70 research outputs found
The Feeling of Numbers: emotions in everyday engagements with data and their visualisation
This paper highlights the role that emotions play in engagements with data and their visualisation. To date, the relationship between data and emotions has rarely been noted, in part because data studies have not attended to everyday engagements with data. We draw on an empirical study to show a wide range of emotional engagements with diverse aspects of data and their visualisation, and so demonstrate the importance of emotions as vital components of making sense of data. We nuance the argument that regimes of datafication, in which numbers, metrics and statistics dominate, are characterised by a renewed faith in objectivity and rationality, arguing that in datafied times, it is not only numbers but also the feeling of numbers that is important. We build on the sociology of a) emotions and b) the everyday to do this, and in so doing, we contribute to the development of a sociology of data
Bank Value and Geographic Diversification: Regional vs Global
This paper analyzes the impact of geographic diversification on bank value by employing
a data set comprising the largest banks across the world, originating from both
developed and emerging countries. The findings suggest that the value impact of international
diversification depends on a bankâs home country: higher levels of diversification are
associated with changes in valuations only for banks originating from emerging countries.
In addition, the locus of destination of the diversification efforts matters for the direction
of effects: while higher levels of intra-regional diversification lead to value enhancement,
higher levels of inter-regional diversification seem to induce a negative (but statistically
less robust) effect on the valuation of emerging country banks
Extended Theories of Gravity
Extended Theories of Gravity can be considered a new paradigm to cure
shortcomings of General Relativity at infrared and ultraviolet scales. They are
an approach that, by preserving the undoubtedly positive results of Einstein's
Theory, is aimed to address conceptual and experimental problems recently
emerged in Astrophysics, Cosmology and High Energy Physics. In particular, the
goal is to encompass, in a self-consistent scheme, problems like Inflation,
Dark Energy, Dark Matter, Large Scale Structure and, first of all, to give at
least an effective description of Quantum Gravity. We review the basic
principles that any gravitational theory has to follow. The geometrical
interpretation is discussed in a broad perspective in order to highlight the
basic assumptions of General Relativity and its possible extensions in the
general framework of gauge theories. Principles of such modifications are
presented, focusing on specific classes of theories like f (R)-gravity and
scalar-tensor gravity in the metric and Palatini approaches. The special role
of torsion is also discussed. The conceptual features of these theories are
fully explored and attention is payed to the issues of dynamical and conformal
equivalence between them considering also the initial value problem. A number
of viability criteria are presented considering the post-Newtonian and the
post-Minkowskian limits. In particular, we discuss the problems of neutrino
oscillations and gravitational waves in Extended Gravity. Finally, future
perspectives of Extended Gravity are considered with possibility to go beyond a
trial and error approach.Comment: 184 pages, 3 figures, survey to appear in Physics Report
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