55 research outputs found

    A Guide to FRB/US A Macroeconomic Model of the United States

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    Abstract: FRB/US is a large-scale quarterly econometric model of the U.S. economy, developed to replace the MPS model. Most behavioral equations are based on specifications of optimizing behavior containing explicit expectations of firms, households, and financial markets. Although expectations are explicit, the empirical fits of the structural descriptions of macroeconomic behavior are comparable to those of reduced-form time series models. In most instances, tests do not reject overidentifying restrictions of rational expectations or the hypothesis of serially independent residuals. As modeled, private sector expectations of policy constitute a major transmission channel of monetary policy

    Finland's Knowledge Creators Mobility Data

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    The data is compiled from scientific publication record over two decades in Finland. In Finland over the past 20 years, human capital active in Science, Technology and Innovation had undertaken 11,911,200 authorships in scientific papers. This has happened with 307,884,450 act of authorship offered by international collaborators

    Finland's Knowledge Creators Mobility Data

    No full text
    The data is compiled from scientific publication record over two decades in Finland. In Finland over the past 20 years, human capital active in Science, Technology and Innovation had undertaken 11,911,200 authorships in scientific papers. This has happened with 307,884,450 act of authorship offered by international collaborators

    Author Meets Critics: Eugenio Petrovich, A Quantitative Portrait of Analytic Philosophy

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    A critical commentary on Eugenio Petrovich's new book (2024, Springer)

    Historical Analysis and the Shifting Journal Article

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    It is tempting to regard the “record” of journal articles as a temporally and culturally stable artifact that could permit sweeping, comparative historical analyses of a particularly powerful sort. All the more since some still-extant journals, like Nature or the Proceedings of the Royal Society, reach back to cover significant periods of the nineteenth century (having been founded in 1869 and 1831, respectively). Setting aside worries about pretensions to completeness (as could be attested by anyone who has ever attempted to download the “complete” catalog of even a relatively recent journal), I want to pursue the question of the “digital journal record” through a combination of historical and practical approaches in this talk. Humanistic analyses of “the literature” need to not only wrestle with its syntactic content, and with the difficulties of moving from syntax to semantics, but, if such an analysis is to be in the slightest a historical endeavor, it needs also to deal with the epistemic, social, and cultural contexts of journal article production. I will describe these worries in theory, then demonstrate them in practice, presenting some in-progress work on the reception of statistics in Britain in the last decades of the nineteenth century

    Mapping of Finnish innovation system actors

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    Geospatial mapping of Finland innovation systems actors (exluding companies). Includes organizations location, type and objectives, where available

    Mapping of Finnish innovation system actors

    No full text
    Geospatial mapping of Finland innovation systems actors (exluding companies). Includes organizations location, type and objectives, where available

    Yhteiskunnalliset yritykset ja innovaattorit

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    PowerBI dashboard to the data about social enterprises and innovator
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