Search results for "ample"

showing 10 items of 2398 documents

Robustness of the risk–return relationship in the U.S. stock market

2008

Abstract Using GARCH-in-Mean models, we study the robustness of the risk–return relationship in monthly U.S. stock market returns (1928:1–2004:12) with respect to the specification of the conditional mean equation. The issue is important because in this commonly used framework, unnecessarily including an intercept is known to distort conclusions. The existence of the relationship is relatively robust, but its strength depends on the prior belief concerning the intercept. The latter applies in particular to the first half of the sample, where also the coefficient of the relative risk aversion is smaller and the equity premium greater than in the latter half.

Financial economicsEquity premium puzzle05 social sciencesBayesian probabilitySample (statistics)Conditional expectation01 natural sciences010104 statistics & probability0502 economics and businessEconometricsEconomicsStock market0101 mathematicsRobustness (economics)Finance050205 econometrics Risk returnFinance Research Letters
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Moving closer? Comparing regional adjustments to shocks in EMU and the United States

2020

Highlights • Interstate migration is the main adjustment channel to labor demand shocks for the US. • EMU countries adjust through changes in labor force participation and unemployment. • Price flexibility is more important as a shock absorber for EMU. • Risk-sharing mechanisms have been more effective in the US than in the EMU. • The strength of these channels has increased for EMU ad declined for the United States.

Flexibility (engineering)Economics and EconometricsLabor mobility2019-20 coronavirus outbreak050208 financeRisk-sharingEuroCurrency UnionsSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)media_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesLabor demandSettore SECS-P/02 Politica EconomicaMonetary economicsExchange-rate flexibilityFull sampleArticleRegional adjustments0502 economics and businessUnemploymentEconomics050207 economicsFinancemedia_commonJournal of International Money and Finance
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Automation of the determination of hydrogen peroxide, dichromate, formaldehyde and bicarbonate in milk by flow injection analysis

1992

Automatic flow injection methods for the determination of hydrogen peroxide, dichromate, formaldehyde and bicarbonate in dairy products are proposed. They are based on reaction with vanadium pentoxide, diphenyl-carbazide, fuchsine-sulphur dioxide and alizarin, respectively. Sample pre-treatment (paper and membrane filtration, dialysis) is widely discussed for on-line incorporation. The usefulness of these methods was tested by applying them to different commercial samples, satisfactory results being obtained in all instances.

Flow injection analysisChromatographyBicarbonateFormaldehydeAnalytical chemistryVanadiumchemistry.chemical_elementAlizarinBiochemistryAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPentoxideSample preparationHydrogen peroxideFresenius' Journal of Analytical Chemistry
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FIA-fluorimetric determination of adrenaline by oxidation with a solid-phase reactor of manganese dioxide incorporated in polyester resin beads

1995

Abstract The FIA-spectrofluorimetric determination of adrenaline was carried out by reaction of the drug with manganese dioxide entrapped in a polymeric material in a solid-phase reactor; the oxidized drug was monitored fluorimetrically at 540 nm (Ioxg. 330.0 nm). The calibration graph for adrenaline was linear over the range 0.5 - 20 μg ml−1 with a relative standard deviation of 2.0% (at 5 ug ml−1) and the sample throughput of 65 h−1. The influence of foreign compounds was studied and the method was applied to the determination of adrenaline content in a pharmaceutical formulation . ∗Present address: Institut of Chemistry, Warsawa University, Bialystok Branch, Bialystok, Poland.

Flow injection analysisChromatographyCalibration curveBiochemistry (medical)Clinical BiochemistryFluorescence spectrometrychemistry.chemical_elementManganesePharmaceutical formulationBiochemistryDosage formAnalytical ChemistrychemistryElectrochemistrySample preparationQuantitative analysis (chemistry)SpectroscopyAnalytical Letters
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Determination of essential metals in complete diet feed by flow injection and flame atomic absorption spectrometry

2002

A prior study of different sample pre-treatments for the determination of metallic elements in complete diet feeds was performed in order to choose the most suitable for these samples. The studied pre-treatment were: acid extraction (lixiviation), wet digestion (on microwave oven) and dry ashing mineralization (calcination). Lixiviation (acid extraction) with hydrochloric acid was selected due to its accuracy, fast and simple pre-treatment procedure. Due of the different levels of concentration of the metallic elements in the samples, the same manifold was used but with small variations. Copper (with on-line pre-concentration by chelating Chelex-100 resin), calcium (with on-line dilution) a…

Flow injection analysisChromatographyMicrowave ovenExtraction (chemistry)Analytical chemistryHydrochloric acidAnalytical Chemistrylaw.inventionDilutionchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryAshinglawSample preparationAtomic absorption spectroscopySpectroscopyMicrochemical Journal
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A new method to measure the size distribution of insoluble submicron particles in water

