Search results for "Icing"

showing 10 items of 491 documents

Herding in the cryptocurrency market: CSSD and CSAD approaches

2018

Abstract We analyse the existence of herding in the cryptocurrency market through the cross-sectional standard (absolute) deviation of returns. Our results show that extreme dispersion of returns is explained by rational asset pricing models although it is possible to observe herding during down markets, which highlights the inefficiency and risk of cryptocurrencies. We also observe that the smallest digital currencies are herding with the largest ones, thus traders base their decisions on the performance of the main cryptocurrencies. However, the herding phenomenon cannot be solely attributed to Bitcoin, since the rest of the market is not herding with the main cryptocurrency.

CryptocurrencyCryptocurrencyMarket efficiency050208 financeFinancial economics05 social sciencesMarket efficiencyHerdingDigital currency0502 economics and businessEconomicsCapital asset pricing modelStatistical dispersionHerding050207 economicsInefficiencyBitcoinFinanceFinance Research Letters
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ENO1 gene product binds to the c-myc promoter and acts as a transcriptional repressor: relationship with Myc promoter-binding protein 1 (MBP-1).

2000

The Myc promoter-binding protein-1 (MBP-1) is a 37-38 kDa protein that binds to the c-myc P2 promoter and negatively regulates transcription of the protooncogene. MBP-1 cDNA shares 97% similarity with the cDNA encoding the glycolytic enzyme alpha-enolase and both genes have been mapped to the same region of human chromosome 1, suggesting the hypothesis that the two proteins might be encoded by the same gene. We show here data indicating that a 37 kDa protein is alternatively translated from the full-length alpha-enolase mRNA. This shorter form of alpha-enolase is able to bind the MBP-1 consensus sequence and to downregulate expression of a luciferase reporter gene under the control of the c…

CytoplasmTranscriptional repressionRecombinant Fusion ProteinsBiophysicsEnolaseCodon InitiatorDown-RegulationBiologyAlternative translationResponse ElementsTransfectionBiochemistryCell LineGene productHSPA4Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-mycStructural BiologyHSPA2GeneticsBiomarkers TumorE2F1AnimalsHumansSOCS6Genes Tumor SuppressorDNA bindingPromoter Regions GeneticMolecular BiologyYY1Tumor Suppressor ProteinsNuclear ProteinsCell BiologyDNAMolecular biologyGPS2Neoplasm ProteinsDNA-Binding ProteinsMolecular WeightRepressor ProteinsAlternative SplicingGATAD2BChromosomes Human Pair 1Phosphopyruvate HydrataseProtein BiosynthesisPeptidesProtein BindingFEBS letters
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Heterochromatin Networks: Topology, Dynamics, and Function (a Working Hypothesis)

2021

Open systems can only exist by self-organization as pulsing structures exchanging matter and energy with the outer world. This review is an attempt to reveal the organizational principles of the heterochromatin supra-intra-chromosomal network in terms of nonlinear thermodynamics. The accessibility of the linear information of the genetic code is regulated by constitutive heterochromatin (CHR) creating the positional information in a system of coordinates. These features include scale-free splitting-fusing of CHR with the boundary constraints of the nucleolus and nuclear envelope. The analysis of both the literature and our own data suggests a radial-concentric network as the main structural…

DNA Replication TimingQH301-705.5HeterochromatinEmbryonic DevelopmentReviewtranscriptional pulsingTopologyModels Biologicalpositional informationphysics of lifeCell Line TumorAnimalsHumansConstitutive heterochromatinNucleosomeEpigeneticsBiology (General)PhysicsReplication timingheterochromatincytoskeletonActomyosinGeneral MedicineGenetic codenucleolar boundaryRatsChromatinGene Expression RegulationOrgan SpecificitynetworksRNA splicingscale-free oscillationsChickensCell Nucleoluschromatin organizationCells
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A novel member of an ancient superfamily: sponge (Geodia cydonium, Porifera) putative protein that features scavenger receptor cysteine-rich repeats

1997

Proteins featuring scavenger receptor cysteine-rich (SRCR) domains are prominent receptors known from vertebrates and from one phylum of invertebrates, the echinoderms. In the present study we report the first putative SRCR protein from the marine sponge Geodia cydonium (Porifera), a member of the lowest phylum of contemporary Metazoans. Two forms of SRCR molecules were characterized, which apparently represent alternative splicing of the same transcript. The long putative SRCR protein, of 1536 aa, features twelve SRCR repeats, a C-terminal transmembrane domain and a cytoplasmic tail. The sequence of the short form is identical with the long form except that it lacks a coding region near th…

DNA ComplementaryMolecular Sequence DataCell-cell recognitionReceptors Cell SurfaceBiologyHomology (biology)PhylogeneticsSequence Homology Nucleic AcidGeneticsAnimalsCoding regionAmino Acid SequenceCysteineCloning MolecularReceptors ImmunologicScavenger receptorConserved SequenceReceptors LipoproteinRepetitive Sequences Nucleic AcidReceptors ScavengerGeneticsBase SequenceC-terminusAlternative splicingMembrane ProteinsGeneral MedicineScavenger Receptors Class BBiological EvolutionPoriferaTransmembrane domainGene
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Attention Check Items and Instructions in Online Surveys: Boon or Bane for Data Quality?

