144 results
Search Results
2. Discussion Papers.
- Subjects
RESEARCH - Abstract
Presents a list of discussion papers of London Business School's Centre for Economic Forecasting in London, England for 1997 and 1998.
- Published
- 1998
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3. Recent Research.
- Subjects
RESEARCH ,MONETARY unions - Abstract
Presents a summary of several research papers of London Business School's Centre for Economic Forecasting in London, England, including `Monetary Union: The Ins and Outs of Strategic Delegation,' by Paul Levine and Joseph Pearlman.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Discussion Papers.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC forecasting - Abstract
Introduces the discussion papers submitted to the Center for Economic Forecasting of the London Business School in London, England from 1996 to 1998. `Weak Exogeneity and Joint Normality,' by Caporale and Pittis; `International Economic Policy Coordination: A Brief Survey of the Literature,' by Caporale; `Causality and Forecasting in Incomplete Systems: Evaluating Potential Losses,' by Caporale and Pittis.
- Published
- 1998
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5. 'Geography matters': the role distance plays in reproducing educational inequality in East London.
- Author
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Hamnett, Chris and Butler, Tim
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL equalization ,EQUALITY & society ,SECONDARY education ,EDUCATIONAL resources ,GEOGRAPHICAL research - Abstract
There is a longstanding literature on the unequal geographical distribution of welfare. In this paper we argue that increasingly geography is becoming the basis for rationing access to some forms of welfare. Focusing on access to secondary schools in East London, England, where the demand for places at the more popular schools generally far exceeds the number of places available, we show how distance from school has now become the primary means of allocating places. Rather than educational resources attempting to compensate for geographical disadvantage, geography (in the form of distance from school) has become the rationale by which those living in advantaged areas continue to have privileged access to educational resources. Whereas previously the role of the state was to compensate for the unfairness of such geographical inequalities, geography (via distance to school) is now used to justify the unequal allocation of scarce school places. The paper demonstrates that not only does the near universal adoption of distance-based allocation policies in East London lead to the reproduction of social advantage and disadvantage, but also it is creating new hierarchies of school popularity and more important unpopularity which are not always clearly related to issues of school attainment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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6. Design capital: practice and situated learning in London design agencies.
- Author
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Sunley, Peter, Pinch, Steven, and Reimer, Suzanne
- Subjects
DESIGN ,CONSULTANTS ,DESIGNERS ,BUSINESS enterprises ,TACIT knowledge ,LEARNING - Abstract
This paper considers the relations between practice, knowledge and context in design consultancies. It uses a case study of design consultancies in London based on in-depth interviews with designers working in design agencies in the city. The paper argues that the relations between design knowledge and context have been conceived in two ways. The first account emphasises the sharing of tacit knowledge in a design community marked by relatively strong and durable social ties. The second approach argues instead that design is a creative collectivity with much weaker social ties and a broader range of types of knowledge. It is argued that while both of these approaches illuminate parts of situated learning and context in design consultancies, these are actually more complex and mixed than either account recognises. Both accounts overlook the crucial importance of what are termed medium-strength ties between designers and their clients that combine market contracts with personal regard and friendship. The paper concludes by suggesting that such medium ties are increasingly important in design-based innovation systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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7. Covered Interest Parity: A High-frequency, High-quality Data Study.
- Author
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Taylor, Mark P.
- Subjects
ASSETS (Accounting) ,EFFICIENT market theory ,FOREIGN exchange market ,PURCHASING power parity - Abstract
The covered interest parity theorem states that the covered interest differential between two identical assets denominated in different currencies should be zero. Profitable deviations from the parity represent riskless arbitrage opportunities and so indicate market inefficiency. Previous empirical work on this topic has used data that have not been contemporaneously sampled, and does not therefore constitute a proper test of covered interest parity (since those prices never appeared in the market simultaneously). In this paper the covered interest parity condition is tested using high-frequency, contemporaneously sampled data gathered in the London foreign exchange market. The results overwhelmingly support the market efficiency hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1987
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8. The power of speech: orality, oaths and evidence in the British Atlantic world, 1650-1800.
- Author
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Ogborn, Miles
- Subjects
SPEECH ,HISTORICAL geographic information systems ,IMPERIALISM ,OATHS ,LEGAL evidence - Abstract
Compared with the attention paid to written texts, geographers and others have neglected the spoken word in its many forms, particularly in investigations of the power relations of colonialism and imperialism. This paper argues that considering orality as a series of embodied, situated enunciations, declarations and conversations can provide a basis for historical geographies of the spoken word that engage with representation as practice. Using evidence from the domain of law within the context of Britain's plantation colonies in the Caribbean - particularly Barbados and Jamaica - this paper argues for the significance of the oral culture of empire. This was evident in the ways in which the power of speech - through the rules on oath-taking and evidence-giving - was part of the making of imperial and colonial identities and relationships dividing white and non-white, free and unfree, both within the spaces of plantation societies and in the broader British Atlantic world. The fragility of the identities and relationships made through the spoken word is also demonstrated through a series of moments when changes in the regulation of speech in courts of law were suggested and contested. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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9. Knowledge networks of ‘buzz’ in London's advertising industry: a social network analysis approach.
