Search results for "Econometric"

showing 10 items of 3780 documents

Optimal selection of individuals for repeated covariate measurements in follow-up studies

2016

Repeated covariate measurements bring important information on the time-varying risk factors in long epidemiological follow-up studies. However, due to budget limitations, it may be possible to carry out the repeated measurements only for a subset of the cohort. We study cost-efficient alternatives for the simple random sampling in the selection of the individuals to be remeasured. The proposed selection criteria are based on forms of the D-optimality. The selection methods are compared with the simulation studies and illustrated with the data from the East–West study carried out in Finland from 1959 to 1999. The results indicate that cost savings can be achieved if the selection is focuse…

AdultStatistics and ProbabilityTime Factorsdata collectionEpidemiologyComputer sciencemissing covariate data01 natural sciences010104 statistics & probability03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHealth Information ManagementRisk FactorsStatisticsCovariateEconometricsHumans030212 general & internal medicineoptimal design0101 mathematicsrepeated measurementsFinlandSelection (genetic algorithm)Event (probability theory)ta112Data collectionPatient SelectionFollow up studiesta3142follow-up studyMiddle AgedSimple random sampleCardiovascular DiseasesResearch DesignCohortseurantatutkimusSelection methodFollow-Up StudiesStatistical Methods in Medical Research
researchProduct

Mixed predictability and cross-validation to assess non-linear Granger causality in short cardiovascular variability series

2006

A method to evaluate the direction and strength of causal interactions in bivariate cardiovascular and cardiorespiratory series is presented. The method is based on quantifying self and mixed predictability of the two series using nearest-neighbour local linear approximation. It returns two causal coupling indexes measuring the relative improvement in predictability along direct and reverse directions, and a directionality index indicating the preferential direction of interaction. The method was implemented through a cross-validation approach that allowed quantification of directionality without constraining the embedding of the series, and fully exploited the available data to maximise th…

AdultStatistics as TopicBiomedical EngineeringInferenceBlood PressureHealth InformaticsBivariate analysisDirectionalityCross-validationGranger causalityHeart RateStatisticsEconometricsHumansComputer SimulationPredictabilityMathematicsSeries (mathematics)Models CardiovascularNonlinear systemNonlinear DynamicsData Interpretation StatisticalShort-term cardiovascular variabilityRespiratory MechanicsRegression AnalysisFemaleNon-linear predictionLinear approximationAlgorithmsBiomedizinische Technik/Biomedical Engineering
researchProduct

Did the Finnish depression of the early 1990s have a silver lining? : The effect of unemployment on long-term physical activity

2022

This paper studies the impact of long-term unemployment on physical activity. We examined the effects 6 and 15 years following a severe business cycle downturn in Finland over the period 1991–1994. The study sample comprised residents of Northern Finland. The unemployed individuals were 23–26 years old during the downturn. Physical activity, measured by MET minutes and meeting WHO guidelines, was higher 15 years later among those people who experienced the longest periods of unemployment in 1991–1994. Physical activity was somewhat lower among people with relatively shorter periods of unemployment. peerReviewed

AdultunemploymentelintavatEconomics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)physical activitytyöttömyysmacroeconomic conditionsYoung Adulttaloudellinen tilaUnemploymentkansanterveysrecessionslamaHumansExercisepitkäaikaistyöttömyysFinlandfyysinen aktiivisuus
researchProduct

Essential? COVID-19 and highly educated Africans in Finland’s segmented labour market

2022

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to characterise the position of highly educated African migrants in the Finnish labour market and to examine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on that position.Design/methodology/approachThe paper is based on the biographical work stories of 17 highly educated African migrant workers in four occupation areas in Finland: healthcare, cleaning, restaurant and transport. The sample was partly purposively and partly theoretically determined. The authors used content driven thematic analysis technique, combined with by the biographical narrative concept of turning points.FindingsUsing the case of highly educated African migrants in the Finnish labour market, …

African migrantsSociology and Political Sciencesiirtolaisetlabour market segmentationsiirtolaispolitiikkaCOVID-19migration policytyömarkkinatGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinlandInternational Journal of Sociology and Social Policy
researchProduct

Threshold rule and scaling behavior in a multi-agent supply chain

2010

In this paper an agent-based model of self organized criticality is developed in a network economy characterized by lead time and a threshold behavior of firms. Instead of considering the aggregate production of the economy as a whole, we focus on both the propagation and amplification effects of a demand shock in the sectorial productions of a multi-agent supply chain. We study a static network structure representing a relation of firms in a lower-upper stream in an industrial organization. In our model, the individual (R, nQ) policies play an important role in generating a propagation effect across the different layers of the economy, and the propagation turns into the large fluctuations …