2019

In this paper, we examine rates of careless responding and reactions to detection methods (i.e., attention check items and instructions) in an experimental setting based on two different samples. First, we use a quota sample (with monetary incentive), a central data source for internet-based surveys in sociological and political research. Second, we include a voluntary opt-in panel (without monetary incentive) well suited for conducting survey experiments (e.g., factorial surveys). Respondents’ reactions to the detection items are analyzed by objective, nonreactive indicators (i.e., break-off, item non-response, and measurement quality), and two self-report scales. Our reaction analyses rev…

Data sourceIncentivebusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectData qualityApplied psychologyQuota samplingSatisficingQuality (business)The InternetJustice (ethics)businessmedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Valuation of Barrier Options in a Black-Scholes Setup with Jump Risk

1999

This paper discusses the pitfalls in the pricing of barrier options approximations of the underlying continuous processes via discrete lattice models. These problems are studied first in a Black-Scholes model. Improvements result from a trinomial model and a further modified model where price changes occur at the jump times of a Poisson process. After the numerical difficulties have been resolved in the Black-Scholes model, unpredictable discontinuous price movements are incorporated.

Datar–Mathews method for real option valuationComputer scienceValuation of optionsJumpBarrier optionApplied mathematicsTrinomial treeBinomial options pricing modelBlack–Scholes modelBlack–Scholes equationMathematical economicsSSRN Electronic Journal
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A wavelet-based demosaicking algorithm for embedded applications

2010

This paper presents an alternative to the spatial reconstruction of the sampled color filter array acquired through a digital image sensor. A demosaicking operation has to be applied to the raw image to recover the full-resolution color image. We present a low-complexity demosaicking algorithm processing in the wavelet domain. Produced images are available at the output of the algorithm either in the spatial representation or directly in the wavelet domain for high-level post processing in the latter domain. Results show that the computational complexity has been lowered by a factor of five compared to state of the art demosaicking algorithms.

DemosaicingComputer scienceColor imagebusiness.industryComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISIONWavelet transformIterative reconstructionDigital imageWaveletColor filter arrayComputer visionArtificial intelligencebusinessImage resolutionAlgorithm2010 Conference on Design and Architectures for Signal and Image Processing (DASIP)
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Random Slicing: Efficient and Scalable Data Placement for Large-Scale Storage Systems

2014

The ever-growing amount of data requires highly scalable storage solutions. The most flexible approach is to use storage pools that can be expanded and scaled down by adding or removing storage devices. To make this approach usable, it is necessary to provide a solution to locate data items in such a dynamic environment. This article presents and evaluates the Random Slicing strategy, which incorporates lessons learned from table-based, rule-based, and pseudo-randomized hashing strategies and is able to provide a simple and efficient strategy that scales up to handle exascale data. Random Slicing keeps a small table with information about previous storage system insert and remove operations…

DesignComputer scienceDistributed computingPerformancestorage managementHash function0102 computer and information sciences02 engineering and technologyParallel computingUSable01 natural sciencesSlicingrandomized data distributionAffordable and Clean Energy0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringRandomnessExperimentationscalabilityPseudorandom number generatorbusiness.industry020206 networking & telecommunicationsReliabilityData FormatPRNG010201 computation theory & mathematicsHardware and ArchitectureComputer data storageScalabilityTable (database)businessNetworking & Telecommunications
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Unavoidable sets and circular splicing languages

2017

Circular splicing systems are a formal model of a generative mechanism of circular words, inspired by a recombinant behaviour of circular DNA. They are defined by a finite alphabet A, an initial set I of circular words, and a set R of rules. In this paper, we focus on the still unknown relations between regular languages and circular splicing systems with a finite initial set and a finite set R of rules represented by a pair of letters ( ( 1 , 3 ) -CSSH systems). When R = A × A , it is known that the set of all words corresponding to the splicing language belongs to the class of pure unitary languages, introduced by Ehrenfeucht, Haussler, Rozenberg in 1983. They also provided a characteriza…

Discrete mathematicsClass (set theory)General Computer ScienceRegular languages; Circular splicing systems; Unavoidable sets0102 computer and information sciences02 engineering and technologyRegular languagesCharacterization (mathematics)01 natural sciencesUnitary stateTheoretical Computer ScienceFocus (linguistics)Set (abstract data type)CombinatoricsRegular language010201 computation theory & mathematicsUnavoidable sets0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering020201 artificial intelligence & image processingFinite setGenerative grammarCircular splicing systemsMathematicsTheoretical Computer Science
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On the regularity of circular splicing languages : A survey and new developments

2009

Circular splicing has been introduced to model a specific recombinant behaviour of circular DNA, continuing the investigation initiated with linear splicing. In this paper we focus on the relationship between regular circular languages and languages generated by finite circular splicing systems. We survey the known results towards a characterization of the intersection between these two classes and provide new contributions on the open problem of finding this characterization. First, we exhibit a non-regular circular language generated by a circular simple system thus disproving a known result in this area. Then we give new results related to a restrictive class of circular splicing systems…

Discrete mathematicsComputer scienceOpen problemINF/01 - INFORMATICAGraph theoryCircular wordMolecular computingComputer Science ApplicationsGraph theoryAutomata theory Circular words Formal languages Graph theory Molecular computing Splicing systemsIntersectionFormal languageTheory of computationGraph (abstract data type)CographFormal languageSplicing systemComplement (set theory)Automata theory
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