514 research outputs found
The Size Variance Relationship of Business Firm Growth Rates.
The relationship between the size and the variance of firm growth rates is known to follow an approximate power-law behavior σ(S) similar to S^-β(S) where S is the firm size and β(S) almost equal to 0.2 is an exponent weakly dependent on S. Here we show how a model of proportional growth which treats firms as classes composed of various number of units of variable size, can explain this size-variance dependence. In general, the model predicts that β(S) must exhibit a crossover from β(0) = 0 to β(∞) = 1/2. For a realistic set of parameters, β(S) is approximately constant and can vary in the range from 0.14 to 0.2 depending on the average number of units in the firm. We test the model with a unique industry specific database in which firm sales are given in terms of the sum of the sales of all their products. We find that the model is consistent with the empirically observed size-variance relationship.patent disclosure; innovation; r&d competition
The Size Variance Relationship of Business Firm Growth Rates.
The relationship between the size and the variance of firm growth rates is known to follow an approximate power-law behavior σ(S) similar to S^-β(S) where S is the firm size and β(S) almost equal to 0.2 is an exponent weakly dependent on S. Here we show how a model of proportional growth which treats firms as classes composed of various number of units of variable size, can explain this size-variance dependence. In general, the model predicts that β(S) must exhibit a crossover from β(0) = 0 to β(∞) = 1/2. For a realistic set of parameters, β(S) is approximately constant and can vary in the range from 0.14 to 0.2 depending on the average number of units in the firm. We test the model with a unique industry specific database in which firm sales are given in terms of the sum of the sales of all their products. We find that the model is consistent with the empirically observed size-variance relationship.
The Size Variance Relationship of Business Firm Growth Rates
The relationship between the size and the variance of firm growth rates is
known to follow an approximate power-law behavior where is the firm size and is an
exponent weakly dependent on . Here we show how a model of proportional
growth which treats firms as classes composed of various number of units of
variable size, can explain this size-variance dependence. In general, the model
predicts that must exhibit a crossover from to
. For a realistic set of parameters, is
approximately constant and can vary in the range from 0.14 to 0.2 depending on
the average number of units in the firm. We test the model with a unique
industry specific database in which firm sales are given in terms of the sum of
the sales of all their products. We find that the model is consistent with the
empirically observed size-variance relationship
Genome-wide analysis of long noncoding RNA stability
Transcriptomic analyses have identified tens of thousands of intergenic, intronic, and cis-antisense long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) that are expressed from mammalian genomes. Despite progress in functional characterization, little is known about the post-transcriptional regulation of lncRNAs and their half-lives. Although many are easily detectable by a variety of techniques, it has been assumed that lncRNAs are generally unstable, but this has not been examined genome-wide. Utilizing a custom noncoding RNA array, we determined the half-lives of ∼800 lncRNAs and ∼12,000 mRNAs in the mouse Neuro-2a cell line. We find only a minority of lncRNAs are unstable. LncRNA half-lives vary over a wide range, comparable to, although on average less than, that of mRNAs, suggestive of complex metabolism and widespread functionality. Combining half-lives with comprehensive lncRNA annotations identified hundreds of unstable (half-life 16 h). Analysis of lncRNA features revealed that intergenic and cis-antisense RNAs are more stable than those derived from introns, as are spliced lncRNAs compared to unspliced (single exon) transcripts. Subcellular localization of lncRNAs indicated widespread trafficking to different cellular locations, with nuclear-localized lncRNAs more likely to be unstable. Surprisingly, one of the least stable lncRNAs is the well-characterized paraspeckle RNA Neat1, suggesting Neat1 instability contributes to the dynamic nature of this subnuclear domain. We have created an online interactive resource (http://stability. matticklab.com) that allows easy navigation of lncRNA and mRNA stability profiles and provides a comprehensive annotation of ∼7200 mouse lncRNAs
The VIP Experiment
The Pauli Exclusion Principle (PEP) is a basic principle of Quantum
Mechanics, and its validity has never been seriously challenged. However, given
its importance, it is very important to check it as thoroughly as possible.
