1,627 research outputs found
Università e città gateway. Il caso studio di Bari/University and gateway city. The case study of Bari
The paper starts from the marking of banch DATAR (2003) in which only two indicators Bari brought to a level of European competitiveness: population dynamics and size of the local university. The contribution by looking at the relationship between universities and cities to Bari reconnects to one of the themes of the author
Replication Data for: Group 2 | BARI (Harvard, Northeastern): Expanding Administrative Urban Knowledge with R and Big Data: “Boston Property Assessments FY2018”
I. INTRODUCTION, AND IMPACT OF FINDINGS FOR FUTURE IMPLEMENTATION
Outcome: A quantitative ""data-story"" can be fully expressed in qualitative form as a means of expressing the interconnected nature of variables that contribute to a networked understanding to map the constantly evolving modern Urban Landscape.
Enhanced allocative, fiscal, political, and social decision making lead to almost immediate positive externalities in terms of the connected urban landscape. Constant constraints of many different forms force decision-makers to make impulsive, rushed, and consequently uninformed decisions that are based merely on presuppositions. Constant construction of pathways between seamlessly unrelated sets of information derived from the existing, historic, and quantifiable data types will bring urban decision makers solution-based and preventative vs. reactive competitive advantage . These *NEW* ""Measures"" that we have calculated and defined only be achieved through the expansion of PUBLIC access to unit-level, which is one of the purposes of publishing reproducible findings for this dataset.II. PURPOSE AND GOAL IN TERMS OF THE CONTRIBUTION TO UNCOVER INSIGHTS THAT HIGHLIGHT THE HOLISTIC FUNCTIONS OF THE CITY AND IMPROVE KNOWLEDGE
* Incorporate big data into the study and management of the City of Boston to develop new contextually rich value-added variables through integration of additional administrative records, GIS/geographic data (shape-file/JSON), demographic data etc.
* Statistically analyze and explore output generated from the integrated data to uncover correlations that will provide increased confidence levels, understandability, and interpretability in relation to the economy, direct human behavior, government policies/decision making, and the environment.
* Use Practical Aggregate Measures to accelerate assimilation of, and to leverage all facets of corresponding applicable data
* Finally, meticulously record, interpolate, hypothesize, and upload findings for a continuation of development.--
Replication of Citation Metadata for "Group 2":
Dataset Persistent ID: doi:10.7910/DVN/PZCZSF
Title: Group 2
Author:
Boston Area Research Initiative, BARI (Northeastern University / Harvard University)
Charan Konanki, Sai (Northeastern University)
Shah, Chaitya (Northeastern University)
Jonah, Domenic (Northeastern University) - ORCID: 0000-0002-0212-158
Replication Data for: Group 2 | BARI (Harvard, Northeastern): Expanding Administrative Urban Knowledge with R and Big Data: “Boston Property Assessments FY2018”
I. INTRODUCTION, AND IMPACT OF FINDINGS FOR FUTURE IMPLEMENTATION
Outcome: A quantitative ""data-story"" can be fully expressed in qualitative form as a means of expressing the interconnected nature of variables that contribute to a networked understanding to map the constantly evolving modern Urban Landscape.
Enhanced allocative, fiscal, political, and social decision making lead to almost immediate positive externalities in terms of the connected urban landscape. Constant constraints of many different forms force decision-makers to make impulsive, rushed, and consequently uninformed decisions that are based merely on presuppositions. Constant construction of pathways between seamlessly unrelated sets of information derived from the existing, historic, and quantifiable data types will bring urban decision makers solution-based and preventative vs. reactive competitive advantage . These *NEW* ""Measures"" that we have calculated and defined only be achieved through the expansion of PUBLIC access to unit-level, which is one of the purposes of publishing reproducible findings for this dataset.II. PURPOSE AND GOAL IN TERMS OF THE CONTRIBUTION TO UNCOVER INSIGHTS THAT HIGHLIGHT THE HOLISTIC FUNCTIONS OF THE CITY AND IMPROVE KNOWLEDGE
* Incorporate big data into the study and management of the City of Boston to develop new contextually rich value-added variables through integration of additional administrative records, GIS/geographic data (shape-file/JSON), demographic data etc.
* Statistically analyze and explore output generated from the integrated data to uncover correlations that will provide increased confidence levels, understandability, and interpretability in relation to the economy, direct human behavior, government policies/decision making, and the environment.
* Use Practical Aggregate Measures to accelerate assimilation of, and to leverage all facets of corresponding applicable data
* Finally, meticulously record, interpolate, hypothesize, and upload findings for a continuation of development.--
Replication of Citation Metadata for "Group 2":
Dataset Persistent ID: doi:10.7910/DVN/PZCZSF
Title: Group 2
Author:
Boston Area Research Initiative, BARI (Northeastern University / Harvard University)
Charan Konanki, Sai (Northeastern University)
Shah, Chaitya (Northeastern University)
Jonah, Domenic (Northeastern University) - ORCID: 0000-0002-0212-158
Idea\u27s Futility Exception: On the Verge of Futility?
