3,968 research outputs found

    Risk Classification in Insurance Contracting

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    Risk classification refers to the use of observable characteristics by insurers to group individuals with similar expected claims, compute the corresponding premiums, and thereby reduce asymmetric information. An efficient risk classification system generates premiums that fully reflect the expected cost associated with each class of risk characteristics. This is known as financial equity. In the health sector, risk classification is also subject to concerns about social equity and potential discrimination. We present different theoretical frameworks that illustrate the potential trade-off between efficient insurance provision and social equity. We also review empirical studies on risk classification and residual asymmetric information.Adverse selection, classification risk, diagnostic test, empirical test of asymmetric information, financial equity, genetic test, health insurance, insurance rating, insurance pricing, moral hazard, risk classification, risk characteristic, risk pooling, risk separation, social equity

    Parameterization of the set of positive- definite matrices and an algorithm for its generation

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    Numerical analysis on set elements for positive definite symmetric matrices by parameterizatio

    Algorithm for Liapunov stability analysis

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    Development of algorithm provides automatic computation of quadratic estimate of domain of stability for stable equilibrium states of nonlinear systems of ordinary differential equations

    Further development of an algorithm for the nonlinear stability analysis of the orbiting astronomical observatory paired-tracker control system Final report

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    Algorithm development for estimating domain of attraction of OAO paired-tracker equilibrium state with Liapunov function

    Payoff Continuity in Incomplete Information Games: A Comment

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    Kajii and Morris (J. Econ. Theory 1998, 267-276) provide necessary and sufficient conditions for two priors to be strategically close. The restrictiveness of these con- ditions establishes that strategic behavior can be highly sensitive to the assumed prior. Their results thus recommend care in the use of priors in economic modelling. Unfortunately, their proof of a central proposition fails for zero probability types. This comment corrects their proof to account for these cases

    The Evolution of Reciprocity in Sizable Human Groups

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    The scale and complexity of human cooperation is an important and unresolved evo- lutionary puzzle. This article uses the finitely repeated n person Prisoners’ Dilemma game to illustrate how sapience can greatly enhance group-selection effects and lead to the evolutionary stability of cooperation in large groups. This affords a simple and direct explanation of the human “exception.

    Cell-free prediction of protein expression costs for growing cells

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    Translating heterologous proteins places significant burden on host cells, consuming expression resources leading to slower cell growth and productivity. Yet predicting the cost of protein production for any given gene is a major challenge, as multiple processes and factors combine to determine translation efficiency. To enable prediction of the cost of gene expression in bacteria, we describe here a standard cell-free lysate assay that provides a relative measure of resource consumption when a protein coding sequence is expressed. These lysate measurements can then be used with a computational model of translation to predict the in vivo burden placed on growing E. coli cells for a variety of proteins of different functions and lengths. Using this approach, we can predict the burden of expressing multigene operons of different designs and differentiate between the fraction of burden related to gene expression compared to action of a metabolic pathway

    Risk Classification and Health Insurance

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    Risk classification refers to the use of observable characteristics by insurers to group individuals with similar expected claims, compute the corresponding premiums, and thereby reduce asymmetric information. With perfect risk classification, premiums fully reflect the expected cost associated with each class of risk characteristics and yield efficient outcomes. In the health sector, risk classification is also subject to concerns about social equity and potential discrimination. We present an analytical framework that illustrates the potential trade-off between efficient insurance provision and social equity. We also review empirical studies on risk classification and residual asymmetric information that inform this trade-off

    Rapid Communication: MspI Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism at the Swine Myogenin Locus

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    Source and Description of Probe. A 1,486-bp rat cDNA clone for myogenin (MYOG) was excised from the EcoRI site of the plasmid, pBluescrybe M13- (Wright et al., 1989). Method of Detection. DNA was isolated from whole blood and digested with MspI. Fragments were then separated by agarose gel electrophoresis and transferred to charged nylon membranes. Hybridizations were at 65°C for 16 to 20 h (.5 M NaCl, .05 M Naphosphate buffer, pH 6.5, 5x Denhardt\u27s reagent, 10% dextran sulfate, .5% SDS, 100 pg/mL sonicated, denatured salmon sperm DNA). Final washes were at 55 to 60°C in .7x SSC, 5% SDS for 15 to 20 min
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