- Author
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Mould, Oli and Joel, Sian
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ADVERTISING ,SOCIAL groups ,SOCIAL networks - Abstract
There has been a plethora of literature in the last few years attempting to conceptualise how the (international) firm operates in the notion of what has been termed ‘buzz’. In this paper, we aim to highlight how the use of social network analysis (SNA) can provide a nuanced view of ‘buzz’, through a focus on London's advertising industry. In this case study, we use the data on interlocking board members of the advertising companies in London, and visualise their network maps through sociograms. This method of analysis, under-utilised in the economic geography literature, highlights the intensity of connections between companies and particular individuals. It shows the paths of knowledge flow within the industry, and can highlight the key ‘gatekeepers’ within what is already known to be a highly networked and socialised industry. This is a specific conceptualisation of interaction and provides a quantitative conception of what has hitherto been largely evaluated through qualitative means. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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10. Global music city: knowledge and geographical proximity in London's recorded music industry.
- Author
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Watson, Allan
- Subjects
MUSIC industry ,SOUND recording industry ,ECONOMIC geography ,MASS media ,MUSIC & geography ,INTELLECT ,THEORY of knowledge - Abstract
Drawing from debates in economic geography on relational and organisational proximity as a substitute for geographical proximity, the paper explores characteristics of knowledge transfer in London's recorded music industry through an examination of organisational connections on local and global scales. The paper demonstrates that knowledge transfer within the industry occurs simultaneously across multiple geographical scales, with certain organisational connections facilitating the transfer of tacit knowledge across organisational boundaries. However, the paper argues that these connections do not offer the same scope for trust as is afforded by frequent face-to-face contact and therefore offer only a partial substitute for geographical proximity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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11. Discourses of regeneration in early twentieth-century Britain: from Bedlam to the Imperial War Museum.
- Author
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Cooke, Steven and Jenkins, Lloyd
- Subjects
HISTORIC buildings ,HOSPITALS ,MUSEUMS - Abstract
This paper examines the building that presently houses the Imperial War Museum, investigating the transformation of the archetypal ‘mad space’ of the Bethlem Royal Hospital into what has been described as the ‘biggest boy’s bedroom in London’. Following recent concerns in human geography with Imperial cities, it highlights the differing ways in which this transformation embodies a number of themes of degeneration and regeneration in early twentieth-century Britain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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12. The Workings of the London Office Market.
- Author
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Hendershott, Patric H., Lizieri, Colin M., and Matysiak, George A.
- Subjects
LABOR market ,EMPLOYMENT ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,SUPPLY & demand ,INTEREST rates ,CONSTRUCTION industry ,RENT (Economic theory) - Abstract
This paper presents estimates of an equilibrium-based dynamic adjustment model of the office market, using supply and demand relationships to link construction, absorption, vacancies and rents to employment growth and real interest rates. The model is estimated using data from the City of London office market over 1977-1996. The model tracks the market dynamically, and the severe 1985-1996 cycle is shown to be related to the cycle in employment growth and the movement of real interest rates. The latter directly affects both construction and real rent levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
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13. Weak-form Efficiency in the Nineteenth Century: A Study of Daily Prices in the London Market for 3 per cent Consuls, 1821-1860.
- Author
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Brown, Robert L. and Easton, Stephen A.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC indicators ,ECONOMIC development ,CAPITAL market ,STOCK exchanges ,SECURITIES trading ,FINANCIAL markets - Abstract
Although a number of studies published in the economic history literature discuss the development, organization and function of the London Stock Exchange, there is little quantitative evidence on how well this market functioned. This is a significant omission, since the finance literature provides a well developed set of criteria against which the performance of capital markets may be judged. In particular, the finance literature emphasizes the importance of the efficient impounding of information into market prices. So-called 'weak-form efficiency' is the least demanding version and is therefore the logical starting point. This paper reports the results of weak-form efficiency tests of the London market for 3 per cent Consols from 1821 to 1860. The tests are based on over 10,000 daily price changes, The evidence presented here is similar to that found in contemporary markets, suggesting that the market for 3 per cent Consols was efficient in the weak-form sense. From a finance perspective, this market is of interest, given the institutional differences between it and contemporary markets. From an economic history perspective, this security is of special interest, given its frequent use in economic history analyses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
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14. Public (open) access policy.
