1,358,122 research outputs found

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from Henryk Stenzel to Daniel W. Kempner telling him that he is willing to make a monthly contribution of $25 to help Fannie Kempner

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from Henryk B. Stenzel to D. W. Kempner discussing football tickets that he is sending Kempner as well as some personal news. A document explaining how tickets for games are allotted is attached

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from A. H. Blackshear, Jr. to H. B. Stenzel sending two tickets to A&M football

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from Daniel W. Kempner to Henry Stenzel informing that the Kempner family wants to give Leah a nice present, and congratulates both of them

    Anomalies in Auction Choice Behavior

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    Ivanova-Stenzel and Salmon (2004a) established some interesting yet puzzling results regarding bidders’ preferences between auction formats. The finding is that bidders strongly prefer the ascending to the first price sealed bid auction on a ceteris paribus basis but they are not willing to pay up to an entry price for entering into an ascending auction instead of a first price that would equalize the profits between the two. While it was found that risk aversion on the part of the bidders could resolve this anomaly the claim that risk aversion drives overbidding in first price auctions is somewhat controversial. In this study we examine two competing explanations for the observed behavior; loss aversion and “clock aversion”, i.e. a dislike for some aspect of the clock based bidding mechanism. We find that neither alternative explanation can account for bidders’ auction choice behavior leaving risk aversion as the only un-falsified hypothesis

    An inversion formula for the Segal–Bargmann transform on a symmetric space of non-compact type

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    AbstractWe prove analogs of the heat kernel transform inversion formulae of Golse, Leichtnam and the author [E. Leichtnam, F. Golse, M. Stenzel, Intrinsic microlocal analysis and inversion formulae for the heat equation on compact real-analytic Riemannian manifolds, Ann. Sci. École Norm. Sup. (4) 29 (6) (1996) 669–736. MR1422988 (97h:58153), Theorems 0.3, 0.4] in the setting of a Riemannian symmetric space of Helgason's non-compact type

    Book Review: The War in Nicaragua

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    Review essay by Colonel Joerg Stenzel, instructor, Department of Military Strategy, Planning, and Operations, US Army War College Colonel Joerg Stenzel (German Army), an instructor at the US Army War College, lends his expertise in strategy to this review of the most famous and successful filibuster featured in William Walker\u27s 1860 work, The War in Nicaragua. As Stenzel notes, the book is Walker\u27s personal description of his own war in Nicaragua that it is arguably biased and written in the third person in a style that differs greatly from his earlier editorials. Stenzel provides an overview of Walker\u27s life and contextualizes his actions in relationship to slavery, North-South rivalries, the Gold Rush, and Manifest Destiny, noting that A closer look at Walker and his actions shows that Central America, with its instabilities and turmoil, had and still has significant geopolitical relevance for the US government.https://press.armywarcollege.edu/parameters_bookshelf/1041/thumbnail.jp

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from D. W. Kempner to Henry B. Stenzel, asking him for help in securing tickets for the November Texas - A. & M. game

    Interview with Mary Stenzel-Poore, Ph.D.

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    Dr. Mary Stenzel-Poore is an outstanding figure in the field of neuroimmunology as well as within OHSU's history. Her lab's work is centered on neuroprotection and immunotherapy research that seeks to prevent the brain against injury in a stroke. Dr. Stenzel-Poore is Chief of Research Operations at the Knight Cancer Institute and Professor of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology. This interview traces her experiences at OHSU as a graduate student, a postdoc, a faculty member, department chair, and associate dean, in addition to her current roles. Dr. Stenzel-Poore discusses her unique perspective of the development of OHSU in tandem with her own growth within the institution. The interview captures a variety of topics, from personal experience to administrative insight, as well as commentary on themes such as women in health and science, and progress in times of financial unrest

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    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
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