5,489 research outputs found
PREDICTING COUPON USE FROM SHOPPER DEMOGRAPHIC AND BEHAVIORAL CHARACTERISTICS
We surveyed of grocery shoppers in the Northeast United States to measure how demographic characteristics and consumer behavior affect the use of four coupon types (paper, in-store, checkout, and online). We employ logit models to estimate the probability that a consumer is a regular coupon user conditioned to his/her demographic and behavioral characteristics. Readership and economizing-behavior variables have a larger impact on the probability of being a coupon user than do demographic variables, except in the case of online coupons. Our results suggest that targeting specific coupon types using demographic profiles alone is not an appropriate method of coupon distribution. Understanding behavioral characteristics of the coupon users will help target coupon offerings by various distribution methods.Consumer/Household Economics,
On Petition for a Writ of Certiorari to The United States Court of Appeals for The Eighth Circuit, Brief of Law Professors Paul F. Rothstein, et. al., Office of the President v. Office of Independent Counsel
This Court should grant review not only because this is a case of national importance and prominence, but also because the decision below is a conspicuous departure from settled principles of evidence law. The panel majority concluded that communications between government lawyers and government officials are not protected by the attorney-client privilege, at least when those communications are sought by a federal grand jury. That conclusion conflicts with the predominant common-law understanding that the attorney-client privilege applies to government entities and that where the privilege applies, it is absolute (i.e., it protects against disclosure in all types of legal and investigative proceedings). In particular, the Court of Appeals\u27 decision rests on a fundamental misunderstanding of this Court\u27s decisions in Upjohn Co. v. United States, 449 U.S. 383 (1981), and United States v. Nixon, 418 U.s. 683 (1974).
Moreover, this case warrants further review because the decision below has profound implications beyond the parties to this dispute. The Court of Appeals\u27 ruling, if allowed to stand, will create widespread uncertainty among federal, state, and local officials concerning the extent to which their communications with their agency lawyers, for the purpose of seeking legal advice in the conduct of governmental affairs, are protected by the attorney-client privilege. Unless this Court grants review and resolves this uncertainty, the decision below will likely have an adverse effect on the current and future operation of not only the Office of the President of the United States, but also government at all levels. At the very least, a decision of such vast implications (as in the present case) should be made by the highest court in the land. We accordingly urge the Court to grant the petition for review
Ageâdependent amyloid deposition is associated with white matter alterations in cognitively normal adults during the adult life span
Introduction
Both betaâamyloid (Ab) deposition and decline in white matter integrity, are brain alterations observed in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and start to occur by the fourth and fifth decades. However, the association between both brain alterations in asymptomatic subjects is unclear.
Methods
Amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) were obtained in 282 cognitively normal subjects (age 30â89 years). We assessed the interaction of age by abnormal amyloid PET status (Florbetapir Fâ18 PET >1.2 standard uptake value ratio [SUVR]) on regional mean diffusivity (MD) and global white matter hyperintensity (WMH) volume, controlled for sex, education, and hypertension.
Results
Subjects with abnormal amyloid PET (n = 87) showed stronger ageârelated increase in global WMH and regional MD, particularly within the posterior parietal regions of the white matter.
Discussion
Sporadic AÎČ deposition is associated with white matter alterations in AD predilection areas in an ageâdependent manner in cognitively normal individuals
Graphical representation of covariant-contravariant modal formulae
Covariant-contravariant simulation is a combination of standard (covariant)
simulation, its contravariant counterpart and bisimulation. We have previously
studied its logical characterization by means of the covariant-contravariant
modal logic. Moreover, we have investigated the relationships between this
model and that of modal transition systems, where two kinds of transitions (the
so-called may and must transitions) were combined in order to obtain a simple
framework to express a notion of refinement over state-transition models. In a
classic paper, Boudol and Larsen established a precise connection between the
graphical approach, by means of modal transition systems, and the logical
approach, based on Hennessy-Milner logic without negation, to system
specification. They obtained a (graphical) representation theorem proving that
a formula can be represented by a term if, and only if, it is consistent and
prime. We show in this paper that the formulae from the covariant-contravariant
modal logic that admit a "graphical" representation by means of processes,
modulo the covariant-contravariant simulation preorder, are also the consistent
and prime ones. In order to obtain the desired graphical representation result,
we first restrict ourselves to the case of covariant-contravariant systems
without bivariant actions. Bivariant actions can be incorporated later by means
of an encoding that splits each bivariant action into its covariant and its
contravariant parts.Comment: In Proceedings EXPRESS 2011, arXiv:1108.407
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