124,534 research outputs found
Science and Subpoenas: When do the Courts Become Instruments of Manipulation?
Fischer says he believes that the uneasy relationship between law and science is likely to continue regarding disclosure of scientific research materials
Aspects of quark mass generation on a torus
In this talk we report on recent results for the quark propagator on a
compact manifold. The corresponding Dyson-Schwinger equations on a torus are
solved on volumes similar to the ones used in lattice calculations. The
quark-gluon interaction is fixed such that the lattice results are reproduced.
We discuss both the effects in the infinite volume/continuum limit as well as
effects when the volume is small.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures; talk given by CF at QNP06, Madrid, June 200
Influence of voltmeter input impedance on quantum Hall effect measurements
We report on the influence of voltmeters on measurements of the longitudinal
resistance in the quantum Hall effect regime. We show that for typical input
resistances for standard digital lock-in amplifiers the longitudinal resistance
can show a non-zero minimum which might be mistaken for parallel conduction in
the doping layer. In contrast to a real parallel conduction the effect
disappears when either the current source and ground contact are swapped or the
polarity of the B-field is changed. We discuss the influence of input
capacitances and stray capacitances on the measurement. The data demonstrates
the influence of the voltmeter input impedance on the longitudinal resistance
measurement.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 table Corrected capacitance from 400pF to 4n
On the Inadequacy of Newswire Reports for Empirical Research on Foreign Exchange Interventions
Newswire reports have become an accepted tool for empirical studies analyzing informational asymmetries in FX markets. This paper tests the accuracy of such reports for Swiss interventions in the foreign exchange market. The evidence finds that the time stamp of the reports does not always lie near the recorded time of the first intervention trade as is commonly assumed in market microstructure studies. The standard deviation of the time difference is measured in hours and not in minutes. These and other regression results question the accuracy of newswire reports for Swiss interventions.Central Bank Interventions, Intra-Daily Data, Newswire Reports
GIS and Network Analysis
Both geographic information systems (GIS) and network analysis are burgeoning fields, characterised by rapid methodological and scientific advances in recent years. A geographic information system (GIS) is a digital computer application designed for the capture, storage, manipulation, analysis and display of geographic information. Geographic location is the element that distinguishes geographic information from all other types of information. Without location, data are termed to be non-spatial and would have little value within a GIS. Location is, thus, the basis for many benefits of GIS: the ability to map, the ability to measure distances and the ability to tie different kinds of information together because they refer to the same place (Longley et al., 2001). GIS-T, the application of geographic information science and systems to transportation problems, represents one of the most important application areas of GIS-technology today. While traditional GIS formulation's strengths are in mapping display and geodata processing, GIS-T requires new data structures to represent the complexities of transportation networks and to perform different network algorithms in order to fulfil its potential in the field of logistics and distribution logistics. This paper addresses these issues as follows. The section that follows discusses data models and design issues which are specifically oriented to GIS-T, and identifies several improvements of the traditional network data model that are needed to support advanced network analysis in a ground transportation context. These improvements include turn-tables, dynamic segmentation, linear referencing, traffic lines and non-planar networks. Most commercial GIS software vendors have extended their basic GIS data model during the past two decades to incorporate these innovations (Goodchild, 1998). The third section shifts attention to network routing problems that have become prominent in GIS-T: the travelling salesman problem, the vehicle routing problem and the shortest path problem with time windows, a problem that occurs as a subproblem in many time constrained routing and scheduling issues of practical importance. Such problems are conceptually simple, but mathematically complex and challenging. The focus is on theory and algorithms for solving these problems. The paper concludes with some final remarks.
Measuring carrier density in parallel conduction layers of quantum Hall systems
An experimental analysis for two parallel conducting layers determines the
full resistivity tensor of the parallel layer, at magnetic fields where the
other layer is in the quantum Hall regime. In heterostructures which exhibit
parallel conduction in the modulation-doped layer, this analysis quantitatively
determines the charge density in the doping layer and can be used to estimate
the mobility. To illustrate one application, experimental data show magnetic
freeze-out of parallel conduction in a modulation doped heterojunction. As
another example, the carrier density of a minimally populated second subband in
a two-subband quantum well is determined. A simple formula is derived that can
estimate the carrier density in a highly resistive parallel layer from a single
Hall measurement of the total system.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Immigrant language barriers and house prices
Are language skills important in explaining the nexus between house prices and immigrant inflows? The language barrier hypothesis says immigrants from a non common language country value amenities more than immigrants from common language countries.> ; In turn, immigrants from non common language countries are less price sensitive to house price changes than immigrants from a common language country. Tests of the language barrier hypothesis with Swiss house prices show that an immigration inflow from a non common language country equal to 1 percent of an area's population is coincident with an increase in prices for single-family homes of about 4.9 percent. Immigrant inflow from a common language country instead has no statistically significant impact.Labor mobility
Network dependence in multi-indexed data on international trade flows
Faced with the problem that conventional multidimensional fixed effects models only focus on unobserved heterogeneity, but ignore any potential cross-sectional dependence due to network interactions, we introduce a model of trade flows between countries over time that allows for network dependence in flows, based on sociocultural connectivity structures. We show that conventional multidimensional fixed effects model specifications exhibit cross-sectional dependence between countries that should be modeled to avoid simultaneity bias. Given that the source of network interaction is unknown, we propose a panel gravity model that examines multiplenetwork interaction structures, using Bayesian model probabilities to determine those most consistent with the sample data. This is accomplished with the use of computationally efficient Markov Chain Monte Carlo estimation methods that produce a Monte Carlo integration estimate of the log-marginal likelihood that can be used for model comparison. Application of the model to a panel of trade flows points to network spillover effects, suggesting the presence of network dependence and biased estimates from conventional trade flow specifications. The most important sources of network dependence were found to be membership in trade organizations, historical colonial ties, common currency, and spatial proximity of countries.Series: Working Papers in Regional Scienc
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