• This paper considers two models for analyzing the dynamics of firm behavior that allow for heterogeneity among firms, idiosyncratic (or firm specific) sources of uncertainty, and discrete outcomes (exit and/or entry). (repec.org)
  • Or is it just that musical evolution is the result of the idiosyncratic behavior of composers and so defies more general characterization? (technologyreview.com)
  • But an important question is whether this spread is the result of a general mechanism of transmission or the idiosyncratic behavior of individual composers. (technologyreview.com)
  • Individuals with disabilities may exhibit problem behaviors that are difficult to analyze using typical analogue assessments due to intensity or rate (Davis et al, 2012), or the problem behavior may be maintained by idiosyncratic variables that are observed in the natural setting but not during a standard functional analysis (Hanley, Iwata & McCord, 2003). (abainternational.org)
  • Second, an assessment of idiosyncratic variables evoking problem behavior during transitions is described. (abainternational.org)
  • The title functions as an idiosyncratic presence that both acknowledges and extends the metaphorical implications of the work. (lissongallery.com)
  • His move back to a more traditional consideration of the object is enriched by the metaphorical implications of the ladders, which may be simple objects but assume a function that is allegorical and high. (whitehotmagazine.com)
  • The model incorporates multidimensional heterogeneity, idiosyncratic risk and borrowing constraints. (repec.org)
  • This paper demonstrates that, when households face borrowing constraints and uninsurable idiosyncratic shocks to income, the welfare implications of financial liberalization are considerable. (bportugal.pt)
  • This challenge has been met by a number of papers in the economics literature, which exploit major shocks to early-life health in the forms of famine and epidemics. (lu.se)
  • Julie Fisher acknowledges the competence of young children when they arrive at school, the importance of building on their early successes and the critical role of adults who understand the individual and idiosyncratic ways of young learners. (stem.org.uk)
  • In this paper, we examine the welfare implications of removing stamp duty in a general equilibrium overlapping generation model with heterogeneous agents. (austaxpolicy.com)
  • Specifically, the article highlights the key implications that this decision, the recent announcement of general details about the E.U.-U.S. Privacy Shield, and currently ongoing regulatory reactions (especially by European data protection agencies), will have for many companies based in both Europe and the United States that are now scrambling to ensure that their interim data protection measures are sufficient moving forward. (quinnemanuel.com)
  • In the chemical and mining industries, mercury is used as a catalyst in reactions to form polymers, in manufacturing chlorine and caustic soda, and in extracting gold from ore. (cdc.gov)
  • Some drug reactions are idiosyncratic. (msdmanuals.com)
  • We study the policy implications of this fiscal externality in an optimal dynamic tax framework. (repec.org)
  • Strong domestically-driven inflation in the old "D-mark zone" - in contrast with the developments in the periphery - is a new form of divide in the Euro area with significant policy implications. (axa-im.com)
  • The nonparametric implications enable the construction of testing and selection correction procedures that are easy to implement (they do not require the computationally difficult, and functional-form specific, estimation algorithms that have been used to empirically analyze stochastic control models with discrete outcomes in the past). (repec.org)
  • Seen from the Roman side of the chronological fence, the study of Medieval technology had appeared to be a fertile field, producing interesting ideas of broad historical significance backed up by forms of detailed literary and artistic evidence sadly lacking from earlier periods. (humanist.de)
  • They tend therefore to adopt an idiosyncratic organizational scheme for what they are learning. (vanderbilt.edu)
  • The focus is on quantifying the effect of the number of members, which drives the level of idiosyncratic longevity risk in the fund, on the income stability. (researchgate.net)
  • The title draws on the multiplicities of practice within a given form as well as the diversity of media, materials, surface effects and scale employed. (lissongallery.com)
  • In a practical and realistic way Starting from the Child examines a range of theories about young children as learners and the implications of these theories for classroom practice. (stem.org.uk)
  • We will discuss implications for practice and directions for future research. (abainternational.org)
  • It was many individual teachers like Stanley Keleman and Carl Rogers, as well as the community of Esalen teachers that helped him form a vision of how to cross the divide between the self-enclosed individual and the open society. (esalen.org)
  • The language of the transference of idea-in-head to lines-on-page is as individual and idiosyncratic as the creator. (comixtalk.com)
  • This doesn't mean the resulting comics will (necessarily) be less idiosyncratic or individual â€" just that the process has to be standardized to some degree. (comixtalk.com)
  • Our model features an idiosyncratic shock to housing preferences which may create mismatch or induce household to move. (austaxpolicy.com)
  • Next World Emissaries features triumphant hybrid forms based on pervasive species such as weeds and insects. (holtermuseum.org)
  • The wall text, which you can see above, opens with: "This exhibition presents a dozen international artists whose abstract work features idiosyncratic and organic forms, materials that appear to be malleable and pliable, craft-based techniques, and, in many cases, an engagement with gender and sexuality. (blogspot.com)
