7,444 research outputs found
Limit laws for random vectors with an extreme component
Models based on assumptions of multivariate regular variation and hidden
regular variation provide ways to describe a broad range of extremal dependence
structures when marginal distributions are heavy tailed. Multivariate regular
variation provides a rich description of extremal dependence in the case of
asymptotic dependence, but fails to distinguish between exact independence and
asymptotic independence. Hidden regular variation addresses this problem by
requiring components of the random vector to be simultaneously large but on a
smaller scale than the scale for the marginal distributions. In doing so,
hidden regular variation typically restricts attention to that part of the
probability space where all variables are simultaneously large. However, since
under asymptotic independence the largest values do not occur in the same
observation, the region where variables are simultaneously large may not be of
primary interest. A different philosophy was offered in the paper of Heffernan
and Tawn [J. R. Stat. Soc. Ser. B Stat. Methodol. 66 (2004) 497--546] which
allows examination of distributional tails other than the joint tail. This
approach used an asymptotic argument which conditions on one component of the
random vector and finds the limiting conditional distribution of the remaining
components as the conditioning variable becomes large. In this paper, we
provide a thorough mathematical examination of the limiting arguments building
on the orientation of Heffernan and Tawn [J. R. Stat. Soc. Ser. B Stat.
Methodol. 66 (2004) 497--546]. We examine the conditions required for the
assumptions made by the conditioning approach to hold, and highlight
simililarities and differences between the new and established methods.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/105051606000000835 in the
Annals of Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute
of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Judicial Incentives and Indeterminacy in Substantive Review of Administrative Decisions
In the Chevron and State Farm cases the Supreme Court announced what appeared to be controlling standards for substantive review of administrative decisions. Instead, the Chevron framework has broken down, and State Farm has been all but ignored by agencies and the courts, including the Supreme Court. This article accounts for this breakdown by analyzing the impact of judicial incentives on substantive review in administrative law
Judicial Incentives and Indeterminacy in Substantive Review of Administrative Decisions
Uppsatsen tydliggör och beskriver innehållet i elva lokala överenskommelser (LÖK) mellan civilsamhället och offentlig sektor. Studien visar också hur relationen mellan parterna avspeglas i texterna. Uppsatsen visar också på hur olika idéer och synsätt i överenskommelserna kan få praktiska konsekvenser för civilsamhället
Model Based Definition
In September 2007, the Engineering Directorate at the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) created the Design System Focus Team (DSFT). MSFC was responsible for the in-house design and development of the Ares 1 Upper Stage and the Engineering Directorate was preparing to deploy a new electronic Configuration Management and Data Management System with the Design Data Management System (DDMS) based upon a Commercial Off The Shelf (COTS) Product Data Management (PDM) System. The DSFT was to establish standardized CAD practices and a new data life cycle for design data. Of special interest here, the design teams were to implement Model Based Definition (MBD) in support of the Upper Stage manufacturing contract. It is noted that this MBD does use partially dimensioned drawings for auxiliary information to the model. The design data lifecycle implemented several new release states to be used prior to formal release that allowed the models to move through a flow of progressive maturity. The DSFT identified some 17 Lessons Learned as outcomes of the standards development, pathfinder deployments and initial application to the Upper Stage design completion. Some of the high value examples are reviewed
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The Enlightenment of Administrative Law: Looking Inside the Agency for Legitimacy
This article’s investigation into the “agency for legitimacy” proceeds in five steps: Part I introduces the concept of “administrative constitutionalism,” which encompasses the debate over what should be the role and nature of public administration to ensure its legitimacy. It then lays out the elements of the rational-instrumental and deliberative-constitutive paradigms and explains how they contribute to administrative constitutionalism respectively from the outside-in and inside-out. Part II provides a brief history of administrative constitutionalism, which reveals there have been ongoing tensions between two paradigms—and thus between outside in and inside out accountability—since the 1880s. Part III elaborates on the authors’ argument that the current emphasis on the rational-instrumental model has been administrative constitutionalism unsustainable. Part IV argues that acknowledging and developing the deliberative-constitutive paradigm will strengthen administrative constitutionalism by admitting the existence of agency discretion and by looking for realistic ways to make it accountable. Finally, Part V offers a case study in how the deliberative-constitutive paradigm can contribute to administrative constitutionalism.The Kay Bailey Hutchison Center for Energy, Law, and Busines
Reply to "Comment on `Jamming at zero temperature and zero applied stress: The epitome of disorder' "
We answer the questions raised by Donev, Torquato, Stillinger, and Connelly
in their "Comment on "Jamming at zero temperature and zero applied stress: The
epitome of disorder.' " We emphasize that we follow a fundamentally different
approach than they have done to reinterpret random close packing in terms of
the "maximally random jammed" framework. We define the "maximally random jammed
packing fraction" to be where the largest number of initial states, chosen
completely randomly, have relaxed final states at the jamming threshold in the
thermodynamic limit. Thus, we focus on an ensemble of states at the jamming
threshold, while DTSC are interested in determining the amount of order and
degree of jamming for a particular configuration. We also argue that
soft-particle systems are as "clean" as those using hard spheres for studying
jammed packings and point out the benefits of using soft potentials
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