In March of 2023, the Supreme Court clarified the exhaustion requirement set out in the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), holding that plaintiffs do not need to exhaust administrative procedures if the type of relief that they are seeking is unavailable under the IDEA. In doing so, the Court left unanswered the question of whether the exhaustion requirement is susceptible to the futility exception—an exception that is currently recognized by eleven courts of appeals. This Comment provides an overview of the IDEA and its exhaustion requirement, including an analysis of exceptions to the requirement. I address the inconsistencies in the interpretation and application of these exceptions and the effect of the Court’s restraint in deciding the issue. I argue that the futility exception fits in line with Congressional intentions and heeds judicial precedent. The Court’s discretion furthers confusion in lower courts and impedes students’ paths to relief. Finally, I analyze whether the Court’s decision in Luna Perez could be utilized to expand the scope of exceptions to exhaustion, specifically exceptions for systemic violations
“Simon Says”: Young children’s understandings of norms modeled by peers
Social norms are mutually agreed upon standards of behavior that are expected among group members and guide essentially all aspects of human social behavior. Previous theory has suggested that children undergo a two-step sequence in normative development. First, children below age 3 have a dyadic, sympathetic orientation towards others. Then, at around age 3, children are believed to transition into a group-level, norm-based orientation. At this second stage, children interpret norms as group-level expectations (rather than solely as individual directives) and develop the ability to follow and enforce social norms. However, this two-step sequence in normative development was hypothesized based on the results of many studies but has not yet been directly tested. The current study addresses this gap by using preferences as a control to norms since both have a world-to-mind direction of fit (i.e., they both convey a desire for a certain state of the world) and therefore should appear the same to children who lack awareness of the difference in generalizability. Furthermore, we investigated whether children would prioritize complying with norms over complying with preferences when they are modeled by similar-age peers to further reveal whether children at the age of three begin to respect norms as such, rather than as commands given by adult authority figures. Among three-and-a-half-year-olds, we found that most children either did not conform to anything or conformed to everything, but among those that favored a testimony type, significantly more complied with norms than complied with preferences
Measurement of the time-dependent CP asymmetry in B0 -> J/ψ KS0 decays
This Letter reports a measurement of the CP violation observables SJ/ψK0S and CJ/ψK0S in the decay channel B0→J/ψK0S performed with 1.0 fb−1 of pp collisions at s√=7 TeV collected by the LHCb experiment. The fit to the data yields SJ/ψK0S=0.73±0.07(stat)±0.04(syst) and CJ/ψK0S=0.03±0.09(stat)±0.01(syst). Both values are consistent with the current world averages and within
expectations from the Standard Model
First observation of Bs → J/ψf0(980) decays
Using data collected with the LHCb detector in proton–proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 7 TeV, the hadronic decay is observed. This CP eigenstate mode could be used to measure mixing-induced CP violation in the system. Using a fit to the π+π− mass spectrum with interfering resonances gives . In the interval ±90 MeV around 980 MeV, corresponding to approximately two full f0 widths we also find , where in both cases the uncertainties are statistical and systematic, respectively
Measurement of the D+/- production asymmetry in 7 TeV pp collisions
The asymmetry in the production cross-section \sigma of D+/- mesons, A_P = (\sigma(D+) - \sigma(D-))/(\sigma(D+) + \sigma(D-)), is measured in bins of pseudorapidity \eta and transverse momentum p_T within the acceptance of the LHCb detector. The result is obtained with a sample of D+ -> K_S pi+ decays corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1.0 fb^-1, collected in pp collisions at a centre of mass energy of 7 TeV at the Large Hadron Collider. When integrated over the kinematic range 2.0 K_S pi+ decay is negligible. No significant dependence on \eta or p_T is observed
“Mezz’ora ancora ed ecco la Puglia benedetta!”. Viaggi di russi a Bari e dintorni tra la fine dell’Ottocento e l’inizio del Novecento
Russians’ journeys in and around Bari in the late 19th and early 20th century. In this article, the author delves into the subject of texts written by Russian travellers in Apulia in the 19th and 20th centuries. These are most often travel reports, especially pilgrimages, but this category also includes narrative texts in which a very precise image of the Apulian land emerges, not far from the image that Russians more generally have of Italy. In the first part of the article, the author illustrates the state of the art regarding the theme of Russian travels through Apulia, while in the second part he indicates the main characteristics of these texts in order to verify the existence of a literary category that we could define “Apulian text of Russian literature” (based on Vladimir Toporov’s famous definition of “Petersburg text”)
I capitoli di Isabella d’Aragona per gli ebrei di Bari
The privilege deed granted by Isabella of Aragon to the Jews of Bari
This paper is the edition of a notarial deed relating to an agreement entered into between the universitas of Bari and the local Jewish community. Among other inserts, the deed contains an unpublished privilege granted in 1522 to the Jews of Bari by its feudal lord, Isabella of Aragon, concerning the safety of the Jewish families, their general assets, and the methods of exercising the activity of moneylending. The author provides a close analysis of the manuscript and a biographical note on Isabella of Aragon which explains the context in which the deed was granted, comparing its articles with similar measures previously issued in favour of Jews living in the Kingdom of Naples.In questo lavoro si presenta l’edizione di un atto notarile relativo a un accordo stipulato tra l’Universitas di Bari e la locale comunità ebraica. L’atto contiene, tra gli inserti, un inedito privilegio concesso nel 1522 agli ebrei di Bari dalla feudataria della città Isabella d’Aragona e relativo alla sicurezza delle loro famiglie, dei loro beni e alle modalità di esercizio dell'attività di prestito. Dopo una attenta analisi del manoscritto, l’autore fornisce cenni biografici su Isabella d’Aragona e si sofferma ad analizzare gli articoli che compongono il privilegio, confrontandoli con provvedimenti simili già emessi in precedenza a favore degli ebrei del regno di Napoli.
The privilege deed granted by Isabella of Aragon to the Jews of Bari
This paper is the edition of a notarial deed relating to an agreement entered into between the universitas of Bari and the local Jewish community. Among other inserts, the deed contains an unpublished privilege granted in 1522 to the Jews of Bari by its feudal lord, Isabella of Aragon, concerning the safety of the Jewish families, their general assets, and the methods of exercising the activity of moneylending. The author provides a close analysis of the manuscript and a biographical note on Isabella of Aragon which explains the context in which the deed was granted, comparing its articles with similar measures previously issued in favour of Jews living in the Kingdom of Naples
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