3,109 research outputs found

    Evolution or revolution? a study of price and wage volatility in England, 1200-1900

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    Using annual data 1209-1914, this paper examines whether there are structural breaks in the movements of prices and wages that correspond to the major ā€˜revolutionsā€™ identified in historical narratives. Econometric modelling of trend and volatility in prices and wages confirms the importance of the Commercial Revolution and the Glorious Revolution, but suggests that the Industrial Revolution may be better described in evolutionary terms. The evidence also points to a late medieval revolution at the time of the Good Parliament, shortly after the Black Death and just before the Peasantā€™s Revolt. This supports Britnell and Campbellā€™s commercialisation hypothesis - that the institutional pre-conditions for the Industrial Revolution began to develop at a very early date.Economic evolution; Economic revolution; Historical economics;

    Revolutionary change and structural breaks: A time series analysis of wages and commodity prices in Britain 1264-1913

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    In this paper we empirically test the hypothesis that economic revolutions are associated with structural breaks in historical economic data. A simple test for structural breaks in economic time series is applied to British wage and price data from the medieval to the modern period. Evidence for structural change is found in nearly half of the series studied -- suggesting that structural breaks are an intrinsic feature of such historic data. Structural changes are most closely linked to the Commercial Revolution followed by the Agricultural Revolution and the Industrial Revolution, with changes linked to an underlying process of price stabilisation as measured by a decrease in the long-term level of volatility.historical economics; economic revolutions; structural breaks; price stabilisation

    How long has NICE taken to produce Technology Appraisal guidance? A retrospective study to estimate predictors of time to guidance.

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    OBJECTIVES: To assess how long the UK's National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence's (NICE) Technology Appraisal Programme has taken to produce guidance and to determine independent predictors of time to guidance. DESIGN: Retrospective time to event (survival) analysis. SETTING: Technology Appraisal guidance produced by NICE. DATASOURCE: All appraisals referred to NICE by February 2010 were included, except those referred prior to 2001 and a number that were suspended. OUTCOME MEASURE: Duration from the start of an appraisal (when the scope document was released) until publication of guidance. RESULTS: Single Technology Appraisals (STAs) were published significantly faster than Multiple Technology Appraisals (MTAs) with median durations of 48.0 (IQR; 44.3-75.4) and 74.0 (IQR; 60.9-114.0) weeks, respectively (pā€‰<0.0001). Median time to publication exceeded published process timelines, even after adjusting for appeals. Results from the modelling suggest that STAs published guidance significantly faster than MTAs after adjusting for other covariates (by 36.2 weeks (95% CI -46.05 to -26.42 weeks)) and that appeals against provisional guidance significantly increased the time to publication (by 42.83 weeks (95% CI 35.50 to 50.17 weeks)). There was no evidence that STAs of cancer-related technologies took longer to complete compared with STAs of other technologies after adjusting for potentially confounding variables and only weak evidence suggesting that the time to produce guidance is increasing each year (by 1.40 weeks (95% CI -0.35 to 2.94 weeks)). CONCLUSIONS: The results from this study suggest that the STA process has resulted in significantly faster guidance compared with the MTA process irrespective of the topic, but that these gains are lost if appeals are made against provisional guidance. While NICE processes continue to evolve over time, a trade-off might be that decisions take longer but at present there is no evidence of a significant increase in duration

    Rain induced bursts of denitrification activity account for differences in dissolved nitrogen export from forested catchments

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    This study sought to explain differences in dissolved nitrogen (N) export between catchments in the Turkey Lakes Watershed. Neighbouring catchments c35 and c38 have similar N inputs, but a discrepancy in dissolved N export. It was hypothesized that gaseous N export from wet soils accounted for this discrepancy as c35 contains few isolated wet soils, whereas c38 contains many connected wet soils. To test this hypothesis, N2O efflux from soils was measured during the growing season in 2006 and 2007. Minimal N2O efflux (\u3c 1 g N ha1 day1) was observed on days without rain. However, on days with rain, N2O efflux was observed, with a linear increase in the rate of N2O efflux from wet soils of 0.016 g N ha1 day1 (r2=0.60, p\u3c0.001) per millimetre of rain. Intensive monitoring of the wetland soil profile suggested that rain delivers water to the surface layers of the wetland creating an oxygen poor environment where accumulated NO3 is transformed to N2O then N2. The discrepancy in dissolved N export between c35 and c38 was explained when N2O and associated N2 efflux (based on a ratio of 10N2:1N20) from the wet soils in c38 were considered. This study suggests that rain can produce substantial bursts of N2O and N2 from forest soils and that failure to account for gaseous N export may lead to an underestimation of N export from forested catchments

    Performance of wrist based electrocardiography with conventional ECG analysis algorithms

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    Effect of turbulence on electron cyclotron current drive and heating in ITER

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    Non-linear local electromagnetic gyrokinetic turbulence simulations of the ITER standard scenario H-mode are presented for the q=3/2 and q=2 surfaces. The turbulent transport is examined in regions of velocity space characteristic of electrons heated by electron cyclotron waves. Electromagnetic fluctuations and sub-dominant micro-tearing modes are found to contribute significantly to the transport of the accelerated electrons, even though they have only a small impact on the transport of the bulk species. The particle diffusivity for resonant passing electrons is found to be less than 0.15 m^2/s, and their heat conductivity is found to be less than 2 m^2/s. Implications for the broadening of the current drive and energy deposition in ITER are discussed.Comment: Letter, 5 pages, 5 figures, for submission to Nuclear Fusio
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