Here we describe the VIP (Violation of PEP) experiment, an improved version of
the Ramberg and Snow experiment (Ramberg and Snow, Phys. Lett. B238 (1990)
438); VIP shall be performed at the Gran Sasso underground laboratories, and
aims to test the Pauli Exclusion Principle for electrons with unprecedented
accuracy, down to Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, PDF only, presented by Edoardo Milotti to the
conference "Quantum Theory: reconsideration of foundations-3", Vaxjo
(Sweden), June, 6-11 200
Efficient processing of an antigenic sequence for presentation by MHC class I molecules depends on its neighboring residues in the protein
Processing of endogenously synthesized proteins generates short peptides that are presented by MHC class I molecules to CD8 T lymphocytes. Here it is documented that not only the sequence of the presented peptide but also the residues by which it is flanked in the protein determine the efficiency of processing and presentation. This became evident when a viral sequence of proven antigenicity was inserted at different positions into an unrelated carrier protein. Not different peptides, but different amounts of the antigenic insert itself were retrieved by isolation of naturally processed peptides from cells expressing the different chimeric proteins. Low yield of antigenic peptide from an unfavorable integration site could be overcome by flanking the insert with oligo-alanine to space it from disruptive neighboring sequences. Notably, the degree of protection against lethal virus disease related directly to the amount of naturally processed antigenic peptide
High sensitivity tests of the Pauli Exclusion Principle with VIP2
The Pauli Exclusion Principle is one of the most fundamental rules of nature
and represents a pillar of modern physics. According to many observations the
Pauli Exclusion Principle must be extremely well fulfilled. Nevertheless,
numerous experimental investigations were performed to search for a small
violation of this principle. The VIP experiment at the Gran Sasso underground
laboratory searched for Pauli-forbidden X-ray transitions in copper atoms using
the Ramberg-Snow method and obtained the best limit so far. The follow-up
experiment VIP2 is designed to reach even higher sensitivity. It aims to
improve the limit by VIP by orders of magnitude. The experimental method,
comparison of different PEP tests based on different assumptions and the
developments for VIP2 are presented.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings DISCRETE2014 Conferenc
Strong interaction studies with kaonic atoms
The strong interaction of antikaons (K-) with nucleons and nuclei in the low
energy regime represents an active research field connected intrinsically with
few-body physics. There are important open questions like the question of
antikaon nuclear bound states - the prototype system being K-pp. A unique and
rather direct experimental access to the antikaon-nucleon scattering lengths is
provided by precision X-ray spectroscopy of transitions in low-lying states of
light kaonic atoms like kaonic hydrogen isotopes. In the SIDDHARTA experiment
at the electron-positron collider DA?NE of LNF-INFN we measured the most
precise values of the strong interaction observables, i.e. the strong
interaction on the 1s ground state of the electromagnetically bound K-p atom
leading to a hadronic shift and a hadronic broadening of the 1s state. The
SIDDHARTA result triggered new theoretical work which achieved major progress
in the understanding of the low-energy strong interaction with strangeness.
Antikaon-nucleon scattering lengths have been calculated constrained by the
SIDDHARTA data on kaonic hydrogen. For the extraction of the isospin-dependent
scattering lengths a measurement of the hadronic shift and width of kaonic
deuterium is necessary. Therefore, new X-ray studies with the focus on kaonic
deuterium are in preparation (SIDDHARTA2). Many improvements in the
experimental setup will allow to measure kaonic deuterium which is challenging
due to the anticipated low X-ray yield. Especially important are the data on
the X-ray yields of kaonic deuterium extracted from a exploratory experiment
within SIDDHARTA.Comment: Proc. Few Body 21, 4 pages, 2 figure
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