1,664 research outputs found

    Staley, Roberta

    No full text
    currentAcademic Biography BA (University of Calgary) Diploma Journalism (Grant MacEwan) MA Liberal Studies (Simon Fraser University) Roberta Staley is an author, a magazine editor and writer, and a documentary filmmaker who has reported from such places as Afghanistan, Papua New Guinea, Kenya, El Salvador, Haiti, Colombia, Cambodia, South Africa, Israel, and New Zealand. She currently edits Enterprise magazine, and is a contributor to BC Business, the South China Morning Post Magazine, Ms. Magazine, Trek, the Canadian Chemical News, Corporate Knights, and Sculpture, among others. She is also a columnist for Just for Canadian Doctors/Dentists magazines. Roberta has published her first book, titled Voice of rebellion : how Mozhdah Jamalzadah brought hope to Afghanistan. It is a biography of Afghan-Canadian human rights activist Mozhdah Jamalzadah

    Comonotonic‐Based Time Series Clustering With Constraints: A Review and a Conceptual Framework

    No full text
    Time series clustering is a widely used unsupervised learning approach that identifies groups of similar time series to uncover hidden patterns in complex datasets. In recent years, this technique has gained traction in the analysis of geo-referenced time series, where spatial information must be incorporated into the dissimilarity measure to achieve meaningful results. This paper offers a thorough review of dissimilarity-based clustering methods with soft spatial constraints, i.e., approaches that integrate spatial context into the clustering process without enforcing strict spatial proximity within clusters. Our focus is on copula-based clustering techniques, which effectively capture comovements among time series without requiring explicit modeling of their marginal distributions. We first introduce a general framework for copula-based time series clustering and then explore how spatial constraints can be embedded into the clustering process. Finally, we propose a general framework, called Triple-C, which provides two comprehensive model architectures that address this challenge through either a dissimilarity fusion step or a copula aggregation approach

    Tail‐dependence clustering of time series with spatial constraints

    No full text
    We introduce a clustering method for time series based on tail dependence. Such a method also considers spatial constraints by means of a suitable procedure merging temporal and spatial dependence via extreme-value copulas. The cluster composition depends on the choice of the hyper-parameter α(0,1)\alpha \in (0, 1) used to calibrate the contribution of the spatial dependence to the overall dissimilarity. A novel heuristic approach to select α\alpha based on a suitable connectedness index associated to each cluster of the partition is proposed

    An approach to cluster time series extremes with spatial constraints

    No full text
    We introduce a clustering method for time series based on tail dependence. Such a method considers spatial constraints by means of a suitable dissimilarity index that merges temporal and spatial dependence via extreme-value copulas. The proposed approach is applied to the study of rainfall extremes

    “Il rinvio del giudice tributario alla Corte di Giustizia” ;

    No full text
    giornata di approfondimento e studio organizzato dal Consiglio dell’Ordine degli Avvocati di Benevento

    Postface. Pour une esthétique hétéronome et plurielle

    No full text
    By discussing the essays collected in the volume, Roberta Dreon's paper focuses on the reasons that justify the very idea of a pragmatist aesthetic. This is done by considering that the association between the traditional, contemplative, disinterested, and anti-instrumental conception of aesthetic experience seems to preclude the possibility of characterizing it in practical or pragmatic terms. The author argues that this is achieved on the one hand by a rethinking of the very notion of the "aesthetic" found in the philosophies of James and Dewey. This allows for supporting the idea that artistic practices are grounded in ordinary experience, and particularly in their aesthetic-qualitative aspects. On the other hand, the author argues that Dewey's aesthetics was convincingly pragmatist to the extent that it lucidly focused on the consequences of the autonomist conception of art and proposed a continuist, meliorist, and pluralist alternative capable of providing effective contributions to democratic and inclusive development

    È possibile una teoria della razionalità? Il contributo di Hilary Putnam

    No full text
    Secondo Putnam argomentare sulla natura della razionalità è l’attività per eccellenza dei filosofi. Sulla traccia di Putnam, l’autore esamina le principali teorie della razionalità presenti nel pensiero contemporaneo. Tali concezioni hanno il difetto di essere unilaterali, mentre la nozione di razionalità si rivela complessa, quindi una teoria della razionalità è possibile, benché non possa essere definitiva. In seguito l’autore cerca di individuare le caratteristiche fondamentali che competono alla razionalità, in opposizione tanto alla concezione positivista quanto al relativismo.According to Putnam, arguing about the nature of rationality is the typical task of philosophers. Following Putnam, in this paper the author examines the main theories of rationality to be found in contemporary thought. Whereas such views betray their own one-sidedness, the idea of rationality is very complicated. As a consequence, a theory of rationality is possible, but cannot be definitive. Furthermore, the author tries to highlight the chief features pertaining to rationality, opposing positivsm as well as relativism

    First person - Roberta Besio

    No full text
    First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Disease Models & Mechanisms (DMM), helping early-career researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Roberta Besio is first author on 'Cellular stress due to impairment of collagen prolyl hydroxylation complex is rescued by the chaperone 4-phenylbutyrate', published in DMM. Roberta is a postdoc in the lab of Antonella Fortino at University of Pavia, Italy, investigating collagen and genetic diseases of the connective tissue

    Family altruism and incentives

    No full text
    The author builds on the altruistic model of the family, to explore the strategic interaction between altruistic parents, and selfish children, when children's efforts are endogenous. If there is uncertainty about the amount of income the children will realize, and if parents have imperfect information, the children have an incentive to exert little effort, and to rely on their parent's altruistically motivated transfers. Because of this, parents face a tradeoff between the insurance that bequests implicitly provide their children, and the disincentive to work prompted by their altruism. The author shows that if parents can credibly commit to a pattern of transfers, they will choose not to compensate children in bad outcomes, as much as predicted by the standard (no uncertainty, no asymmetric information) dynastic model of the family. Alternatively, parents may choose to forgo any insurance, and offer a fixed level of bequest, to elicit greater effort from their children. The optimal transfers structure that the author derives, reconciles the predictions of the altruistic family model, with much of the existing evidence on inter-generational transfers, which suggests that parents compensate only partially, or not at all, for earnings differentials among their children. Moreover, the author shows that Ricardian equivalence holds in this setup, except when non-negativity constraints are binding.Economic Theory&Research,Environmental Economics&Policies,Health Economics&Finance,Educational Sciences,Safety Nets and Transfers
    corecore