  • A single creator's comics are formed in as many different ways as there are creators. (comixtalk.com)
  • It is unusual but highly effective for Corwin to adjust or change in small ways the ladder with small alterations so that its Ur-form becomes transformed into something else, something larger. (whitehotmagazine.com)
  • While the situation at SVB was idiosyncratic in some ways, sharply higher interest rates have resulted in material unrealized losses totaling $620 billion across FDIC-insured US banks as of year-end 2022. (cambridgeassociates.com)
  • Investors and businesses are increasingly aware of the need to understand the drivers and the implications of a greater level of event risk exacerbated by shifting social patterns. (citigroup.com)
  • I'll then extract a set of principles that I hope will have broader implications across America. (kresge.org)
  • The two hand-built ceramic works Ribbon Bow, 2004 are made from cut up thrown pottery elements that are reassembled to create undulating forms. (lissongallery.com)
  • I create sculptures that explore human impact on the world by fusing animate and inanimate forms into singular identities. (holtermuseum.org)
  • In his works, landscapes, the species we affect, and the waste we create, coalesce in vivid forms that illustrate the reach of our impact and consumption habits. (holtermuseum.org)
  • The total social benefits of college education exceed the private benefits because the government receives a share of the monetary returns in the form of income taxes. (repec.org)
  • As a foundation for this work, historically imagined utopias (from the absurd revelry and hybrid forms of Bosch's Garden of Earthly Delights to antique sailing maps of imagined territories) have been considered alongside constructed virtual reality worlds in pop-cultural narratives, and Ecotopian fiction. (holtermuseum.org)
  • Those of us looking at the work can, to some extent, dissociate it from what it is meant to represent, separating the form from its realist function. (whitehotmagazine.com)
  • That's interesting work that has important implications for our understanding of the way music evolves. (technologyreview.com)
  • If so, then what are the implications of this condition, for scholarship on digital users and for our own personal work habits? (culturedigitally.org)
  • Computing Markov-Perfect Nash Equilibria: Numerical Implications of a Dynamic Differentiated Product Model ," RAND Journal of Economics , The RAND Corporation, vol. 25(4), pages 555-589, Winter. (repec.org)
  • Computing Markov Perfect Nash Equilibria: Numerical Implications of a Dynamic Differentiated Product Model ," NBER Technical Working Papers 0119, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc. (repec.org)
  • Computing Markov perfect Nash equilibria: numerical implications of a dynamic differentiated product model ," Discussion Paper / Institute for Empirical Macroeconomics 58, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. (repec.org)
  • These are the implications of a dynamic model estimated using the past 20 years of data for the United States. (federalreserve.gov)
  • Underneath all the seemingly idiosyncratic personalities and methods there was a profound current of appreciation: for our earthiness, for our souls' rootedness in ancient processes of evolution expressed in the patterns of breath, rushes of excitement, sudden holdings. (esalen.org)
  • Expert knowledge is conditionalized , and the conditional relationships form patterns that experts recognize and rely upon. (vanderbilt.edu)
  • These complex hybrid forms construct idiosyncratic narratives that explore new and fantastic understandings of eco-anxiety and speculate on possibilities beyond planetary collapse. (holtermuseum.org)
  • Open-ended questions were formulated and used to elicit the rich idiosyncratic meaning of the complex experiences of the participants. (bvsalud.org)
  • His consistently innovative use of form and his interest in materials and their manipulation make him one of the most inventive artists of our time. (lissongallery.com)
  • This self-deception caused him to make inappropriate comparisons and draw idiosyncratic conclusions. (humanist.de)
  • I'm going to leave it to another writer to parse the political implications of the title. (blogspot.com)
  • Until now, financial markets have taken a relatively sanguine view of political events, treating them as regionalized and idiosyncratic. (citigroup.com)
  • The Mishnah shows that the process of consolidating various earlier schools of thought and local, even idiosyncratic traditions of observance (e.g., in a certain village, of a certain scribe and his disciples) was a later endeavor beginning at Yavneh. (mindvendor.com)
  • Corwin, who has done an excellent job in this show, understands that the implication of his efforts are at least as important as the literal meaning of the object. (whitehotmagazine.com)
  • Perhaps the more pertinent question, and an important practical consideration for scholars whose primary output is long-form writing, is this: How do users negotiate the participatory immersion and fluid, ambient exchange of always-on communication with the temporary need for quiet and connection-free contemplation? (culturedigitally.org)
  • The current interest rate environment has various implications for the resilience of the banking sector. (europa.eu)
  • In the context of a $20 trillion banking system, 3% in unrealized losses may not seem like much, but there is potential for further losses to materialize and erode bank equity, especially as implications of rapidly rising interest rates have likely not fully materialized. (cambridgeassociates.com)
  • We quickly formed a philanthropic-private sector consortium named M-1 Rail, after Woodward's route designation as Michigan's first paved road. (kresge.org)