Agent-based modelComputer scienceSupply chainSelf organized criticalityagent-based modelNetwork economySelf-organized criticalityReorder pointbullwhip effectSettore SECS-S/06 -Metodi Mat. dell'Economia e d. Scienze Attuariali e Finanz.Demand shockBullwhip effectEconometricsLead time
researchProduct

The effect of agglomeration economies and geography on the survival of accommodation businesses in Sicily

2021

The study explores the geographical pattern of the accommodation industry in the Italian insular region of Sicily, focusing on the determinants of the risk of market exit. We adopt a standard framework of business survival analysis where agglomeration economies play an important role. We then extend the analysis by considering the role of geography to explore whether the risk of market exit depends on nearness to desirable amenities. The geography is here measured by the distance from the coast and the altitude of the place where the firm is located. When we look at the entire population of accommodation firms that started between 2010 and 2014, we find evidence that the risk of failure inc…

Agglomeration economieSpatial methodsGeography Planning and Development0211 other engineering and technologies02 engineering and technologyspatial method0502 economics and businessEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)geographical locationEconomic geography050207 economicsLocationaccommodation busineSicilyinsular regionsfirm survival; geographical location; insular regions; tourism industryfirm survivalbusiness.industryEconomies of agglomeration05 social sciencesFrame (networking)021107 urban & regional planningGeographytourism industrysurvival analysiStatistics Probability and UncertaintybusinessGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceAccommodationTourism
researchProduct

Personality and the gender wage gap

2012

In this study, we investigate whether personality traits contribute towards a better understanding of the reasons for the gender wage gap. We explore whether two of the personality factors put forward by Bowles et al. (2001) as likely to be incentive enhancing in the employer–employee relationship can explain the difference in wages for women and men. These are (1) personal self efficacy (Locus of Control (LoC)) and (2) time preference. We also study the role of the so called Big Five personality traits (extraversion, emotional stability, agreeableness, openness intellect and conscientiousness), which have been associated with earnings in several recent studies. Using a sample of Dutch empl…

AgreeablenessEconomics and EconometricsLabour economicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectAlternative five model of personalityConscientiousnessBig Five personality traits and cultureHierarchical structure of the Big FiveEconomicsOpenness to experiencePersonalityBig Five personality traitsSocial psychologyhealth care economics and organizationsmedia_commonApplied Economics
researchProduct

The effects of personality on earnings

2005

Abstract The purpose of this paper is to investigate the influence of personality dimensions on wage settings. The study was inspired by the model proposed by Bowles, Gintis, and Osborne [American Economic Review 91 (2001) 155], which shows how psychological characteristics may be rewarded or punished in the labour market due to a so-called incentive-enhancing property. Additionally, two meta-studies show that there are robust relationships between some personality dimensions and productivity [Barrick & Mount, Personnel Psychology 44 (1991) 1; Salgado, Journal of Applied Psychology 82 (1997) 30]. We used data from the DNB Household Survey (DHS) to test the extent to which certain personalit…

AgreeablenessEconomics and EconometricsSociology and Political ScienceEarningsmedia_common.quotation_subjectWageConscientiousnessNeuroticismPsychoticismPersonalityDemographic economicsBig Five personality traitsPsychologySocial psychologyApplied Psychologymedia_commonJournal of Economic Psychology
researchProduct

The effects of personality, risk and other-regarding attitudes on trust and reciprocity

2022

Abstract This paper reports experimental results on the determinants of trust and reciprocity in the context of a genuinely sequential, binary Trust Game. Apart from behavior in the main experiment, subjects’ risk attitudes and inequality aversion are elicited, as well as the traits of neuroticism and agreeableness, captured through the five-factor model. The findings suggest that trustors’ (first movers) behavior is affected by their loss aversion, while trustees’ (second movers) reciprocal behavior is not explained by any of their other-regarding attitudes, but, rather, by their agreeableness.

AgreeablenessEconomics and Econometricsinequality attitudemedia_common.quotation_subjectGeneral Social Sciencesbehavioral economicstrustContext (language use)NeuroticismDictator gamepersonalityReciprocity (social psychology)Loss aversionrisk attitudeD91PersonalityC9PsychologySocial psychologyApplied PsychologyInequity aversionmedia_commonJournal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics
researchProduct

Effiziente Kapitalallokation in der Banksteuerung

2007

Agricultural scienceManagement of Technology and Innovation0502 economics and business05 social sciencesEconomicsProduction (economics)050201 accountingGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceGeneral Business Management and Accounting050203 business & managementSchmalenbachs Zeitschrift für betriebswirtschaftliche Forschung
researchProduct