12,531,035 research outputs found
Engendering Development
This article discusses the productive and reproductive roles Filipino women perform and assesses their contributions to human development. It also examines the reality of their marginalization from the country’s social, economic and political life. It then suggests on measures by which women can be empowered to achieve the goals of gender equality and equity.women's issues, vulnerable groups, development program, MIMAP
Noise Bubbles
We introduce noisy information into a standard present value stock price model. Agents
receive a noisy signal about the structural shock driving future dividend variations. The
resulting equilibrium stock price includes a transitory component —the “noise bubble”—
which can be responsible for boom and bust episodes unrelated to economic fundamentals. We propose a non-standard VAR procedure to estimate the structural shock and
the “noise” shock, their impulse response functions and the bubble component of stock
prices. We apply such procedure to US data and find that noise explains a large fraction
of stock price volatility. In particular the dot-com bubble is entirely explained by noise.
On the contrary the stock price boom peaking in 2007 is not a bubble, whereas the
following stock market crisis is largely due to negative noise shocks
Ciribiribin : Waltz
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-ps/1457/thumbnail.jp
Mobile library and staff preparedness
The provision of access to information and effective delivery of information services is central to the role of librarians. Mobile technologies have added another dimension to this role – one that requires new knowledge, skills and competencies to ensure the needs and expectations of users are met. If libraries are to be successful in developing services for mobile technologies, their managers will have to consider two significant staffing issues. Firstly, it is important to understand what knowledge, skills and competencies are needed by staff to enable them to deliver services through mobile technologies, and secondly, to use that understanding to provide support and training for staff in the use of mobile technologies. In order to explore these issues and to contribute to the planning and professional development in the mobile library environment, a survey was undertaken of librarians working in the vocational education and training (VET) sector in Australia and New Zealand
Pier Luigi Nervi, modern technology for classical typology.
This paper investigates around the figure of Pier Luigi Nervi (1891-1979).
Perceived mainly as an innovative structural engineer, Nervi has been arguably the most important Italian designer of the post-war period.
This article is founded on the necessity to update the knowledge on the substantial contribution on Architecture from the Engineers. The timeliness of this research is apparent when one considers, for example, the 2005 RIBA Gold medal awarded to the Engineer Frei Otto. In this perspective, Nervi needs to be re-considered under the new light of his design-process, which had the most apparent outcome in the structures for the Olympic Games in Rome, 1960. An account of which is traced in this paper. Through historical comparisons, this paper shows how important were the influences of contemporary and historical context in which Nervi designed these sport buildings
Creating proactive interference in immediate recall: building a dog from a dart, a mop and a fig
[Abstract]: Phonemic codes are accorded a privileged role in most current models of immediate serial recall, although their effects are apparent in short-term proactive interference (PI) effects as well. The current research looks at how assumptions concerning distributed representation and distributed storage involving both semantic and phonemic codes might be operationalized to produce PI in a short-term cued recall task. The four experiments reported here attempted to generate the phonemic characteristics of a non-rhyming, interfering foil from unrelated filler items in the same list. PI was observed when a rhyme of the foil was studied or when the three phonemes of the foil were distributed across three studied filler items. The results suggest that items in short-term memory are stored in terms of feature bundles and that all items are simultaneously available at retrieval
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