1,910 research outputs found

    A study of commuter airline economics

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    Variables are defined and cost relationships developed that describe the direct and indirect operating costs of commuter airlines. The study focused on costs for new aircraft and new aircraft technology when applied to the commuter airline industry. With proper judgement and selection of input variables, the operating costs model was shown to be capable of providing economic insight into other commuter airline system evaluations

    Optimal utility and probability functions for agents with finite computational precision

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    When making economic choices, such as those between goods or gambles, humans act as if their internal representation of the value and probability of a prospect is distorted away from its true value. These distortions give rise to decisions which apparently fail to maximize reward, and preferences that reverse without reason. Why would humans have evolved to encode value and probability in a distorted fashion, in the face of selective pressure for reward-maximizing choices? Here, we show that under the simple assumption that humans make decisions with finite computational precision––in other words, that decisions are irreducibly corrupted by noise––the distortions of value and probability displayed by humans are approximately optimal in that they maximize reward and minimize uncertainty. In two empirical studies, we manipulate factors that change the reward-maximizing form of distortion, and find that in each case, humans adapt optimally to the manipulation. This work suggests an answer to the longstanding question of why humans make “irrational” economic choices

    Life course building epidemiology: An alternative approach to the collection and analysis of carbon emission data

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    Developing policy for the reduction of the carbon emissions due to buildings requires models for energy usage that incorporate social, behavioural, and environmental factors in addition to the physical properties and technical specifications of the buildings. Marked parallels exist with some of the more intractable public health issues, such as rising levels of obesity. Recently, health researchers have recognized the importance of taking a broader life-course approach to epidemiology in order to examine the degree that long-term health outcomes are set in early life and the extent that these may be mediated or mitigated by subsequent growth and development, as well as by intervention strategies. Life course epidemiology as applied in building science, where energy usage is treated as analogous to poor health outcomes, provides an alternative approach for the construction of causal models that allow for complex interactions between social and technical factors as well as long term effects. It can provide a useful framework for the successful management and analysis of longitudinal studies and may prove particularly effective in identifying the type, timing, and targeting of intervention strategies to produce optimal outcomes in terms of absolute reductions of carbon emissions and resilience of building performance to external stresses, such as those imposed by climate change. An example based on a study in Milton Keynes (London), which is currently in progress, is used to illustrate the way causal models may help elucidate the complex interactions between factors that influence energy usage

    Sketch of grammar of the Chippeway language : to which is added a vocabulary of some of the most common words

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    LoC Class: PM851, LoC Subject Headings: Chippewa languag

    Quantum Statistics and Slow Neutron Scattering by Gases

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    A surprisingly simple expression in ``closed form'' for the cross section d2σ/dΩdÏ” for the scattering of thermal neutrons (including polarized neutrons) from an ideal quantum gas is derived. This result extends the work of Van Hove on the quantum gas. An expansion is obtained for dσ/dÏ”. The case of elastic scattering is treated separately. From these expressions is obtained a criterion for ignoring the statistics of the scatterer in favor of classical (Boltzmann) statistics. This criterion should have some validity for weakly interacting systems. It is shown that the effects of statistics on the neutron cross section for a helium‐4 gas range from 5% or less for the noninteracting gas up to as much as 40% for the interacting system.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/70882/2/JCPSA6-47-12-4923-1.pd

    The use of cochlear implantation

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    Neutron Scattering in Normal and Deuterated Polyethylene

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    The one‐ and two‐phonon amplitude‐weighted directional frequency functions are calculated for normal and deuterated crystalline polyethylene. These results are compared to previously measured frequency spectra for stretch‐oriented normal polyethylene and to new measurements on deuterated polyethylene. In addition, the Debye‐Waller factors are calculated for oriented polyethylene and compared with elastic‐scattering data.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/70915/2/JCPSA6-48-2-912-1.pd

    A literature review of the use of gamification in accounting education

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    [EN] Gamification is a tool that is increasingly used in the field of teaching at all levels of education, from primary to university. Despite the fact that Business Management and Accounting have not remained on the sidelines in studies on the use of game-based learning, the scarcity of such work in this field provides us with only a limited vision of the research that is being carried out in the area. In order to fill this research gap, this paper analyses the academic literature in detail on the use of gamification in accounting education. To this end, an in-depth review of scientific documents retrieved from academic databases has been carried out with the aim of: a) identifying the methodologies used in the research, b) examining the types of games used by researchers, c) establishing the different educational stages where this research is being carried out, d) analysing the samples used, and e) analysing the results obtained in the studies. The results obtained from this review have made it possible to recognise some of the most recurrent work and other research areas in which further exploration can be undertaken within the field of gamification and accounting.Queiro-Ameijieras, CM.; Martí-Parreño, J.; Seguí-Mas, E.; Summerfield, L. (2019). A literature review of the use of gamification in accounting education. IATED. 7662-7667. https://doi.org/10.21125/iceri.2019.1822S7662766
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