That's a good question. They do research that is more related to our investigation functions and to issues that come up through the legislative process. These issues are more related to our immediate role, because that is necessary for us to operate.
The research program, called the contributions program, allows people to research things that are very far from our immediate work, but that will eventually be useful. For example, if we move to legislation on RFIDs, radio frequency identification devices—I'm just picking that example out of the air—this would be helpful for policy-makers to understand the implication.