  • Angel investing is as idiosyncratic as individuals because individuals are at the core of angel investing. (entrepreneurship.org)
  • The number of studies that aim to understand the interactions between the cognitive and affective processes has been increasing over the past years, mainly due to their several practical implications, particularly for psychotherapy and the forensic field. (scielo.br)
  • Conditions in their countries may explain some of this: services inflation - which is normally the most "idiosyncratic", domestically-driven component - is significantly above the average in Austria, Belgium, and the Netherlands, in clear contrast with the relative moderation seen in Southern Europe. (axa-im.com)
  • A fall in the reserve asset's value, triggered by overall market conditions or by an idiosyncratic change in the fundamental value of the asset, can reduce the value of the GSC. (financialsamurai.com)
  • A Professor of Constitutional Law is doubtless aware that there are historical precedents of elected governments that were not constitutionally limited and that there are eminently sensible reasons why those "archaic, idiosyncratic and downright evil" framers of the Constitution did not emulate them. (americanthinker.com)
  • The suggestion is so preposterous that it is tempting to dismiss the article altogether, but to do so would be to miss some very revealing implications. (americanthinker.com)
  • 3) describe a framework that underlies CDS systems which, if incorporated in the development of CPGs, can be a means to bridge this gap, 4) review the general types and adoption of current CDS systems, and 5) describe how the adoption of EHRs and related technologies will directly influence the content and form of CPGs. (biomedcentral.com)
  • These works exemplify the process of soft/solid carving in which form is created by cutting away and hollowing out, continuing his longstanding investigation of the boundaries between interior and exterior. (lissongallery.com)
  • If the Rabbinical analogy held good, they reasoned, then the form-critic must reckon with a process whereby 'Rabbi Jesus' carefully drilled his pupils 'line upon line, measure upon measure' till they got it right. (mindvendor.com)
  • Their results have implications for the understanding of other cultural phenomena, such as the evolution of language, fashion, and science. (technologyreview.com)
  • Cocaine is a commonly used illegal recreational drug that may have significant cardiovascular implications. (medscape.com)
  • The paper concludes by checking for the implications of the two models on an eight-year panel of Wisconsin firms. (repec.org)
  • and the themes identified form the basis for discussion in this paper. (bvsalud.org)
  • Empirical Implications Of Alternative Models Of Firm Dynamics ," SSRI Workshop Series 292694, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Social Systems Research Institute. (repec.org)
  • This impression probably resulted from the existence of a few charismatic writers of the 1950's-1970's notably L. White Jr. and including J. Gimpel who had, in the tradition of Lefebvre des Noëttes made bold claims for the historical and social implications of technology. (humanist.de)
  • Seidman begins by blaming the current governmental crisis, incredibly, on "obedience to the Constitution," which he describes as containing "archaic, idiosyncratic and downright evil provisions. (americanthinker.com)
  • Merging human forms with those of animals, insects, architecture and the natural environment, my sculptures become intricate cosmologies of real and imagined spaces. (holtermuseum.org)
  • The implication of this is that a venture capitalist has to invest a million dollars or more per company for him or her to be able to justify spending time with that investment. (entrepreneurship.org)
  • We further identify relevant factors that generally influence the conception of these products from the retirees' perspectives, and derive implications for product developers, before concluding with avenues of future research. (researchgate.net)
  • Empirical Implications of Alternative Models of Firm Dynamics ," NBER Working Papers 2893, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc. (repec.org)
  • Commissioned by the National Research Council, How People Learn presents the conclusions of recent research in cognitive science, and then develops their implications for teaching and learning. (vanderbilt.edu)
  • a form in which the effect of being in a state in a particular period erodes away as time from that period lapses). (repec.org)
  • Islamophobia or generalised anti-Muslim feelings increased concerningly in this period (Beaman, 2021), a rift was formed between, on the one hand, Republican France ("us") and, on the other hand, Muslims ("them") and the marginalised areas they were associated with (Niang, 2019). (jssj.org)
  • The mechanics of consumerism is a driving theme behind these works, with a specific focus on the factory food system and its implications for land depletion and climate shift. (holtermuseum.org)
  • True to form, the New York Times saw out 2012 by publishing another apology for dictatorship. (americanthinker.com)
  • House Version is made of prefabricated stainless steel tubes of varying length, the domed ends of which interconnect to form molecule-like clusters at the vertices. (lissongallery.com)
  • Empirical Implications of Alternative Models of Firm Dynamics ," Journal of Economic Theory , Elsevier, vol. 79(1), pages 1-45, March. (repec.org)
  • Much of this radical change was forming out of the storm gathering at Esalen where pioneers like Charlotte Selver, Ida Rolf, Moshe Feldenkrais, Fritz Smith, Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen, Judith Aston, and Emilie Conrad were given the chance to emerge from their private studios and small groups of students to engage in the intense community discourses going on all over the Esalen property. (esalen.org)