14,103 research outputs found
Testing the RPI data for consistency with the theory of the cost-of-living index
This paper tests the published section level price and weight data
used in the compilation of the UK Retail Prices Index for consistency
with the theory of the cost-of-living index. We use a nonparametric test
of theoretical consistency and bootstrap statistical methods to estimate
the probability of consistency
Estimation of household demand systems with theoretically compatible Engel curves and unit value specifications
We develop a method for estimation of price reactions using unit value
data which exploits the implicit links between quantity and unit value
choices. This allows us to combine appealing Engel curve specifications
with a model of unit value determination in a way which is consistent
with demand theory, unlike methods hitherto prominent in the literature.
The method is applied to Czech data
Michromechanics in biogenic hydrated silica: hinges and interocking devices in diatoms.
Diatoms are single-celled organisms with rigid parts in relative motion at the micrometrescale and below. These biogenic hydrated silica structures have elaborate shapes, interlocking devices, and, in some cases, hinged structures. The silica shells of the diatoms experience various forces from the environment and also from the cell itself when it grows and divides, and the form of these micromechanical parts has been evolutionarily optimized during the last 150 million years or more, achieving mechanical stability. Linking structures of several diatom species such as Aulacoseira, Corethron, and Ellerbeckia are presented in high-resolution SEM images and their structure and presumed functions are correlated. Currently, the industry for micro- and nanoelectromechanical devices (MEMS and NEMS) puts great effort into investigating tribology on the micro- and nanometre scale. It is suggested that micro- and nanotribologists meet with diatomists to discuss future common research attempts regarding biomimetic ideas and approaches for novel and/or improved MEMS and NEMS with optimized tribological properties
A non-parametric bound on substitution bias in the UK retail prices index
This paper uses revealed preference restrictions and nonparametric statistical methods to bound true cost-of-living indices. These are compared to the popular price indices including the type used to calculated the UK RPI.
This is used to assess the method of calculating the RPI for substitution bias
Valuing quality
This paper uses revealed preference restrictions and nonparametric statistical methods to bound a quality-constant price series for a good that changes quality over time. Unlike the more usual hedonic regression techniques for estimating quality-adjusted prices, this method does not require us to observe the changing characteristics of the good or to assume a particular
functional relationship between these characteristics and quality. To place a bound on quality change using revealed preference conditions we assume that preferences are stable over time, that quality change occurs in one good or group of goods and that the direction of quality change is known
Nonparametric methods for the characteristic model
Characteristics models have been found to be useful in many areas of
economics. However, their empirical implementation tends to rely heavily
on functional form assumptions. In this paper we develop a revealed
preference-based nonparametric approach to characteristics models. We
derive the minimal necessary and sufficient empirical conditions under
which data on the market behaviour of individual, heterogeneous, pricetaking
consumers are nonparametrically consistent with the consumer
characteristics model. Where these conditions hold, we show how information
may be recovered on individual consumerās marginal valuations
of product attributes. In some cases marginal valuations are point identified
and in other cases we can only recover bounds. Where the conditions
fail we highlight the role which the introduction of unobserved product
attributes can play in rationalising the data. We implement these ideas
using consumer panel data on the Danish milk market
Dispelling the myth of robotic efficiency: why human space exploration will tell us more about the Solar System than will robotic exploration alone
There is a widely held view in the astronomical community that unmanned
robotic space vehicles are, and will always be, more efficient explorers of
planetary surfaces than astronauts (e.g. Coates, 2001; Clements 2009; Rees
2011). Partly this is due to a common assumption that robotic exploration is
cheaper than human exploration (although, as we shall see, this isn't
necessarily true if like is compared with like), and partly from the
expectation that continued developments in technology will relentlessly
increase the capability, and reduce the size and cost, of robotic missions to
the point that human exploration will not be able to compete. I will argue
below that the experience of human exploration during the Apollo missions, more
recent field analogue studies, and trends in robotic space exploration actually
all point to exactly the opposite conclusion.Comment: 12 pages; 5 figures. Published, with minor modifications, in
Astronomy and Geophysics, Vol. 53, pp. 2.22-2.26, 201
SMC SMP 24: A newly radio-detected planetary nebula in the small magellanic cloud
In this paper we report new radio-continuum detection of an extragalactic PN:
SMC SMP 24. We show the radio-continuum image of this PN and present the
measured radio data. The newly reduced radio observations are consistent with
the multi-wavelength data and derived parameters found in the literature. SMC
SMP 24 appear to be a young and compact PN, optically thick at frequencies
below 2 GHz.Comment: accepted for publication in Serbian Astronomical Journa
Homoclinic snaking in bounded domains
Homoclinic snaking is a term used to describe the back and forth oscillation of a branch of time-independent spatially localized states in a bistable, spatially reversible system as the localized structure grows in length by repeatedly adding rolls on either side. On the real line this process continues forever. In finite domains snaking terminates once the domain is filled but the details of how this occurs depend critically on the choice of boundary conditions. With periodic boundary conditions the snaking branches terminate on a branch of spatially periodic states. However, with non-Neumann boundary conditions they turn continuously into a large amplitude filling state that replaces the periodic state. This behavior, shown here in detail for the Swift-Hohenberg equation, explains the phenomenon of āsnaking without bistabilityā, recently observed in simulations of binary fluid convection by Mercader, Batiste, Alonso and Knobloch (preprint)
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