yoko Aoyagi
,
Yuichi Furukawa
,
Hisashi Narahara
in
Case Report
,
Case reports
,
Health risk assessment
2019
The dissemination of minimally invasive in utero surgery reduced the mortality of twin reversed arterial perfusion sequence, but the mortality of expectantly treated surgical candidates remains high. A 26-year-old, non-parous, Japanese woman at 13 weeks of gestation had been diagnosed with twin reversed arterial perfusion sequence and was judged as a surgical candidate for radiofrequency ablation. However, she did not undergo surgery because of the anatomical location of the acardiac twin. At 18 weeks of gestation, the blood flow to the acardiac twin disappeared spontaneously. The pump twin began to demonstrate fetal growth retardation during the third trimester. The patient delivered a 1891 g female at term. We macroscopically identified the cause of the fetal growth retardation as velamentous insertion of the umbilical cord and microscopically diagnosed the acardiac twin with acardiac acephalus. We should give the same attention to the management of post–twin reversed arterial perfusion sequence as twin reversed arterial perfusion sequence itself.
Journal Article