1,067 research outputs found
Neighborhood Effects in Spatial Housing Value Models The Case of the Metropolitan Area of Paris (1999).
In hedonic housing models, the spatial dimension of housing values are traditionally processed by the impact of neighborhood variables and accessibility variables. In this paper we show that spatial effects might remain once neighborhood effects and accessibility have been controlled for. We notably stress on three sides of neighborhood effects: social capital, social status and social externalities and consider the accessibility to the primary economic center as describing the urban spatial trend. Using spatial econometrics specifications of the hedonic equation, we estimate whether spatial effects impact the housing values. Our empirical case concerns the Metropolitan Area (MA) of Paris in France which is divided in 2 636 neighborhood areas. We estimate the housing price distribution from a sample of 21,000 apartments sold in 1999. Our empirical results highlight the lumpy distribution of unit price along the general decreasing spatial trend from the Central Business District once neighborhood effects have been introduced. More precisely, a spatial error model is estimated revealing a positive and significance spatial effects across housing values which extend beyond their neighborhood area. Social capital, social status and social externalities play local role and may positively or negatively impact the housing prices. We showed a positive impact of diversified building patterns but a negative impact of social mixity which is somewhat conflictual but which is in fact in line with many current questions about social segregation and spatial segregation in urban areas.Hedonic model, housing value, neighborhood effects, spatial econometrics
The European Regional Convergence Process, 1980-1995: Do Spatial Regimes and Spatial Dependence Matter?
We show in this paper that spatial dependence and spatial heterogeneity matter in the estimation of the b-convergence process among 138 European regions over the 1980-1995 period. Using spatial econometrics tools, we detect both spatial dependence and spatial heterogeneity in the form of structural instability across spatial convergence clubs. The estimation of the appropriate spatial regimes spatial error model shows that the convergence process is different across regimes. We also estimate a strongly significant spatial spillover effect: the average growth rate of per capita GDP of a given region is positively affected by the average growth rate of neighboring regions.convergence, club convergence, spatial econometrics, European regions, spatial regimes, spatial autocorrelation
Interactions, spillovers de connaissance et croissance des économies modernes. Faut-il préférer la globalisation ou la proximité géographique ?
Globalisation and metropolisation in modern economies induce some locational trategies of knowledge based activities towards cities and deeply increase trade and move of ideas across cities. In that context, we study the way knowledge spillovers have influenced the economic growth of 82 European Metropolises over the 1990-2005 period. We model knowledge spillovers across cities according to three specific interaction patterns depending either on geography or on global advanced services or thought a combination of these patterns. We show that the mixed pattern matters the best for economic growth of cities in Europe.
A Simple Vegetation Criterion (NDF Content) May Account for Diet Choices of Cattle Between Forages Varying in Maturity Stage and Physical Accessibility
The management of extensively grazed pastures requires an understanding and prediction of the diet choices of herbivores grazing on vegetation that is qualitatively (maturity stage) and quantitatively (biomass, sward height) heterogeneous. The Optimal Foraging Theory (OFT, Stephens & Krebs, 1986), bases its predictions on the relative energy intake rate (EIR) of forages. However, as EIRs are difficult to assess at pasture and are subject to wide intra- and inter-individual variations, another vegetation criterion was sought (accessibility, quality), by-passing the animal\u27s influence, to predict cattle diet choices quantitatively
Interactions, spillovers de connaissance et croissance des économies modernes. Faut-il préférer la globalisation ou la proximité géographique ?
La globalisation et la métropolisation des économies modernes induisent des stratégies de localisation des activités intensives en connaissance en faveur des métropoles et démultiplient les échanges commerciaux et d'information entre les métropoles. Nous étudions, dans ce contexte, le rÎle joué par les spillovers de connaissance sur la croissance de 82 métropoles européennes sur la période 1990-2005. Nous modélisons les spillovers entre les métropoles en distinguant trois schémas d'interactions via la proximité géographique, la globalisation des services supérieurs ou la combinaison de ces deux schémas. Nous montrons que le schéma mixte est le plus performant pour la croissance des métropoles européennes.croissance urbaine, métropoles, interactions spatiales, climat des affaires, économies modernes
Development of a Model Simulating the Impact of Management Strategies on Production From Beef Cattle Farming Systems Based on Permanent Pasture
Grazing systems in Europe increasingly have to meet environmental objectives, which influence management strategies. A deterministic model describing farming system dynamics is being developed in order to elucidate interactions between nature-friendly management practices, as for example late (after flowering) hay harvest or moderate stocking rate, and agricultural output
Baryonic acoustic oscillations simulations for the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST)
The baryonic acoustic oscillations are features in the spatial distribution
of the galaxies which, if observed at different epochs, probe the nature of the
dark energy. In order to be able to measure the parameters of the dark energy
equation of state to high precision, a huge sample of galaxies has to be used.
The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope will survey the optical sky with 6 filters
from 300nm and 1100nm, such that a catalog of galaxies with photometric
redshifts will be available for dark energy studies. In this article, we will
give a rough estimate of the impact of the photometric redshift uncertainties
on the computation of the dark energy parameter through the reconstruction of
the BAO scale from a simulated photometric catalog.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 10th Rencontres de Blois proceedin
A Simple Vegetation Criterion (NDF Content) May Account for Diet Choices of Cattle Between Forages Varying in Maturity Stage and Physical Accessibility
The management of extensively grazed pastures requires an understanding and prediction of the diet choices of herbivores grazing on vegetation that is qualitatively (maturity stage) and quantitatively (biomass, sward height) heterogeneous. The Optimal Foraging Theory (OFT, Stephens & Krebs, 1986), bases its predictions on the relative energy intake rate (EIR) of forages. However, as EIRs are difficult to assess at pasture and are subject to wide intra- and inter-individual variations, another vegetation criterion was sought (accessibility, quality), by-passing the animal\u27s influence, to predict cattle diet choices quantitatively
- âŠ