31,402 research outputs found
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Spillover effects from London and Frankfurt to Central and Eastern European stock markets
This paper investigates comovement in stock markets between the emerging economies of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) and the developed markets of Western Europe. Three approaches are employed to examine this issue. The first two approaches, time-varying realised correlation ratios and cointegration statistics, use a two-step technique to derive timevarying estimates of the comovement between returns on CEE and EU stock exchanges. The first step uses common factor analysis to define the factors driving CEE stock exchanges, while the second step evaluates the relationship between the leading principal factor for CEE countries and the DAX and FTSE using time-varying realised correlation and rolling cointegration statistics. The third approach employs multivariate GARCH techniques to obtain estimates of mean and variance spillover effects
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Stock market co-movement in the Caribbean
This paper investigates co-movement in five Caribbean stock markets (Barbados, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago, The Bahamas and Guyana) using common factor analysis. The common factors are obtained using principal component analysis and therefore account for the maximum portion of the variance present in the stock exchanges investigated. We break our analysis down and test for co-movement in different periods so as to ascertain any changes that have taken place from one period to the next. In particular we examine 10-year, 5-year and 3-year periods. We also specify a vector autoregression model and test for co-movement between the five markets during the sample period through impulse response functions. Both of our tests fail to find any evidence of co-movement between the exchanges over the entire sample period. However, we find evidence of periodic co-movement, particularly between exchanges in Barbados, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago
Metal drilling with portable hand drills
Study of metal drilling solves problems of excessive burring, oversized holes, and out-of-round holes. Recommendations deal with using the proper chemical coolants, applying the coolants effectively, employing cutting oils, and dissipating the heat caused by drilling
Automated DNA Motif Discovery
Ensembl's human non-coding and protein coding genes are used to automatically
find DNA pattern motifs. The Backus-Naur form (BNF) grammar for regular
expressions (RE) is used by genetic programming to ensure the generated strings
are legal. The evolved motif suggests the presence of Thymine followed by one
or more Adenines etc. early in transcripts indicate a non-protein coding gene.
Keywords: pseudogene, short and microRNAs, non-coding transcripts, systems
biology, machine learning, Bioinformatics, motif, regular expression, strongly
typed genetic programming, context-free grammar.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
Heisenberg exchange in magnetic monoxides
The superexchange intertacion in transition-metal oxides, proposed initially
by Anderson in 1950, is treated using contemporary tight-binding theory and
existing parameters. We find also a direct exchange for nearest-neighbor metal
ions, larger by a factor of order five than the superexchange. This direct
exchange arises from Vddm coupling, rather than overlap of atomic charge
densities, a small overlap exchange contribution which we also estimate. For
FeO and CoO there is also an important negative contribution, related to Stoner
ferromagnetism, from the partially filled minority-spin band which broadens
when ionic spins are aligned. The corresponding J1 and J2 parameters are
calculated for MnO, FeO, CoO, and NiO. They give good accounts of the Neel and
the Curie-Weiss temperatures, show appropriate trends, and give a reasonable
account of their volume dependences. For MnO the predicted value for the
magnetic susceptibility at the Neel temperature and the crystal distortion
arising from the antiferromagnetic transition were reasonably well given.
Application to CuO2 planes in the cuprates gives J=1220oK, compared to an
experimental 1500oK, and for LiCrO2 gives J1=4 50oK compared to an experimental
230oK.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Phys. Rev. B 1/19/07. Realized
J=4V^2/U applies generally, as opposed to J=2V^2/U from one-electron theory
(1/28 revision
Dip coating process: Silicon sheet growth development for the large-area silicon sheet task of the low-cost silicon solar array project
The research program to investigate the technical and economic feasibility of producing solar-cell-quality sheet silicon by dip-coating one surface of carbonized ceramic substrates with a thin layer of large-grain polycrystalline silicon is reported. The initial effort concentrated on the design and construction of the experimental dip-coating facility. The design was completed and its experimental features are discussed. Current status of the program is reported, including progress toward solar cell junction diffusion and miscellaneous ceramic substrate procurement
Optical matrix elements in tight-binding models with overlap
We investigate the effect of orbital overlap on optical matrix elements in
empirical tight-binding models. Empirical tight-binding models assume an
orthogonal basis of (atomiclike) states and a diagonal coordinate operator
which neglects the intra-atomic part. It is shown that, starting with an atomic
basis which is not orthogonal, the orthogonalization process induces
intra-atomic matrix elements of the coordinate operator and extends the range
of the effective Hamiltonian. We analyze simple tight-binding models and show
that non-orthogonality plays an important role in optical matrix elements. In
addition, the procedure gives formal justification to the nearest-neighbor
spin-orbit interaction introduced by Boykin [Phys. Rev \textbf{B} 57, 1620
(1998)] in order to describe the Dresselahaus term which is neglected in
empirical tight-binding models.Comment: 16 pages 6 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Reduction of computer usage costs in predicting unsteady aerodynamic loadings caused by control surface motions: Computer program description
A digital computer program was developed to calculate unsteady loadings caused by motions of lifting surfaces with leading edge and trailing edge controls based on the subsonic kernel function approach. The pressure singularities at hinge line and side edges were extracted analytically as a preliminary step to solving the integral equation of collocation. The program calculates generalized aerodynamic forces for user supplied deflection modes. Optional intermediate output includes pressure at an array of points, and sectional generalized forces. From one to six controls on the half span can be accomodated
Eliciting Risk and Time Preferences Using Field Experiments: Some Methodological Issues
We design experiments to jointly elicit risk and time preferences for the adult Danish population. The experimental procedures build on laboratory experiments that have been evaluated using traditional subject pools. The field experiments utilize field sampling designs that we developed, and procedures that were chosen to be relatively transparent in the field with non-standard subject pools. Our overall design was also intended to be a general template for such field experiments in other countries. We examine the characterization of risk over a wider domain for each subject than previous experiments, allowing more precise estimates of risk attitudes. We also examine individual discount rates over six time horizons, as the first stage in a panel experiment in which we revisit subjects to test consistency and stability of responses over time. Risk and time preferences are heterogeneous, varying by observable individual characteristics. On a methodological level, we implement a refinement of existing procedures which elicits much more precise estimates, and also mitigates framing effects.
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