1,000,421 research outputs found
The Good, the Bad, and the Transitivity of _Better Than_
The RachelsâTemkin spectrum arguments against the transitivity of better than involve good or bad experiences, lives, or outcomes that vary along multiple dimensionsâe.g., duration and intensity of pleasure or pain. This paper presents variations on these arguments involving combinations of good and bad experiences, which have even more radical implications than the violation of transitivity. These variations force opponents of transitivity to conclude that something good is worse than something that isnât good, on pain of rejecting the good altogether. That is impossible, so we must reject the spectrum arguments
Averting economic collapse and the solipsism bias
We study the behavior of experimental subjects who have to make a sequence of risky investment decisions in the presence of network externalities. Subjects follow a simple heuristic-investing after positive experiences and reducing their propensity to invest after a failure. This result contrasts with the theoretical findings of Jeitschko and Taylor [Jeitschko, T.D., Taylor, C., 2001. Local discouragement and global collapse: A theory of coordination avalanches. Amer. Econ. Rev. 91 (1), 208-224] in which even agents who have only good experiences eventually stop investing because they account for the fact that others with worse experiences will quit. This can trigger sudden economic collapse-a coordination avalanche-even in the most efficient Bayesian equilibrium. In the experiment, subjects follow their own experiences and disregard the possible bad experiences of others-thus exhibiting behavior that we term "solipsism bias." Solipsism results in sustained investment activity and thus averts complete collapse. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
Dealing with the Bad Loans of the Chinese Banks
Chinese banks suffer from serious financial fragility manifested by high proportions of non-performing loans and low capital-adequacy ratios. A key policy introduced recently by the Chinese government to reduce financial risks is the establishment of four asset management companies (AMCs) for dealing with bad loans. Drawing on the experiences of the Resolution Trust Corporation in the United States and bank restructuring in the Central European transition economies, we argue that the original AMC design will not be successful in resolving the existing non-performing loans (NPLs) nor will it prevent the creation of new bad loans. We recommend a modification of the current proposal that redefines the relationships between the parent banks and the AMCs by transferring the deposits of problem enterprises along with their NPLs from parent banks to AMCs.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/39741/3/wp357.pd
Mass supervision, misrecognition and the âMalopticonâ
This paper aims to contribute to debates about âmass supervisionâ by exploring its penal character as a lived experience. It begins with a review of recent studies that have used ethnographic methods to explore how supervision is experienced before describing the two projects (âSupervisibleâ and âMass Supervision: Seen and Heardâ) on which the paper draws, explaining these as an attempt to generate a âcounter-visual criminologyâ of mass supervision. I then describe two encounters with âTeejayâ; encounters in which we explored his experiences of supervision firstly through photography and then through song-writing. Both media are presented alongside Teejayâs commentary on what he sought to convey, inviting the reader to engage with and interpret the pictures and song. In the concluding discussion, I offer my own analysis, arguing that Teejayâs representations suggest a need to recognize mass supervision as âMalopticalâ as much as âPanopticalâ. Through the âMalopticonâ, the penal subject is seen badly, is seen as bad and is projected and represented as bad. Experiences of misrecognition and misrepresentation constitute significant yet poorly understood pains of supervisory punishment. The paper concludes by suggesting several ways in which a counter-visual criminology might follow Teejayâs lead in exposing and challenging of mass supervision
Social networking, social harassment and social policy
This paper reports on the misuse of social networking sites (SNS). It was based on a study of 226 students in UK, Sweden, Turkey and France and a panel survey of 1068 Australian adults. Although only a minority of people experienced social harassment and abuse, the distressing nature of the bad experiences suggested that social marketing was needed on several fronts -self-regulation, regulation, education and personal responsibility - in order to minimise these behaviours.<br /
The impact of non-physical education teachersâ perceptions on the promotion of active and healthy lifestyles: A cross-sectional qualitative study
