5 research outputs found
On the Lucas Difference Sequence Spaces Defined by Modulus Function
In this paper, firstly, we define the Lucas difference sequence spaces by the help of Lucas sequence and a sequence of modulus function. Besides, we give some inclusion relations and examine geometrical properties such as Banach-Saks type p, weak fixed point property
Case Report: Gastric Carcinoma Diagnosed at the Second Trimester of Pregnancy
We report a rare case of gastric cancer in pregnancy. A 26-year-old woman presented at the 20th week of pregnancy complaining of nausea and vomiting. Although the patient considered the condition to be related with pregnancy and underestimated its importance, her complaints persisted over the following weeks and she was hospitalized for investigation. The diagnostic workup revealed a metastatic gastric cancer. Gastric cancer is very rare in pregnancy, and therefore it may be left out of differential diagnosis by physicians. Diagnosis may be further delayed because of overlapping symptoms occurring during normal pregnancy (nausea, vomiting, and fatigue). All these factors may contribute to a very high mortality of this malignancy during pregnancy
COMBINATORIAL DEVELOPMENT OF ACTIVE MATERIALS FOR ENERGY STORAGE AND CONVERSION
Active material development in energy storage and conversion as in similar development
other fields of materials research have largely followed Edisonian approach of focusing on one
material composition at a time. The approach requires a careful pre-consideration in selecting the
material composition and the success depends largely on the suitability of the initial choice made for
the material. Combinatorial approach is an alternative method whereby a large number of samples
each with different compositions are produced simultaneously..
The Effect on the Indicators of Unemployment of International Crude Oil Price Volatility: Empirical Findings on the Case of Turkey
Oil prices may have an impact on economic activity through various transmission channels. A number of recent studies have emphasized the role of oil prices and macro-economic variables. The aim of this paper is to study the short-term/longterm relationship between oil prices and unemployment in Turkey. The most common cause of increasing oil prices over the last thirty years has been a decrease in supply. Prices increased during the early 1970s as OPEC reduced supply. Again prices increased in the late 1970s and early 1980s as the collapse of the government of the Shah of Iran and subsequent war between Iran and Iraq threatened supply. We applied Granger causal modals to determine if oil prices “Granger Caused” unemployment for data between 2005:01 and 2009:12 in Turkey. However, we performed Vector Autoregressive Model (VAR) to determine the relationship between to variables in question, to estimate these relationships and to determine the delay values. As a result, long-term relationship between oil prices and unemployment rate are available in Turkey, and changes in the unemployment rate do not affect oil prices, oil prices changes affect the unemployment rate (this effect is the opposite direction