323,404 research outputs found
Introduction to the history of the descendants of Abraham Felsenstein 1813-1885.
Early history of Felsenstein family; family of Abraham Felsenstein; family of Siegfried Felsenstein (father of author); courtship and marriage of Siegfried and Rosa Felsenstein; family move from Fuerth to Leipzig in 1909; medical study at universities of Leipzig, Munich, Heidelberg; outbreak of World War I; work as medical officer during war; imprisonment of brother during war; end of war; marriage; death of mother; emigration and death of father; lives of brothers; lives of uncles and their family members.The following individuals are mentioned: Felsenstein, Alfred; Felsenstein, Ernest S; Felsenstein, Eugen; Felsenstein, Felix; Felsenstein, Isidor; Felsenstein, Jacob; Felsenstein, Jitzchok; Felsenstein, Josef; Felsenstein, Ludwig; Felsenstein, Mortiz; Felsenstein, Robert; Felsenstein, Rosa; Felsenstein, Semy; Felsenstein, Siegfried; Felsenstein, Siegmund; Felsenstein, Sophie; Marx, George; Marx, Gertrude.Ernest S. Felsenstein was born in Fuerth and immigrated to the USA in 1937.Synopsis in fileManners and customsProfessions and occupations; fur tradersUniversity of HeidelbergUniversity of LeipzigUniversity of MunichFürth famil
Felsenstein Family Collection.
Family tree and other genealogical materials pertaining to the Felsenstein family.Anne Warner, 1995Folder 1: Two photocopies of a family tree, reaching back to 1854, 12 pages; [1935].Folder 2: Manuscript by Ernest S. Felsenstein "Introduction to the history of the descendants of Abraham Felsenstein 1813-1885" (1973, 70 typed pages, English).Folder 2: Manuscript was closed until 2016Finding aid available online.digitize
Foreign writers Maxime Felsenstein, Alexandre L. Breugnot, and Augusto Solari
North Atlantic Treaty Organization countries\u27 newspaper and magazine writers who are visiting here on their State and Defense Department-sponsored tour. Left to right is, Maxime Felsenstein of Colmar, France; Alexandre L. Breugnot of Algiers; and Augusto Solari of Milan, Italy. High economic and social levels of U. S. workers impress foreign writers.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/28680/thumbnail.jp
Decomposing the Dynamics of Regional Earnings Disparities in Israel
The literature on regional growth convergence and economic disparities has tended to confound four interwoven measurement phenomena. i) mean reversion (so-called beta convergence) where richer regions move towards the average from above and poorer regions from below. ii) diminishing inequality (so called sigma convergence) where the horizontal or spatial distribution of income becomes more equal. iii) mobility, where the rank of a region in the overall distribution of income changes either upwards or downwards. iv) leveling, where the richer regions become poorer (leveling-down) or the poorer regions become richer (leveling-up). We use a new statistical methodology, which treats these four phenomena on an integrated basis. The methodology is applied to Israeli regional earnings and house price data. We find that whereas earnings are strongly sigma divergent during the 1990s, this trend is offset when regional cost of living differences are taken into consideration. In this event, regional housing markets induce convergence in similar measure to the divergence induced by regional labor earnings.
Diffusive author(s), cohesive author: Analysis of S/N (1994)
This study indicates the ways in which various aspects of the author(s) are brought forth in Dumb type’s performance art, the S/N production. Previous research has suggested a non-hierarchical organization of Dumb type and the absence of a “privileged author” in Dumb type’s collaborative work, S/N. However, the results that I have investigated from member’s interviews on the creative process of S/N along with my analysis of the recorded images of S/N, indicate a different aspect of the author(s). First, S/N was created through, so to speak, the collective ideas of the members of Dumb type. Further, S/N has at least nine quotations from previous performances, installations, and printed writings, besides the work-in-progress technique. Explicating one of the “author functions” as given by Michel Foucault, each text has plural subjects of the author. However, it has been revealed from members’ interviews that Teiji Furuhashi had a decision-making role in selecting the members’ ideas within the performance. Since then, S/N has had plural subjects of creation; however, Furuhashi is one of the subjects of creation along with the “privileged author.” S/N has plural authors (diffusive authors) yet at the same time, it has a “privileged author,” Teiji Furuhashi (cohesive author)
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
Spatial macroeconomics
This special issue on spatial macroeconomics aims to bridge the divide between spatial and macroeconomics. Defined in the introduction, spatial macroeconomics explores the interactions between economic activity and geographical space. The issue comprises eleven papers authored by a total of 32 researchers. These papers were selected through a combination of solicited submissions and an open call for contributions. Four papers within this special issue delve into spatial macroeconomic theory. They cover topics such as agglomeration economies for innovation, a neoclassical spatial general equilibrium growth model, the spatial sorting of heterogeneous workers and the impact of national industrial policies in strategic industries on trade. Additionally, seven papers offer empirical studies that encompass a wide range of methodologies. These include general equilibrium models, input-output-based analyses and econometric models. The empirical research addresses various topics, such as the impact of trade on productivity, the trade-off between efficiency and equity, fiscal assistance, local and nationwide fiscal multipliers, forced human displacement during wars and the spatial diffusion effects of renewable energy resource deployment.</p
Dispelling the Myths Behind First-author Citation Counts
We conducted a full-scale evaluative citation analysis study of scholars in the XML research field to explore just how different from each other author rankings resulting from different citation counting methods actually are, and to demonstrate the capability of emerging data and tools on the Web in supporting more realistic citation counting methods. Our results contest some common arguments for the continued
use of first-author citation counts in the evaluation of scholars, such as high correlations between author rankings by first-author citation counts and other citation
counting methods, and high costs of using more realistic citation counting methods that are not well-supported by the ISI databases. It is argued that increasingly available digital full text research papers make it possible for citation analysis studies to go beyond what the ISI databases have directly supported and to employ more
sophisticated methods
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Can archives of audiovisual TV interviews be used to make authors more visible to students, and thereby reduce the learning gap between native and non-native language speakers in college classes? We examined students in a college course who learned about one scholar's ideas through watching an audiovisual TV interview (i.e., visible author format) and about another scholar's ideas through reading a formal text description (i.e., invisible author format). For the invisible author, native language speakers scored significantly higher than the non-native language speakers on a corresponding exam question (i.e., a cognitive measure), generated more words on the exam question (i.e., a motivational measure), and mentioned the author's name more often in answering the exam question (i.e., an affective measure). For the visible author, the groups did not differ on any of these measures. These findings provide evidence for the idea that making the author visible through audiovisual TV interviews can eliminate the learning gap between native and non-native language speakers. 3 Universities around the world serve students who are non-native speakers of th
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