Search results for "PROB"

showing 10 items of 8859 documents

Unveiling the Antecedents of International Diversification: An Agency Theory Approach

2014

While various studies have developed hypotheses about the antecedents of international diversification drawing mainly on the resource-based view, the behavioral theory of the firm, and the transaction costs literature, we advance our understanding by investigating the explanatory power of agency costs of free cash flow arguments. Using a sample panel of 167 Italian firms longitudinally evaluated during the 1980-2010 period, this study tests whether the firm’s choice to spread operations in multiple foreign countries is conditioned by excess of free cash flow and debt, especially in firm-contexts where agency problems are exacerbated by managers or large shareholders’ opportunism. We find th…

Agency Theory; International Diversification; Panel Data AnalysisActuarial scienceFree cash flowmedia_common.quotation_subjectAgency TheoryAgency costDiversification (finance)Principal–agent problemGeneral MedicineMonetary economicsSettore SECS-P/08 - Economia e Gestione delle ImpresePanel Data AnalysisCorporate GovernanceDebtInternational Diversification; Agency Theory; Corporate GovernanceOpportunismInternational DiversificationEconomicsCash flowExplanatory powermedia_common
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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
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Development and validation of prediction model to estimate 10-year risk of all-cause mortality using modern statistical learning methods: a large pop…

2021

Abstract Background In increasingly ageing populations, there is an emergent need to develop a robust prediction model for estimating an individual absolute risk for all-cause mortality, so that relevant assessments and interventions can be targeted appropriately. The objective of the study was to derive, evaluate and validate (internally and externally) a risk prediction model allowing rapid estimations of an absolute risk of all-cause mortality in the following 10 years. Methods For the model development, data came from English Longitudinal Study of Ageing study, which comprised 9154 population-representative individuals aged 50–75 years, 1240 (13.5%) of whom died during the 10-year follo…

AgingLongitudinal studySurvivalEpidemiologyCalibration (statistics)PopulationHealth InformaticsFeature selectionAbsolute riskPopulation-based longitudinal studyPrognostic factorsRisk AssessmentSensitivity and Specificity01 natural sciencesCohort Studies010104 statistics & probability03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineStatisticsHumansMedicineLongitudinal Studies030212 general & internal medicineMortality0101 mathematicseducationAgedProportional Hazards Modelslcsh:R5-920education.field_of_studyProportional hazards modelbusiness.industryAbsolute risk reductionHealth and Retirement StudyStatistical learninglcsh:Medicine (General)businessResearch ArticleCohort studyBMC Medical Research Methodology
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Neuroprotective effects of behavioural training and nicotine on age-related deficits in spatial learning.

2006

Studies in humans and animals show a clear decline in spatial memory with age and several approaches have been adopted to alleviate this impairment. The purpose of our review is to assess the studies that have suggested the possible neuroprotective actions of behavioural training and nicotine-applied both independently and in conjunction-on age-related deficits in spatial learning. Both spatial pretraining and nonspatial experiences influence an animal's performance in spatial tasks. In aged rats, the experience of training in the water maze task increases the number of newly generated neurons in the hippocampus. The neuroprotective effects of nicotine have been demonstrated in both in-vitr…

AgingNicotineHippocampusWater mazeReceptors NicotinicNeuroprotectionSpatial memoryHippocampusNicotineBehavior TherapyEscape ReactionOrientationmedicineAnimalsHumansMaze LearningProblem SolvingPharmacologyConfoundingNeurodegenerative DiseasesSpatial cognitionRatsPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuroprotective AgentsPractice PsychologicalMental RecallSpatial learningSeptum PellucidumPsychologyCognitive psychologymedicine.drugBehavioural pharmacology
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European undergraduate curriculum in geriatric medicine developed using an international modified Delphi technique.

2014

Introduction: the rise in the number of older, frail adults necessitates that future doctors are adequately trained in the skills of geriatric medicine. Few countries have dedicated curricula in geriatric medicine at the undergraduate level. The aim of this project was to develop a consensus among geriatricians on a curriculum with the minimal requirements that a medical student should achieve by the end of medical school. Methods: a modified Delphi process was used. First, educational experts and geriatricians proposed a set of learning objectives based on a literature review. Second, three Delphi rounds involving a panel with 49 experts representing 29 countries affiliated to the European…

AgingSettore MED/09 - Medicina InternaConsensusDelphi Techniqueeducation610 Medicine & health-EuropeanDelphiMedizinische Fakultät360 Social problems & social servicesHumansLearningddc:610undergraduate curriculum610 Medicine & healthEuropean undergraduate curriculum geriatric medicine consensus Delphigeriatric medicineGeneral MedicineResearch PapersEuropean undergraduate curriculum geriatric medicine consensus Delphi CARE STUDENTSEuropeGeriatricsClinical CompetenceCurriculumGeriatrics and Gerontology360 Social problems & social servicesEducation Medical Undergraduate
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Immunosenescence and anti-immunosenescence therapies: the case of probiotics.

