1,834 research outputs found
sj-docx-1-psp-10.1177_01461672211059689 – Supplemental material for Reactive Risk-Taking: Anxiety Regulation Via Approach Motivation Increases Risk-Taking Behavior
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-psp-10.1177_01461672211059689 for Reactive Risk-Taking: Anxiety Regulation Via Approach Motivation Increases Risk-Taking Behavior by Josh Leota, Kyle Nash and Ian McGregor in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin</p
Introducing a spread into the Kyle model
The Kyle (1985) model is extended to take into account market maker competition and the spread. It is shown that with a spread the Kyle model has a Nash equilibrium also with two market makers, not only with three or more, as shown in earlier research. The spread is endogenized, and two testable predictions of the model are generated. The first is that the spread is increasing in the standard deviation of the fundamentals. The second is that it is independent of the standard deviation of noise trades.market microstructure; spread; market maker;
Introducing a spread into the Kyle model
The Kyle (1985) model is extended to take into account market maker competition and the spread. It is shown that with a spread the Kyle model has a Nash equilibrium also with two market makers, not only with three or more, as shown in earlier research. The spread is endogenized, and two testable predictions of the model are generated. The first is that the spread is increasing in the standard deviation of the fundamentals. The second is that it is independent of the standard deviation of noise trades
Kyle Haselden
Kyle Emerson Haselden, D.D., Class of 1934, was a distinguished Baptist minister, author and editor. He authored three books, including 'The Racial Problem in Christian Perspective' published in 1959. He was also the editor of 'The Christian Century.' He is a Charter Member of the Furman University Hall of Fame
First person – Kyle Wegner
First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Biology Open, helping early-career researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Kyle Wegner is first author on ‘Edar is a downstream target of beta-catenin and drives collagen accumulation in the mouse prostate’, published in BIO. Kyle is a PhD candidate in the lab of Chad M. Vezina at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, investigating principles of toxicology and urology to evaluate mechanisms of urinary dysfunction in aging men
sj-pdf-1-pss-10.1177_09567976221110136 – Supplemental material for A Self-Controlled Mind Is Reflected by Stable Mental Processing
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-pss-10.1177_09567976221110136 for A Self-Controlled Mind Is Reflected by Stable Mental Processing by Tobias Kleinert, Kyle Nash, Josh Leota, Thomas Koenig, Markus Heinrichs and Bastian Schiller in Psychological Science</p
005 - Kyle Singer
I highlight the importance of flaws, trauma, and repression by evoking concepts of “the unconscious” through surrealist methodologies. Considering all that is suppressed/repressed within my psyche to form the culturally accepted version of myself, and by examining the distance between my identity, and the repressed self. Engaging the viewers through superabundance, tackling issues of consumerism with construction that grapples with the excess of daily life. I question aesthetic value, moral responsibility, and political agency in my efforts to sublimate the abject. The abject touches on the fragility of our boundaries and the spatial distinction between our interiority and exteriority. My art stems from an insatiable appetite for new materials and compulsive ways I can explore new methods and processes. The impetus for my work is a cultural and political critique imbued with my own flavor of cynicism and disillusionment. I endeavor to destabilize perceptions by creating overwhelming masses of matter and meaning; meant to be all-consuming. This non-hierarchical kind of making causes a slow unraveling of my work allowing for an unpredictable composition and use of materials.The abject deals with a vast array of issues such as marginalized people, mortality, boundaries, and repulsion. It is usually used to describe the human reaction to horror and threatens to breakdown meaning by causing the loss of distinction between subject and object; between self and other. In an era of mass displacement due to natural and political disasters, this conceptually interest me and seem particularly relevant. The abject calls into question hierarchical values that allows for the dispersion and displacement of people: whether it be refugees, or low in-come families pushed out by gentrification. In the age of information, we have become incredibly efficient at codifying people and separating them from their personhood and seeing them only as replaceable objects with a set value; as a cluster of information to be used and exploited for profits. I plan to continue exploring the possibilities of media combination and new technologies. I am currently working with laser cutting, 3D printing, 3D scanning and the CNC machine. I am trying to explore new ways of misusing the machinery as a chance operation that allows the ebbs, flows, and limitations of the process itself to become a way of making. These new processes drastically change the way we think about construction and the possibilities of form. It blurs the boundaries between the hand-made and the mass-produced, dovetailing nicely with my ideas of consumerist cultural critique.College of Liberal Arts - Highest Achievement - Visual and Performing Arts
Gods, Spirits, People: Resource Collection
This collection of primary sources on Gods, Spirits, People in the early modern period accompanies the Gods, Spirits, People chapter. Curated Dr Andrew Redden and Dr Kyle Jackson, University of Liverpool.Collection of primary sourcesThis collection of primary sources on Gods, Spirits, People in the early modern period accompanies the Gods, Spirits, People chapter found at https://kora.kpu.ca/islandora/object/kora:579 and https://liverpooluniversitypress.manifoldapp.org/read/untitled-493687ea-d192-4880-b61e-19bd082917ba/section/0b9435bf-9209-45e7-bf35-81be5a2c3da
Linoleic acid causes greater weight gain than saturated fat without hypothalamic inflammation in the male mouse
A significant change in the Western diet, concurrent with the obesity epidemic, was a substitution of saturated fatty acids with polyunsaturated, specifically linoleic acid (LA). Despite increasing investigation on type as well as amount of fat, it is unclear which fatty acids are most obesogenic. The objective of this study was to determine the obesogenic potency of LA vs. saturated fatty acids and the involvement of hypothalamic inflammation. Forty-eight mice were divided into four groups: low-fat or three high-fat diets (HFDs, 45% kcals from fat) with LA comprising 1%, 15% and 22.5% of kilocalories, the balance being saturated fatty acids. Over 12 weeks, bodyweight, body composition, food intake, calorimetry, and glycemia assays were performed. Arcuate nucleus and blood were collected for mRNA and protein analysis. All HFD-fed mice were heavier and less glucose tolerant than control. The diet with 22.5% LA caused greater bodyweight gain, decreased activity, and insulin resistance compared to control and 1% LA. All HFDs elevated leptin and decreased ghrelin in plasma. Neuropeptides gene expression was higher in 22.5% HFD. The inflammatory gene Ikk was suppressed in 1% and 22.5% LA. No consistent pattern of inflammatory gene expression was observed, with suppression and augmentation of genes by one or all of the HFDs relative to control. These data indicate that, in male mice, LA induces obesity and insulin resistance and reduces activity more than saturated fat, supporting the hypothesis that increased LA intake may be a contributor to the obesity epidemic.Peer reviewe
Liquidity risks on power exchanges
Financial derivatives are important hedging tool for asset’s manager. Electricity is by its very nature the most volatile commodity, which creates big incentive to share the risk among the market participants through financial contracts. But, even if volume of derivatives contracts traded on Power Exchanges has been growing since the beginning of the restructuring of the sector, electricity markets continue to be considerably less liquid than other commodities. This paper tries to quantify the effect of this insufficient liquidity on power exchange, by introducing a pricing equilibrium model for power derivatives where agents can not hedge up to their desired level. Mathematically, the problem is a two stage stochastic Generalized Nash Equilibrium and its solution is not unique. Computing a large panel of solutions, we show how the risk premium and player’s profit are affected by the illiquidity.illiquidity, electricity, power exchange, artitrage, generalized Nash Equilibrium, equilibrium based model, coherent risk valuation
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