21,312 research outputs found

    How Boston and Other American Cities Support and Sustain the Arts: Funding for Cultural Nonprofits in Boston and 10 Other Metropolitan Centers

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    A new study commissioned by the Boston Foundation on how Boston and comparable cities support the arts shows that only New York City has higher per capita contributed revenue for the art than Boston, among major American cities.The study, titled "How Boston and Other American Cities Support and Sustain the Arts: Funding for Cultural Nonprofits in Boston and 10 Other Metropolitan Cities," also examined Baltimore, Chicago, Cleveland, Houston, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Philadelphia, Portland Oregon, San Francisco, and Seattle. "How Boston" is a follow-up of sorts to a 2003 Boston Foundation report titled, "Funding for Cultural Organizations in Boston and Nine Other Metropolitan Areas."Key findings of this study, regarding Boston, include the fact that Boston's arts market is quite densely populated. While Greater Boston is the nation's 10th largest metro area and ranks ninth for total Gross Domestic Product, its non-profit arts market, which consists of more than 1,500 organizations, is comparable to that of New York and San Francisco, and consistently surpasses large cities such as Houston, Chicago and Philadelphia, in terms of the number of organizations and their per capita expenses

    Boston

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    This fact sheet presents various economic, social, and demographic indicators pertaining to the Latino population in the Boston Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area (PMSA) and, when required, compares the Boston PMSA with the state of Massachusetts overall and with the other main areas of large Latino concentration, namely, the Lawrence and Worcester PMSAs and the Springfield Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA).1 In this fact sheet the term “Boston” refers to the complete PMSA and not just the city of Boston. The information for this fact sheet comes from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey of 2004

    Disease modifying therapy for multiple system atrophy – Parkinsonian Type

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    BACKGROUND: Multiple System Atrophy –Parkinsonian Type (MSA-P) is a rare, rapidly progressive neurodegenerative disease without any current treatment. Recent research has increased the understanding of brain iron accumulation and its association with neurodegenerative synucleinopathies, like MSA-P. Because of this improved understanding of the disease process, there is potential for new therapies that could benefit patients with MSA-P. Unfortunately, many attempts at finding a new and effective treatments for MSA-P have been unsuccessful. Two drugs that have shown potential in neurodegenerative synucleinopathies associated with brain iron accumulation are iron chelators (Deferiprone) and tyrosine kinase inhibitors (Nilotinib.) METHODS: The proposed study is a multicenter, double blind, randomized control study of Nilotinib and Deferiprone for the treatment of MSA-P. There will be two treatment arms; Nilotinib and a placebo group vs. Nilotinib and Deferiprone. There will be a 24 week treatment phase, followed by a 24 week wash-out phase. All patients will have a baseline evaluation including: a full neurological exam with rating scales (UMSARS, UPDRS, SCOPA, and MOCA) to assess motor and non-motor symptoms of MSA-P. Lab and imaging data will include CBC, CMP, serum iron panel, CSF iron panel and brain SWI-MR scans. Neurological exams and rating scales will be assessed every four weeks while imaging and laboratory data will be assessed at baseline (week 0) at the end of the intervention phase (week 24) and at the end of the follow-up phase (week 48). CONCLUSIONS: Deferiprone and Nilotinib when used together will have a synergistic impact on the symptoms of MSA-P and will be more effective when used together versus when they are used individually. SIGNIFICANCE: Patients with MSA-P have shortened life expectancy as well as severely diminished quality of life due to rapidly progressive neurodegeneration. This trial aims to implementing evidence based treatment for MSA-P that could potentially improve life expectancy as well as quality of life in this patient population

    Funding for Cultural Organizations in Boston and Nine Other Metropolitan Areas

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    Compares the roles of private and public funding in the cultural economy of Boston against other leading metropolitan regions across the country

    Springfield

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    This fact sheet presents various economic, social, and demographic indicators pertaining to the Latino population in the Springfield Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) and, when required, compares the Springfield MSA with the state of Massachusetts overall and with the other main areas of large Latino concentration, namely, the Boston, Lawrence, and Worcester Primary Metropolitan Statistical Areas (PMSAs). In this fact sheet the term “Springfield” refers to the complete MSA and not just the city of Springfield. The information for this fact sheet comes from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey of 2004

    Chicago Music City

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    Chicago Music City compares the strength and vitality of music industries and scenes across the United States. Sociologists, urban planners, and real-estate developers point to quality of life and availability of cultural amenities as important indicators of the health and future success of urban areas. Economic impact studies show the importance of music to local economies. This publication compares Chicago's musical strength with the 50 largest metropolitan areas in the U.S., focusing on 11 comparison cities: Chicago and its demographic peers, New York and Los Angeles, and eight other cities with strong musical reputations -- Atlanta, Austin, Boston, Las Vegas, Memphis, Nashville, New Orleans and Seattle

    Do Smart Cities Grow Faster?

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    Previous studies have found a strong positive correlation between human capital, measured as the share of the adult population with a college degree, and population growth in metropolitan statistical areas (MSA) in the U.S. In this paper, I corroborate that the human capital-growth connection is indeed statistically significant, although much weaker than previously thought. The evidence suggests that the main reason behind this bias lies on endogeneity issues that have not been thoroughly addressed in the literature. In particular, omitting lagged MSA growth in regressions of current MSA growth on human capital overestimates the impact of skills by 100 per cent. Given that past growth has been shown to be one of the main drivers of current MSA growth (Glaeser 1994a), omitting the former variable in growth-education regressions would bias our human capital estimates upwards. Upon further examination, however, I show that MSA-specific fixed effects explain away the alleged impact of past on current growth. This suggests that the individual characteristics of the city that made it grow in the first place, and not lagged MSA growth per se, are what drives future MSA growth. Yet, even after accounting for these MSA-specific fixed effects, the impact of human capital on MSA growth does not disappear: my estimates suggest that a decadal increase of 10 per cent in the share of the adult population with a college degree translates into a rise of between 3 and up to 5 per cent in the MSA population growth rate during the same period. Finally, instrumental variable regressions strongly support the direction from skills to growth, abating potential reverse causality concerns.human capital, urban growth, skills, education, population changes

    Campus Update: February 1990 v. 2, no. 2

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    Monthly newsletter of the BU Medical Campu

    Determinants of Real House Price Dynamics

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    We explore the dynamics of real house prices by estimating serial correlation and mean reversion coefficients from a panel data set of 62 metro areas from 1979-1995. The serial correlation and reversion parameters are then shown to vary cross sectionally with city size, real income growth, population growth, and real construction costs. Serial correlation is higher in metro areas with higher real income, population growth and real construction costs. Mean reversion is greater in large metro areas and faster-growing cities with lower construction costs. Empirically, substantial overshooting of prices can occur in high real construction cost areas, which have high serial correlation and low mean reversion, such as the coastal cities of Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego.

    Boston Hospitality Review: Spring 2013

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    Lodging Update: Providence, Rhode Island by Rachel Roginsky and Matthew Arrants -- Brand Heritage and Heritage Tourism by Bradford Hudson -- Te Front Desks of Boston by Michael Oshins -- Defining the New Luxury: Perspectives from Industry Leaders by Chekitan S. Dev -- The Ethic of Hospitality by Christopher Muller -- Buffet-Américain by Peter Szend
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