2008

ABSTRACT Aging is a complex process that negatively impacts the development of the immune system and its ability to function. Progressive changes in the T and B cell systems over the life span have a major impact on the capacity to respond to immune challenge. These cumulative age-associated changes in immune competence are termed immunosenescence. This process is mostly characterized by: (1) shrinkage of the T cell repertoire and accumulation of oligoclonal expansions of memory/effector cells directed toward ubiquitary infectious agents; (2) involution of the thymus and the exhaustion of naive T cells; and (3) chronic inflammatory status. Here we discuss possible strategies to counteract t…

AgingT cell repertoireLife spanEffectorProbioticsIMMUNOSENESCENCEPROBIOTICSINTESTINAL MICROFLORAImmunosenescenceBiologymedicine.anatomical_structureImmune systemElderly populationImmunologymedicineAnimalsHumansImmunotherapyGeriatrics and GerontologyB cellRejuvenation research
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Force Platform Balance Measures as Predictors of Indoor and Outdoor Falls in Community-Dwelling Women Aged 63-76 Years

2008

Background. Inability to maintain balance while standing increases risk of falls in older people. The present study assessed whether center of pressure (COP) movement measured with force platform technology predicts risk for falls among older people with no manifest deficiency in standing balance. Methods. Participants were 434 community-dwelling women, aged 63-76 years. COP was measured in six stances on a force platform. Following balance tests, participants reported their falls with 12 monthly calendars. Incidence rate ratios (IRR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) were computed from negative binomial regression models. For the analysis, those with>/=1 fall indoors were coded"indoor fal…

Agingmedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsPoison controlSuicide preventionStatistics NonparametricOccupational safety and healthPredictive Value of TestsRisk FactorsInjury preventionPressuremedicinePostural BalanceHumansForce platformProspective StudiesPostural BalanceFinlandAgedbusiness.industryMiddle AgedConfidence intervalPhysical therapyRegression AnalysisAccidental FallsFemaleGeriatrics and Gerontologymedicine.symptombusinessBalance problemsDemographyThe Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences
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Individual Differences in Personality Associated with Aggressive Behavior among Adolescents Referred for Externalizing Behavior Problems

2017

The present study examined the extent to which individual differences in personality that have been previously associated with aggression in non-clinical subjects (Caprara et al., European Journal of Personality, 27(3), 290–303, 2013, Caprara et al., Developmental Psychology, 50(1), 71–85, 2014) account for aggression among adolescents referred to psychiatric services with diagnosis within the externalizing spectrum (i.e., conduct disorder, oppositional defiant disorder, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder). In particular a conceptual model was examined in which individual differences in basic traits (i.e., emotional instability and agreeableness), lower order traits (i.e., irritab…

Agreeablenessmedia_common.quotation_subjectMoral disengagementExternalizing behavior problem050109 social psychologyPersonality traits; Irritability; Hostile rumination; Moral disengagement; Externalizing behavior problemsDevelopmental psychologymedicineAttention deficit hyperactivity disorderPersonality0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPersonality traitsChild Behavior ChecklistPersonality traitMoral disengagementmedia_commonAggression05 social sciencesHostile ruminationExternalizing behavior problemsmedicine.diseaseIrritabilityClinical PsychologyConduct disorderRuminationmedicine.symptomPsychology050104 developmental & child psychologyClinical psychology
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Pandemic Prevention and Personality Psychology: Gender Differences in Preventive Health Behaviors during COVID-19 and the Roles of Agreeableness and …

2022

One of the greatest public health crises in recent times, the COVID-19 pandemic, has come with a myriad of challenges in terms of health communication and public cooperation to prevent the spread of the disease. Understanding which are the key determinants that make certain individuals more cooperative is key in effectively tackling pandemics and similar future challenges. In the present study (N = 800), we investigated whether gender differences in compliance with preventive health behaviors (PHB) at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic could be established, and, if so, whether the personality traits of agreeableness and conscientiousness could help explain this presumed relationship. Consis…

Agreeablenessmedicine.medical_specialtyagreeablenessDiseaseManagement Science and Operations ResearchpandemicspsychologyPersonality psychologygender personalityArticleDevelopmental psychologyCompliance (psychology)medicineBig Five personality traitsSafety Risk Reliability and QualityconscientiousnessHealth communicationpreventive health behaviorsPublic healthCOVID-19ConscientiousnessComputer Science ApplicationsHD61VDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200Risk in industry. Risk managementStatistics Probability and UncertaintyPsychologySafety ResearchJournal of Safety Science and Resilience
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Products of snowflaked Euclidean lines are not minimal for looking down

2017

We show that products of snowflaked Euclidean lines are not minimal for looking down. This question was raised in Fractured fractals and broken dreams, Problem 11.17, by David and Semmes. The proof uses arguments developed by Le Donne, Li and Rajala to prove that the Heisenberg group is not minimal for looking down. By a method of shortcuts, we define a new distance $d$ such that the product of snowflaked Euclidean lines looks down on $(\mathbb R^N,d)$, but not vice versa.

Ahlfors-regularity26B05 (Primary) 28A80 (Secondary)01 natural sciences010104 statistics & probabilityFractalMathematics - Metric GeometryEuclidean geometryClassical Analysis and ODEs (math.CA)FOS: MathematicsHeisenberg groupMathematics::Metric GeometryBPI-spacesbpi-spacessecondary 28a800101 mathematicsbilipschitz piecesMathematicsDiscrete mathematicsQA299.6-433ahlfors-regularityApplied Mathematics010102 general mathematicsprimary 26b05Metric Geometry (math.MG)biLipschitz piecesMathematics - Classical Analysis and ODEsProduct (mathematics)Geometry and TopologyAnalysis
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