2,626 research outputs found

    [Stammbuch Veit Elias Wick]

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    [STAMMBUCH VEIT ELIAS WICK] [Stammbuch Veit Elias Wick] ( - ) Cover ( - ) Beschreibung ([1]-[2]) Schleicher, Hieronymus; Blatt 1,1; S. Iv (Iv IIr) Unbekannt, S. VII (VIIr) Winckelmann, Johannes; Blatt 1,2; S. XVr (XVr) Schad, Daniel; Blatt 1,3; S. XXXIIr (XXXIIr) Horstius, Gregor; Blatt 1,4; S. XXXIXr (XXXIXr) Jungermann, Ludwig; Blatt 1,5 (0v 1r) Bachmann, Conrad; Blatt 3 (2v 3r) Breidenbach, Johannes; Blatt 4 (3v 4r) Mentzer, Balthasar; Blatt 21 (20v 21r) Gisenius, Johannes; Blatt 35 (34v 35r) Nebelkrae, Heinrich; Blatt 36 (35v 36r) Scheibler, Christoph; Blatt 37 (36v 37r) Stephani, Samuel; Blatt 48 (47v 48r) Steuber, Johannes; Blatt 50 (49v 50r) Feurborn, Justus; Blatt 51 (50v 51r) Oliva, Marcellus; Blatt 58 (57v 58r) Sitzlin, Nicodemus; Blatt 68 (67v 68r) Schad, Bernhard; Blatt 76 (75v 76r) Krafft, Hans Ulrich; Blatt 83 (82v 83r) Schleicher, Carl; Blatt 86 (85v 86r) Strelius, Johann Heinrich; Blatt 90 (89v 90r) Bergelas, Ernst; Blatt 95v (95v 96r) Poll, Nicolaus; Blatt 96 (95v 96r) Kyllinger, Jacob Werner; Blatt 97 (96v 97r) Brunschweig, Matthaeus; Blatt 97v (97v 98r) Hornmolt, Johann Philipp; Blatt 98 (97v 98r) Reichel, Heinrich; Blatt 101v (101v 102r) Frölich, Philipp Andreas; Blatt 102 (101v 102r) Forstenheuser, Johann Georg; Blatt 102v (102v 103r) Frölich, Carl; Blatt 103 (102v 103r) Ayrer, Johann Aegidius; Blatt 104 (103v 104r) Oertel, Andreas; Blatt 104v (104v 105r) Oertel, Georg Christoph; Blatt 106 (105v 106r) Peller, Tobias; Blatt 107 (106v 107r) Rabus, Leonhard; Blatt 129 (128v 129r) Neuner, Georg; Blatt 130 (129v 130r) Christiani, Alexander; Blatt 142 (141v 142r) Zachov, Joachim; Blatt 143v (143v 144r) Bergner, Georg Erhard; Blatt 144 (143v 144r) Guterlob, Johann Adolph; Blatt 147 (146v 147r) Bisterfeldt, Theodor; Blatt 171 (170v 171r) Scherer, Johann Michael; Blatt 172 (171v 172r) Colbius, Jodocus; Blatt 172v (172v 173r) Huber, Johann Martin; Blatt 173 (172v 173r) Fingerlin, Christoph; Blatt 175 (174v 175r) Karpffen, Gottfried von; Blatt 176 (175v 176r) Peper, Daniel; Blatt 176v (176v 177r) Reinmann, Joachim August; Blatt 177 (176v 177r) Register über alle in diesem Band befindliche Nahmen (195v 196r

    On the cost of delayed currency fixing announcements

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    In Foreign Exchange Markets vanilla and barrier options are traded frequently. The market standard is a cutoff time of 10:00 a.m. in New York for the strike of vanillas and a knock-out event based on a continuously observed barrier in the inter bank market. However, many clients, particularly from Italy, prefer the cutoff and knock-out event to be based on the fixing published by the European Central Bank on the Reuters Page ECB37. These barrier options are called discretely monitored barrier options. While these options can be priced in several models by various techniques, the ECB source of the fixing causes two problems. First of all, it is not tradable, and secondly it is published with a delay of about 10 - 20 minutes. We examine here the effect of these problems on the hedge of those options and consequently suggest a cost based on the additional uncertainty encountered. --exotic options,currency fixings