1994

Abstract In the atmosphere, cloud and fog droplets usually contain insoluble material. The role of these insoluble particles is still unknown today, and is of interest to study. To determine the size distribution and number concentration of these particles in water, different techniques are available. The instrumentation, however, to measure nanometer-sized particles down to 50 nm diameter is not known. A new instrument, the Liquid Tandem Differential Mobility Analyser (LTDMA), was developed to measure size distributions of insoluble particles in water in the size range 50–300 nm in diameter. The new method is based on nebulising, e.g. cloud water and forming a residue aerosol consisting of…

Fluid Flow and Transfer ProcessesAtmospheric ScienceEnvironmental EngineeringTandemChemistryMechanical EngineeringAnalyserDispersityAnalytical chemistryMineralogyCloud watercomplex mixturesPollutionWater sampleAerosolField campaignJournal of Aerosol Science
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Applications of Super Resolution Expansion Microscopy in Yeast

2021

Super-resolution microscopy includes multiple techniques in optical microscopy that enable sub-diffraction resolution fluorescence imaging of cellular structures. Expansion microscopy (EXM) is a method of physical expansion to obtain super-resolution images of a biological sample on conventional microscopy. We present images of yeast organelles, applying the combination of super-resolution and ExM techniques. When preparing pre-expanded samples, conventional methods lead to breakage of dividing yeast cells and difficulties in studying division-related proteins. Here, we describe an improved sample preparation technique that avoids such damage. ExM in combination with Airyscan and structured…

Fluorescence-lifetime imaging microscopyMaterials scienceMaterials Science (miscellaneous)BiophysicsGeneral Physics and Astronomyyeastlaw.invention03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineOptical microscopelawnuclear pore complexMicroscopySample preparationPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryseptinMathematical Physics030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesResolution (electron density)expansion super-resolutionImaging studySuperresolutionYeastlcsh:QC1-999tubulinBiological system030217 neurology & neurosurgerylcsh:PhysicsFrontiers in Physics
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The identification of irradiated crustaceans and evaluation of the dose by thermoluminescence: Intercomparison between two methods for extracting min…

2010

Abstract The thermoluminescence (TL) is one of the physical methods recommended by the European Committee for Standardization, for the identification of irradiated food from which silicate minerals can be extracted. The efficacy of the method strongly depends on the quantity and purity of the extracted minerals, and therefore on the extraction procedure. In this work we applied the TL for the identification of crustacean Nephrops norvegicus irradiated at 0.5−1.5−3.0 kGy, comparing two different procedures for extracting minerals: by means of a density gradient or with acid hydrolysis. The identification of the irradiation treatment was always achieved with both procedures, without any false…

Food irradiationDose assessmentThermoluminescenceChemistryMinerals extractionRadiochemistryExtraction (chemistry)Analytical chemistryFood sampleThermoluminescenceSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Identification (information)Silicate mineralsAcid hydrolysisFood irradiationIrradiationFood ScienceFood Research International
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Freshman Engineering’ Reasoning Strategies When Answering FCI Questions: A Case Study

2020

Force Concept Inventory (FCI) is a questionnaire commonly used to assess students’ conceptual understanding of Newtonian Mechanics. We show that Cluster Analysis methods can be used to study student answers to FCI by finding their reasoning strategies on Newtonian Mechanics. Our analysis is performed to data obtained by a sample of freshman engineering students just at the beginning of their first General Physics course. The analysis takes into account the decomposition of the force concept into the conceptual dimensions suggested by test authors and successive researches. We identified groups of students with similar answering strategies, characterised by correct answers, as well as by non…

Force Concept InventorySettore FIS/08 - Didattica E Storia Della FisicaDecomposition (computer science)Mathematics educationNewtonian MechanicsCluster AnalysisSample (statistics)Force Concept InventoryAnalysis methodTest (assessment)
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Simplified methods for spatial sampling: application to first-phase data of Italian National Forest Inventory (INFC) in Sicily

2006

Abstract: Methodological approaches able to integrate data from sample plots with cartographic processes are widely applied. Based on mathematic-statistical techniques, the spatial analysis allows the exploration and spatialization of geographic data. Starting from the punctual information on land use types obtained from the dataset of the first phase of the ongoing new Italian NFI (INFC), a spatialization of land cover classes was carried out using the Inverse Distance Weighting (IDW) method. In order to validate the obtained results, an overlay with other vectorial land use data was carried out. In particular, the overlay compared data at different scales, evaluating differences in terms …

Forest inventoryLand useComputer scienceGeographic Information Systems - GISSample (statistics)ForestryLand coverClassification Corine Land Cover Geographic Information Systems - GIS Inverse Distance Weighting - IDW Land cover class Forest InventoryCorine Land CoverLand cover classClassificationSpatializationForest InventoryInverse Distance Weighting - IDWInverse distance weightinglcsh:SD1-669.5lcsh:ForestryCartographyForest@
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