(1) Background: In accordance with the socio-ecological model of physical education (PE), school-based interventions to promote physical activity (PA) will only be successful if a change occurs in the perceptions and attitudes of all. This study sought to analyze non-PE teachers experiences in PE and how these experiences relate to the value they attribute to PE, sports and PA, and the impact of teachersâ perceptions on promoting active lifestyles in the schoolâs context. A mixed-method study was adopted. (2) Methods: A survey about the perceptions in PE was applied to 297 teachers (58 male). From this sample, 24 teachers were selected for three focus groups considering their experiences in PE (e.g., good experiences, bad experiences). MaxQda was used for the inductive qualitative data analysis. (3) Results: Teachers who have had good experiences in PE value the role of PE and sports. Teachers who have had bad experiences do not value the importance of PE or sports. (4) Conclusions: The results support the importance of having good experiences in PE to generate positive attitudes. Thus, teachers who have had bad experiences in PE may constitute barriers that will hinder the promotion of an educational climate that promotes PA and active lifestyles in schools.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly: An Inquiry into the Causes and Nature of Credit Cycles
This paper builds models of nonlinear dynamics in the aggregate investment and borrower net worth and uses them to study the causes and nature of endogenous credit cycles. The basic model has two types of projects: the Good and the Bad. The Bad is highly productive, but, unlike the Good, it generates less aggregate demand spillovers and contributes little to improve borrower net worth. Furthermore, it is relatively difficult to finance externally due to the agency problem. With a low net worth, the agents cannot finance the Bad, and much of the credit goes to finance the Good, even when the Bad projects are more profitable than the Good projects. This over-investment to the Good creates a boom and generates high aggregate demand spillovers. This leads to an improvement in borrower net worth, which makes it possible for the agents to finance the Bad. This shift in the composition of the credit from the Good to the Bad at the peak of the boom causes a deterioration of net worth. The whole process repeats itself. Endogenous fluctuations occur, as the Good breeds the Bad, and the Bad destroys the Good. The model is then extended to add a third type of the projects, the Ugly, which are unproductive but easy to finance. With a low net worth, the Good competes with the Ugly, creating the credit multiplier effect; with a high net worth, the Good competes with the Bad, creating the credit reversal effect. By combining these two effects, this model generates intermittency phenomena, i.e., relatively long periods of small and persistent movements punctuated intermittently by seemingly random-looking behaviors. Along these cycles, the economy exhibits asymmetric fluctuations; it experiences a long and slow process of recovery from a recession, followed by a rapid expansion, and possibly after a period of high volatility, plunges into a recession.wealth-dependent borrowing constraints, heterogeneity of projects, aggregate demand spillovers, credit multiplier effect, credit reversal effect, endogenous credit cycles, nonlinear dynamics, chaos, flip and tangent bifurcations, homoclinic orbits, intermittency, asymmetric fluctuations
Large deviations in relay-augmented wireless networks
We analyze a model of relay-augmented cellular wireless networks. The network
users, who move according to a general mobility model based on a Poisson point
process of continuous trajectories in a bounded domain, try to communicate with
a base station located at the origin. Messages can be sent either directly or
indirectly by relaying over a second user. We show that in a scenario of an
increasing number of users, the probability that an atypically high number of
users experiences bad quality of service over a certain amount of time, decays
at an exponential speed. This speed is characterized via a constrained entropy
minimization problem. Further, we provide simulation results indicating that
solutions of this problem are potentially non-unique due to symmetry breaking.
Also two general sources for bad quality of service can be detected, which we
refer to as isolation and screening.Comment: 28 pages, 5 figures; corrected several misprint
BAD EXPERIENCES, DRAG LEVELS AND SPORTS PARTICIPATION: DEMOGRAPHIC EVALUATION STUDIES AND CORROSIVE JUNIOR HIGHSCHOOL IN INDONESIA
The purpose of this study was to obtain information on negative experiences, levels of inhibition, and participation in sports based on the demographics of Indonesian junior high schools and the functional relationship between the three. The research method used is descriptive quantitative and correlational design with the design of the test using the discrepancy model. The sample consists of 1690 junior high schools in Indonesia. Data were analyzed using three techniques: one route re-route, two-reroute check and correlation analysis. Research shows that: 1) bad experiences exceed the established low tolerance threshold; 2) the drag level does not exceed the specified low tolerance limit; 3) training participation does not meet well defined criteria; and 4) correlation analysis concluded that there is a fairly strong positive correlation between experience and barriers to exercising. When bad experiences are high, sports problems are high. While the relationship between bad experiences with physical activity and the relationship between sports barriers and physical activity also correlates, the relationship is negative. These results indicate that the three variables influence each other. When the level of bad experience is low, the training barriers will also be low, so that it will affect the level of training participation
- âŠ