    Aura Satz in conversation with Christoph Cox, April/May 2017

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    A conversation between Aura Satz and Christoph Cox, exploring sirens and emergency signals, acoustic ecology, and economies of attention. Aura Satz is a film-maker and sound artist who has performed, exhibited and screened her work nationally and internationally, including at Tate Modern; Oberhausen Short Film Festival (Oberhausen); the Rotterdam Film Festival (Rotterdam); the New York Film Festival (NY); Gallery 44 (Toronto); InterCommunication Centre (Tokyo) and the Sydney Biennale. In 2012, she was shortlisted for the Samsung Art+ Award and the Jarman Award. She teaches at the Royal College of Art, London. She was in conversation with Christoph Cox, a philosopher, critic, and curator who teaches at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts. He is the author of Sonic Flux: Sound, Art, and Metaphysics (University of Chicago Press, forthcoming) and Nietzsche: Naturalism and Interpretation (University of California Press, 1999), and co-editor of Realism Materialism Art (Sternberg, 2015) and Audio Culture: Readings in Modern Music (Continuum, 2004/Bloomsbury, 2017). Cox is editor-at-large at Cabinet magazine. His writing has appeared in numerous journals including October, Artforum, Journal of the History of Philosophy, Journal of Visual Culture, The Review of Metaphysics. He has curated exhibitions at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, The Kitchen, CONTEXT Art Miami and other venues

    Private Equity und Familienunternehmen: eine Untersuchung unter besonderer Berücksichtigung deutscher Maschinen- und Anlagenbauunternehmen

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    Despite the common view that there is inherently a relationship of confliction, it is now impossible to imagine the financing of family-owned enterprises in Germany without the alternative method of Private Equity financing. Based on a survey on Private Equity in family owned companies specialising in the mechanical engineering sector, this working paper identifies that Private Equity in general is not as unwanted as once assumed. Overall more than 3/4 of the surveyed companies do not exclude investment capital. However, the study demonstrates that the time of large buy-outs is arguably up, and minority capital has now come into vogue. This working paper examines, from the viewpoint of the managing directors of the studied companies, the conceptions and beliefs held by such persons about Private Equity. Generally speaking, besides loss of control, managing directors primarily fear Private Equity because of exaggerated returns on investment at the expense of the long-term development of the company. On the other hand, this paper also highlights that managing directors expect that Private Equity can have a positive element as it can enable bank independence, especially at a time when it becomes increasingly difficult to maintain creditworthiness. Further, this paper analyses the relationship between the managing director of the family enterprise and the Private Equity investor. Because of the special situation of the managing director in a family owned company, trust between that person and the Private Equity investor is one of the most important factors. If there is a lack of trust the business relation is troubled from the start. --Private equity,buyout,family owned enterprises,minority capital,credit crisis,MBO,MBI,return on investments,LBO,leveraged finance,M&A

    Cycle time estimation using artificial neural networks

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    author: Christoph Gerhold, BScMasterarbeit Universität Innsbruck 201

    Cycle time estimation using artificial neural networks

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    author: Christoph Gerhold, BScMasterarbeit Universität Innsbruck 201

    Cycle time estimation using artificial neural networks

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    author: Christoph Gerhold, BScMasterarbeit Universität Innsbruck 201

    Mass spectrometry screening of mitochondrial DNA modifiers by using TALE-guided protein-biotinylation in human cells

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    Author Christoph Zinöcker, BScMasterarbeit Universität Linz 2023Arbeit gesperr

    Osmotic Stress Interferes with DNA Damage Response and H2AX Phosphorylation in Human Keratinocytes

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    The human skin and in particular its outermost layer, the epidermis, protects the body from potentially harmful substances, radiation as well as excessive water loss. However, the interference between the various stress responses of the epidermal keratinocytes, which often occur simultaneously, is largely unknown. The focus of this study was to investigate the interference between osmotic stress and DNA damage response. In addition to revealing the already well-described regulation of diverse gene sets, for example, cellular processes such as transcription, translation, and metabolic pathways (e.g., the KEGG citrate cycle and Reactome G2/M checkpoints), gene expression analysis of osmotically stressed keratinocytes revealed an influence on the transcription of genes also related to UV-induced DNA damage response. A gene network regulating the H2AX phosphorylation was identified to be regulated by osmotic stress. To analyze and test the interference between osmotic stress and DNA damage response, which can be triggered by UV stress on the one hand and oxidative stress on the other, in more detail, primary human keratinocytes were cultured under osmotic stress conditions and subsequently exposed to UV light and H2O2, respectively. γH2AX measurements revealed lower γH2AX levels in cells previously cultured under osmotic stress conditions

    Mass spectrometry screening of mitochondrial DNA modifiers by using TALE-guided protein-biotinylation in human cells

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    Author Christoph Zinöcker, BScMasterarbeit Universität Linz 2023Arbeit gesperr
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