3,251 research outputs found
Executive compensation and the susceptibility of firms to hostile takeovers : An empirical investigation of the U.S. oil industry
We investigate the suggested substitutive relation between executive compensation and the disciplinary threat of takeover imposed by the market for corporate control. We complement other empirical studies on managerial compensation and corporate control mechanisms in three distinct ways. First, we concentrate on firms in the oil industry for which agency problems were especially severe in the 1980s. Due to the extensive generation of excess cash flow, product and factor market discipline was ineffective. Second, we obtain a unique data set drawn directly from proxy statements which accounts not only for salary and bonus but for the value of all stock-market based compensation held in the portfolio of a CEO. Our data set consists of 51 firms in the U.S. oil industry from 1977 to 1994. Third, we employ ex ante measures of the threat of takeover at the individual firm level which are superior to ex post measures like actual takeover occurrence or past incidence of takeovers in an industry. Results show that annual compensation and, to a much higher degree, stock-based managerial compensation increase after a firm becomes protected from a hostile takeover. However, clear-cut evidence that CEOs of protected firms receive higher compensation than those of firms considered susceptible to a takeover cannot be found
Phase Lags and Coherence of X-Ray Variability in Black Hole Candidates
The ``low'' (hard or ``non-thermal'') state of black hole candidates is
sometimes modelled via an optically thick, hot Compton cloud that obscures a
softer input source such as an accretion disk. In these models the observed
output spectra consist entirely of photons reprocessed by the cloud, making it
difficult to extract information about the input spectra. Recently Miller
(1995) has argued that the Fourier phase (or time) lag between hard and soft
X-ray photons in actuality represents the phase lags intrinsic to the input
source, modulo a multiplicative factor. The phase lags thus would be a probe of
the input photon source. In this paper we examine this claim and find that,
although true for the limited parameter space considered by Miller, the
intrinsic phase lag disappears whenever the output photon energy is much
greater than the input photon energy. The remaining time lags represent a
``shelf'' due to differences between mean diffusion times across the cloud. As
pointed out by Miller, the amplitude of this shelf -- which is present even
when the intrinsic time lags remain -- is indicative of the size and
temperature of the Compton cloud and is a function of the two energies being
compared. However, we find that with previous instruments such as Ginga the
shelf, if present, was likely obscured by counting noise. A more sensitive
measure of Compton cloud parameters may be obtainable from the coherence
function, which is derived from the amplitude of the Fourier cross power
spectral density. This function has been seen to exponentially decrease at high
Fourier frequencies in Cygnus X-1. Coherence loss is characteristic of Compton
clouds that undergo large variations of size and/or temperature on time scales
longer than about 10 seconds. We argue that observing phase lags and coherenceComment: 14 pages, uuencoded postscript, accepted for publication in Monthly
Notice
Network Inference from Co-Occurrences
The recovery of network structure from experimental data is a basic and
fundamental problem. Unfortunately, experimental data often do not directly
reveal structure due to inherent limitations such as imprecision in timing or
other observation mechanisms. We consider the problem of inferring network
structure in the form of a directed graph from co-occurrence observations. Each
observation arises from a transmission made over the network and indicates
which vertices carry the transmission without explicitly conveying their order
in the path. Without order information, there are an exponential number of
feasible graphs which agree with the observed data equally well. Yet, the basic
physical principles underlying most networks strongly suggest that all feasible
graphs are not equally likely. In particular, vertices that co-occur in many
observations are probably closely connected. Previous approaches to this
problem are based on ad hoc heuristics. We model the experimental observations
as independent realizations of a random walk on the underlying graph, subjected
to a random permutation which accounts for the lack of order information.
Treating the permutations as missing data, we derive an exact
expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm for estimating the random walk
parameters. For long transmission paths the exact E-step may be computationally
intractable, so we also describe an efficient Monte Carlo EM (MCEM) algorithm
and derive conditions which ensure convergence of the MCEM algorithm with high
probability. Simulations and experiments with Internet measurements demonstrate
the promise of this approach.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. An extended
version is available as University of Wisconsin Technical Report ECE-06-
Neighboring suboptimal control for vehicle guidance
The neighboring optimal feedback control law is developed for systems with a piecewise linear control for the case where the optimal control is obtained by nonlinear programming techniques. To develop the control perturbation for a given deviation from the nominal path, the second variation is minimized subject to the constraint that the final conditions be satisfied (neighboring suboptimal control). This process leads to a feedback relationship between the control perturbation and the measured deviation from the nominal state. Neighboring suboptimal control is applied to the lunar launch problem. Two approaches, single optimization and multiple optimization for calculating the gains are used, and the gains are tested in a guidance simulation with a mismatch in the acceleration of gravity. Both approaches give acceptable results, but multiple optimization keeps the perturbed path closer to the nominal path
Coronal--Temporal Correlations in GX339-4: Hysteresis, Possible Reflection Changes, and Implications for ADAFs
We present spectral fits and timing analysis of Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer
observations of GX339-4. These observations were carried out over a span of
more than two years and encompassed both the soft/high and hard/low states.
Hysteresis in the soft state/hard state transition is observed. The hard state
exhibits a possible anti-correlation between coronal compactness (i.e.,
spectral hardness) and the covering fraction of cold, reflecting material. The
correlation between `reflection fraction' and soft X-ray flux, however, appears
to be more universal. Furthermore, low flux, hard state observations - taken
over a decline into quiescence- show that the Fe line, independent of
`reflection fraction', remains broad and at a roughly constant equivalent
width, counter to expectations from ADAF models. All power spectral densities
(PSD) of the hard state X-ray lightcurves are describable as the sum of just a
few broad, quasi-periodic features with frequencies that roughly scale as
coronal compactness to the -3/2 power. Similar to observations of Cyg X-1, time
lags between soft and hard variability anti-correlate with coronal compactness.
A stronger correlation is seen between the time lags and the `reflection
fraction'.Comment: 29 Pages, 17 Figures, 6 Tables. Accepted for Publication in MNRAS.
(Abstract Abridged
Subsistence Trends in a Modern Eskimo Community
While Eskimos of Nunivak Island, Alaska, still engage in traditional subsistence activities, they require an adequate cash income in order to acquire and maintain the equipment needed for such activities. In this paper traditional subsistence modes are examined as well as the economic opportunities that permit the Nunivagamiut to maintain them. The use of imported food in part reflects the degree to which a family is unable to participate in its traditional culture. It is indicated that at least part of this inability is of an economic nature
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