577 research outputs found
Assessing Unilateral Merger Effects in a Two-Sided Market: An Application to the Dutch Daily Newspaper Market
We compare different methods to assess unilateral merger effects in a two-sided market by applying them to a hypothetical merger in the Dutch newspaper industry. For this, we first specify and estimate a structural model of demand for differentiated products on both the readership and the advertising side of the market. This allows us to recover price elasticities and indirect network effects. Following Filistrucchi, Klein, and Michielsen (2010) marginal costs are then recovered from an oligopoly model of the supply side. We use these estimates of price elasticities, network effects and marginal costs to compare different methods that can be used to evaluate merger effects: We perform a concentration analysis based on the Herfindahl Hirschmann Index, a Small Significant Non-Transitory Increase in Price test, measure Upward Pricing Pressure, and conduct a full merger simulation.Two-sided markets;newspapers;advertising;network effects;merger simulation;SSNIP;UPP;HHI
Event-based simulation of interference with alternatingly blocked particle sources
We analyze the predictions of an event-based corpuscular model for
interference in the case of two-beam interference experiments in which the two
sources are alternatingly blocked. We show that such experiments may be used to
test specific predictions of the corpuscular model.Comment: FPP6 - Foundations of Probability and Physics 6, edited by A.
Khrennikov et al., AIP Conference Proceeding
Possible Experience: from Boole to Bell
Mainstream interpretations of quantum theory maintain that violations of the
Bell inequalities deny at least either realism or Einstein locality. Here we
investigate the premises of the Bell-type inequalities by returning to earlier
inequalities presented by Boole and the findings of Vorob'ev as related to
these inequalities. These findings together with a space-time generalization of
Boole's elements of logic lead us to a completely transparent Einstein local
counterexample from everyday life that violates certain variations of the Bell
inequalities. We show that the counterexample suggests an interpretation of the
Born rule as a pre-measure of probability that can be transformed into a
Kolmogorov probability measure by certain Einstein local space-time
characterizations of the involved random variables.Comment: Published in: EPL, 87 (2009) 6000
Classical and Quantum Annealing in the Median of Three Satisfiability
We determine the classical and quantum complexities of a specific ensemble of
three-satisfiability problems with a unique satisfying assignment for up to
N=100 and N=80 variables, respectively. In the classical limit we employ
generalized ensemble techniques and measure the time that a Markovian Monte
Carlo process spends in searching classical ground states. In the quantum limit
we determine the maximum finite correlation length along a quantum adiabatic
trajectory determined by the linear sweep of the adiabatic control parameter in
the Hamiltonian composed of the problem Hamiltonian and the constant transverse
field Hamiltonian. In the median of our ensemble both complexities diverge
exponentially with the number of variables. Hence, standard, conventional
adiabatic quantum computation fails to reduce the computational complexity to
polynomial. Moreover, the growth-rate constant in the quantum limit is 3.8
times as large as the one in the classical limit, making classical fluctuations
more beneficial than quantum fluctuations in ground-state searches
Multi-order interference is generally nonzero
It is demonstrated that the third-order interference, as obtained from
explicit solutions of Maxwell's equations for realistic models of three-slit
devices, including an idealized version of the three-slit device used in a
recent three-slit experiment with light (U. Sinha et al., Science 329, 418
(2010)), is generally nonzero. The hypothesis that the third-order interference
should be zero is shown to be fatally flawed because it requires dropping the
one-to-one correspondence between the symbols in the mathematical theory and
the different experimental configurations.Comment: Replaced Figs. 4,5 and caption of Fig.
Marching to a different drummer : a cross-cultural comparison of young adolescents who challenge gender norms
Purpose: Little is known about how gender norms regulate adolescents' lives across different cultural settings. This study aims to illustrate what is considered as violating gender norms for boys and girls in four urban poor sites as well as the consequences that follow the challenging of gender norms.
Methods: Data were collected as part of the Global Early Adolescent Study, a 15-country collaboration to explore gender norms and health in early adolescence. The current study analyzed narrative and in-depth interviews conducted in urban poor sites in two middle-income (Shanghai, China; and New Delhi, India) and two high-income countries (Baltimore, U.S.; and Ghent, Belgium). A total of 238 participants, 59 boys and 70 girls aged 11-13 years old and 109 of their parents/guardians (28 male adults and 81 female adults), were interviewed. A thematic analysis was conducted across sites using Atlas. Ti 7.5 software.
Results: Findings revealed that although most perceptions and expressions about gender were regulated by stereotypical norms, there was a growing acceptability for girls to wear boyish clothes and engage in stereotypical masculine activities such as playing soccer/football. However, there was no comparable acceptance of boys engaging in traditional feminine behaviors. Across all sites, challenging gender norms was often found to lead to verbal, physical, and/or psychological retribution.
Conclusions: While it is sometimes acceptable for young adolescents to cross gender boundaries, once it becomes clear that a behavior is socially defined as typical for the other sex, and the adolescent will face more resistance. Researchers, programmers, and clinicians working in the field of adolescent health need not only attend to those who are facing the consequences of challenging prevailing gender norms, but also to address the environment that fosters exclusion and underscores differences
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