4,582 research outputs found
Tate module and bad reduction
Let C/K be a curve over a local field. We study the natural semilinear action
of Galois on the minimal regular model of C over a field F where it becomes
semistable. This allows us to describe the Galois action on the l-adic Tate
module of the Jacobian of C/K in terms of the special fibre of this model over
F.Comment: 13 pages, final version, to appear in Proc. AM
Loose, idle and disorderly: vagrant removal in late eighteenth-century Middlesex
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Social History on 2 October 2014, available online: https://doi.org/10.1080/03071022.2014.975943Peer reviewe
Recommended from our members
Atmospheric blocking and mean biases in climate models
Models often underestimate blocking in the Atlantic and Pacific basins and this can lead to errors in both weather and climate predictions. Horizontal resolution is often cited as the main culprit for blocking errors due to poorly resolved small-scale variability, the upscale effects of which help to maintain blocks. Although these processes are important for blocking, the authors show that much of the blocking error diagnosed using common methods of analysis and current climate models is directly attributable to the climatological bias of the model. This explains a large proportion of diagnosed blocking error in models used in the recent Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change report. Furthermore, greatly improved statistics are obtained by diagnosing blocking using climate model data corrected to account for mean model biases. To the extent that mean biases may be corrected in low-resolution models, this suggests that such models may be able to generate greatly improved levels of atmospheric blocking
Managerial Overconfidence and Corporate Risk Management
We show that managerial overconfidence, which has been found to influence a number of corporate financial decisions, also affects corporate risk management. We find that managers increase their speculative activities using derivatives following speculative gains, while they do not reduce their speculative activities following speculative losses. This asymmetric response follows from selective selfattribution: successes tend to be attributed to one’s own skill, while failures tend to be attributed to bad luck. Thus, our results show that managerial behavioral biases can also impact corporate risk management.corporate risk management, behavioral biases, managerial overconfidence, speculation
- …