2,633 research outputs found
Fair Reweighting of the Votes in the EU Council of Ministers and the Choice of Majority Requirement for Qualified Majority Voting during Successive Enlargements.
This paper examines the system of Qualified Majority Voting, used by the Council of Ministers of the European Union, from the perspective of enlargement of the Union. It uses an approach based on power indices due to Penrose, Banzhaf and Coleman to make two analyses: (1) the question of the voting power of member countries from the point of view of fairness, and (2) the question of how the majority quota required for QMV should be determined.VOTING ; QUOTA SYSTEM ; INDEXES
Computing Classical Power Indices For Large Finite Voting Games.
Voting Power Indices enable the analysis of the distribution of power in a legislature or voting body in which different members have different numbers of votes. Although this approach to the measurement of power, based on co-operative game theory, has been known for a long time its empirical application has been to some extent limited, in part by the difficulty of computing the indices when there are many players. This paper presents new algorithms for computing the classical power indices, those of Shapley and Shubik (1954) and of Banzhaf (1963), which are essentially modifications of approximation methods due to Owen, and have been shown to work well in real applications.VOTING ; INDEXES ; GAMES
Is Comprehensive Education Really Free? A Study of the Effects of Secondary School Admissions Policies on House Prices.
This paper reports on a study that tests the anecdotal hypothesis that the prices of houses near popular comprehensive schools carry a premium. Since local education authorities use admissions policies based on catchment areas and places in popular schools are very hard to obtain from outside these areas - but easy from within them - parents have an incentive to move house for the sake of their children's education. This would be expected to be reflected in house prices. The study uses a cross sectional sample based on two popular schools in Coventry.PRICES ; SCHOOLS ; EDUCATION
[C II] emission and star formation in late-type galaxies. II A model
We study the relationship between gas cooling via the [C II] (158 micron)
line emission and dust cooling via the far-IR continuum emission on the global
scale of a galaxy in normal (i.e. non-AGN dominated and non-starburst)
late-type systems. It is known that the luminosity ratio of total gas and dust
cooling, L(C II)/L(FIR), shows a non-linear behaviour with the equivalent width
of the Halpha line emission, the ratio decreasing in galaxies of lower massive
star-formation activity. This result holds despite the fact that known
individual Galactic and extragalactic sources of the [C II] line emission show
different [C II] line-to-far-IR continuum emission ratios. This non-linear
behaviour is reproduced by a simple quantitative model of gas and dust heating
from different stellar populations, assuming that the photoelectric effect on
dust, induced by far-UV photons, is the dominant mechanism of gas heating in
the general diffuse interstellar medium of the galaxies under investigation.
According to the model, the global L(C II)/L(FIR) provides a direct measure of
the fractional amount of non-ionizing UV light in the interstellar radiation
field and not of the efficiency of the photoelectric heating. The model also
defines a method to constrain the stellar initial mass function from
measurements of L(C II) and L(FIR). A sample of 20 Virgo cluster galaxies
observed in the [C II] line with the LWS on board ISO is used to illustrate the
model. The limited statistics and the necessary assumptions behind the
determination of the global [C II] luminosities from the spatially limited data
do not allow us to establish definitive conclusions but data-sets available in
the future will allow tests of both the reliability of the assumptions of our
model and the statistical significance of our results.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures (included), accepted for publication in Astronomy
and Astrophysic
Electric fishing survey of the gravel addition sites on the River Wyre, Grizedale Beck and Joshua's Beck.
Although geographically the River Wyre lies between two rivers containing major migrations of adult salmon and sea trout, its rod & line fisheries have for a number of years produced exceptionally low catches. In order to determine the causes of this the Wyre Salmon and Sea trout Restoration Group (WSSRG) was conceived in 1994 as a partnership between the then National Rivers Authority (now Environment Agency), local landowners, angling clubs and interested parties.
Two studies of 1994 and 1995 stated that there is a shortage of useable spawning gravels on the river. This is
compounded by Abbeystead Reservoir acting as a gravel trap, the siltation of gravels on several side becks and problems with access to available gravels by returning adults. There
was also perceived to be a need for accurate fishery data from the river encompassing redd counts, catch data and surveys of fry populations.
The 1995 report suggested a number of management proposals which might be adopted in order to improve and create available spawning habitat for migratory salmonids. Funding was made available to create three spawning gravels on each of two side becks (Grizedale Beck and Joshua's Beck) and the addition of gravels to a site oh the main river below Abbeystead Reservoir. Modifications were also made to the fish pass at Abbeystead to allow easier passage of fish. These improvements were made in the autumn of 1995. Salmonid spawning redd counting was undertaken on the whole Wyre catchment in 1995/1996 and specific surveys by electric fishing on the gravel enhancement sites in the summer of 1996.
This report details the current state of the improvement works that were undertaken and presents the results of electric fishing surveys in September 1996. A number of lessons have been learnt which will be of great benefit to the Fisheries Function in other parts of the Wyre catchment and the Central Area in general
Shareholder Power and Corporate Governance.
The pattern of ownership and control of British industry is unusual compared with most other countries in that ownership is relatively dispersed. Typically the largest shareholder in any large listed company is likely to own a voting minority of the shares. Majority ownership by a single shareholder is unusual. It is not uncommon for the largest shareholding to be under 20 percent and in many cases it is much less than that. A broadly similar pattern is observed in the USA. Two inferences about corporate governance are conventionally drawn from this, following the early work of Berle and Means: (1) All but the very largest shareholders are typically too small to have any real incentive to participate in decision making; (2) All but the very largest shareholdings are too small to have any real voting power. The question of voting power is the focus of this paper.OWNERSHIP ; SHAREHOLDERS ; VOTING
Members' Voting Power in the Governance of the International Monetary Fund.
In general in an organization whose system of governance involves weighted voting, a member's weight in terms of the number of votes and the formal power it represents differ. Power indices provide a means of analyzing this difference. The paper uses new algorithms for computing power indices for large games.VOTING ; GAMES ; SHAREHOLDERS
Novel modeling of task versus rest brain state predictability using a dynamic time warping spectrum: comparisons and contrasts with other standard measures of brain dynamics
Dynamic time warping, or DTW, is a powerful and domain-general sequence alignment method for computing a similarity measure. Such dynamic programming-based techniques like DTW are now the backbone and driver of most bioinformatics methods and discoveries. In neuroscience it has had far less use, though this has begun to change. We wanted to explore new ways of applying DTW, not simply as a measure with which to cluster or compare similarity between features but in a conceptually different way. We have used DTW to provide a more interpretable spectral description of the data, compared to standard approaches such as the Fourier and related transforms. The DTW approach and standard discrete Fourier transform (DFT) are assessed against benchmark measures of neural dynamics. These include EEG microstates, EEG avalanches, and the sum squared error (SSE) from a multilayer perceptron (MLP) prediction of the EEG time series, and simultaneously acquired FMRI BOLD signal. We explored the relationships between these variables of interest in an EEG-FMRI dataset acquired during a standard cognitive task, which allowed us to explore how DTW differentially performs in different task settings. We found that despite strong correlations between DTW and DFT-spectra, DTW was a better predictor for almost every measure of brain dynamics. Using these DTW measures, we show that predictability is almost always higher in task than in rest states, which is consistent to other theoretical and empirical findings, providing additional evidence for the utility of the DTW approach
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