21,244 research outputs found

    An Assessment of Dynamic Behavior in the U.S. Catfish Market: An Application of the Generalized Dynamic Rotterdam Model

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    The generalized dynamic Rotterdam model was used in estimating U.S. demand for disaggregated catfish. The overall goal was to examine habit persistence in consumption and to determine the adjustment process in demand. Results indicated that it took up to 1 month for catfish-product demand to fully adjust to changes in expenditures and prices. Additionally, habit persistence played a role in demand where present consumption of a given product was positively affected by past consumption of that product. Consequently, U.S. catfish demand was significantly more elastic in the long-run.catfish, demand, dynamics, partial adjustment, Rotterdam model, Agribusiness, Consumer/Household Economics, Demand and Price Analysis, Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Institutional and Behavioral Economics, C51, Q11, Q13, Q17,

    Market Integration for Shrimp and the Effect of Catastrophic Events

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    Seasonal unit-root testing and seasonal cointegration methods are employed to investigate the price transmission in U.S. shrimp markets. ARIMA and Vector Error Correction Models (VECM) are used to identify the effect of catastrophic events on individual price series in one region and the spillover effects in the price series for other regions. Results showed that a cointegrating relation exists between neighboring states, specifically between Alabama and Mississippi and Louisiana and Texas. Cointegrating relations also exist between the Gulf States and the Pacific region, but not the Atlantic region, and the price of imported shrimp is cointegrated with each of the domestic shrimp price series. Finally, while Katrina had an effect on shrimp prices in Gulf States, the effect was not long lasting.catastrophic events, cointegration, market integration, seasonal unit-roots, spillover effects, Marketing, Risk and Uncertainty, C13, Q11, Q13,

    Inter-country Comparisons of Poverty Based on a Capability Approach: An Empirical Exercise

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    We argue that inter-country comparisons of income poverty based on poverty lines uniformly reflecting the costs of the basic requirements of human beings are superior to the existing money-metric approaches. In this exercise, we implement a uniform approach to poverty assessment based on basic human capabilities for three countries: Nicaragua, Tanzania, and Vietnam. We compute standard errors of the resulting poverty estimates and compare the incidence of poverty across these three countries. The choice of approach affects both cardinal estimates and ordinal rankings of poverty across countries and over time. Meaningful and coherent inter-country poverty comparisons can be advanced through international co-ordination in survey design and in the construction of income poverty lines that uniformly reflect the costs of the basic requirements of human beings.Poverty, Inter-Country comparisons, Capability approach

    The Impact of Domestic and Import Prices on U.S. Lamb Imports: A Production System Approach

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    As U.S. lamb imports increased relative to domestic production, and the relative share of chilled to frozen lamb imports increased, importers of chilled lamb have become less responsive to domestic and import prices, while the direct opposite is the case for frozen lamb imports. From 1990 to 2003, chilled lamb imports from Australia and New Zealand became less and less responsive to U.S. prices, and frozen imports became more responsive. Unconditional own-price elasticities also show that, over time, imports of chilled lamb became less responsive to import prices while frozen imports became more responsive to import prices.lamb, demand, imports, trade, import demand, production, International Relations/Trade,

    Central Monitor Based on Personal Computer Using One Wireless Receiver

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    Central monitor is a tool in the health field that serves to monitor the patient's condition which is centralized in one monitor display centrally. In this scientific paper raised wireless systems for sending data to one monitor. In this module there are Electrocardiograph (EKG) parameters which are a parameter to detect and measure the electrical activity of the heart muscle using measurements of biopotential signals obtained from the surface of the body. From these measurements, an ECG signal will be obtained to produce a heart rate per minute (BPM). ECG signals are obtained from measurements of the electrical activity of the heart through electrodes placed on the patient's skin using the bipolar lead method. ECG signals will be processed using a  microcontroller circuit as processors. Then the data will be sent to the PC using wireless HC-11. The data received by the PC, then processed using the Delphi application which will then display ECG charts and BPM results and abnormalities indicators if the BPM is in a condition above or below normal. By comparing the module with a standard measuring instrument, the biggest error is 0.99% which is still in tolerance because the tolerance limit is 5

    Magnetic fields in primordial accretion disks

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    Magnetic fields are considered as a vital ingredient of contemporary star formation, and may have been important during the formation of the first stars in the presence of an efficient amplification mechanism. Initial seed fields are provided via plasma fluctuations, and are subsequently amplified by the small-scale dynamo, leading to a strong tangled magnetic field. Here we explore how the magnetic field provided by the small-scale dynamo is further amplified via the αΩ\alpha-\Omega dynamo in a protostellar disk and assess its implications. For this purpose, we consider two characteristic cases, a typical Pop.~III star with 1010~M_\odot and an accretion rate of 10310^{-3}~M_\odot~yr1^{-1}, and a supermassive star with 10510^5~M_\odot and an accretion rate of 10110^{-1}~M_\odot~yr1^{-1}. For the 1010~M_\odot Pop.~III star, we find that coherent magnetic fields can be produced on scales of at least 100100~AU, which are sufficient to drive a jet with a luminosity of 100100~L_\odot and a mass outflow rate of 103.710^{-3.7}~M_\odot~yr1^{-1}. For the supermassive star, the dynamical timescales in its environment are even shorter, implying smaller orbital timescales and an efficient magnetization out to at least 10001000~AU. The jet luminosity corresponds to 106.0\sim10^{6.0}~L_\odot, and a mass outflow rate of 102.110^{-2.1}~M_\odot~yr1^{-1}. We expect that the feedback from the supermassive star can have a relevant impact on its host galaxy.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics, comments are still welcom

    Pengaruh Suku Bunga Terhadap Aktivitas Perdagangan Saham (Studi Pada Bursa Efek Indonesia Periode 2005-2014)

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    The purpose of this study is to examine the effect of BI Rate and FED Rate partially and simultaneously on stock trading volume, stock trading value, and stock trading frequency by using multiple linear regression analysis. This study uses data quarter of 2005 to 2014 with 40 samples of data time series for each independent and dependent variables. Partial analyses result that; first, BI Rate affects on stock trading value and stock trading frequency negativelly, but does not affect on stock trading volume; second, FED Rate does not affect on stock trading volume, stock trading value, and stock trading frequency. Simoultan analyses result that BI Rate and FED Rate affect on stock trading value positively, but does not affect on stock trading volume and stock trading frequency. The findings in this study indicate the occurrence of asymmetric information to investors in receiving information about changes in BI Rate and FED Rate. It seems that investors tend to be more confident on self-assessment, ignoring changes in BI Rate and FED Rate, and more focus on the real return from the investments on selected stocks

    Fiber Bragg Grating sensors for deformation monitoring of GEM foils in HEP detectors

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    Fiber Bragg Grating (FBG) sensors have been so far mainly used in high energy physics (HEP) as high precision positioning and re-positioning sensors and as low cost, easy to mount, radiation hard and low space- consuming temperature and humidity devices. FBGs are also commonly used for very precise strain measurements. In this work we present a novel use of FBGs as flatness and mechanical tensioning sensors applied to the wide Gas Electron Multiplier (GEM) foils of the GE1/1 chambers of the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment at Large Hadron Collider (LHC) of CERN. A network of FBG sensors has been used to determine the optimal mechanical tension applied and to characterize the mechanical stress applied to the foils. The preliminary results of the test performed on a full size GE1/1 final prototype and possible future developments will be discussed.Comment: Four pages, seven figures. Presented by Michele Caponero at IWASI 2015, Gallipoli (Italy
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