- Author
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Schwartzkroin, Philip A. and Shorvon, Simon D.
- Subjects
ACCESS to information ,MEDICAL research ,INFORMATION policy - Abstract
The article offers information on the mandatory Public Access Policies introduced by the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the British agency Wellcome Trust for all research papers. The NIH policy requires all investigators funded by the National Library of Medicine's PubMed Central (PMC) to submit an electronic version of their final manuscripts. The Wellcome Trust policy mandates electronic copies of any research papers accepted for publication to be made available through PMC.
- Published
- 2008
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15. Architecture and crisis: re-inventing the icon, re-imag(in)ing London and re-branding the City.
- Author
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Kaika, Maria
- Subjects
ARCHITECTURE ,BUILDING repair ,CRISES - Abstract
London’s skyline is changing significantly with a new generation of iconic buildings, of which the Swiss-Re Tower is the most well known. Despite the fact that many of these buildings are located in the City (London’s financial heart), little attention has been paid to the relationship between the transformation of London’s skyline and the recent institutional reconfiguration of the Corporation of London, the authority that runs the City. Focusing empirically on the City’s iconic architecture, and foregrounding a period of institutional crisis for the Corporation (1970–1990), the paper: first, departs from the standard analysis of iconic buildings as signifiers of economic success, and sketches a framework for examining the role of iconic architecture during moments of crisis and, second, offers a new approach to understanding the City’s iconic commissions: not as signifiers of London’s international economic power, but as symptoms of changes in the institutions and élites that promote the City’s new urbanity. The article details how the internationalisation of London’s economy after the 1970s challenged the Corporation’s insular character. The Corporation’s resistance to the ‘invasion’ of foreign companies, people and architectural styles in the City in the midst of a rapid expansion of London’s economy and growing inter-urban competition, led to open threats from the government for the abolition of the Corporation. Responding to these threats, the Corporation reinvented itself with an institutional reform and re-branded its identity in the early 2000s as an outward-looking institution, open to London’s new transnational élites. The 2002 Unitary Development Plan that introduced a new architectural language in the City corresponds to the same need to construct a new imaginary identity for a re-branded Corporation. Towering over the City’s traditional signifiers, the City’s new buildings constitute an ode to the Corporation’s new identity and a visual coup d’état against its time-old heritage-oriented planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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16. A new deal for lone parents? Training lone parents for work in West London.
- Author
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Smith, Fiona, Barker, John, Wainwright, Emma, Marandet, Elodie, and Buckingham, Sue
- Subjects
SINGLE mothers ,EMPLOYEE training ,SINGLE parents ,LABOR supply ,OCCUPATIONAL training ,LABOR market ,CHILD care ,TRAINING - Abstract
In this paper we explore the impacts of the training programmes offered to lone mothers with young children on the Government's ‘New Deal for Lone Parents’ in one local labour market: West London. Our research suggests that regulatory workfare policies are (re)producing and reinforcing gendered inequalities in the labour market by encouraging lone mothers to undertake training in feminised occupational areas such as childcare. We will argue that in a local economy such as West London where more childcare workers are desperately needed to enable other more highly skilled workers to take up employment opportunities, such training programmes may be doing little more than exacerbating the already gendered and class-based polarisation of the labour market – embedding low-skilled, poorly qualified lone mothers into low-paid jobs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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17. Gentrification as global habitat: a process of class formation or corporate creation?
- Author
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Davidson, Mark
- Subjects
HABITATS ,GENTRIFICATION ,GLOBALIZATION ,SOCIAL structure ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The relationship between gentrification and globalisation has recently become a significant concern for gentrification scholars. This has involved developing an understanding of how gentrification has become a place-based strategy of class (re)formation during an era in which globalisation has changed sociological structures and challenged previously established indicators of social distinction. This paper offers an alternative reading of the relationship between gentrification and globalisation through examining the results of a mixed method research project which looked at new-build gentrification along the River Thames, London, UK. This research finds gentrification not to be distinguished by the gentrifer-performed practice of habitus within a ‘global context’. Rather, the responsibility for gentrification, and the relationship between globalisation and gentrification, is found to originate with capital actors working within the context of a neoliberal global city. In order to critically conceptualise this form of gentrification, and understand the role of globalisation within the process, the urban theory of Lefebvre is drawn upon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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18. Super-gentrification in Barnsbury, London: globalization and gentrifying global elites at the neighbourhood level.
- Author
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Butler, Tim and Lees, Loretta
- Subjects
GENTRIFICATION ,GLOBALIZATION ,SOCIAL classes ,CITIES & towns - Abstract
In this paper we argue that a process of super-gentrification, similar to that first identified by Lees (2003 Urban Studies 40 2487–509) in Brooklyn Heights, New York City, is occurring in the already gentrified, inner London neighbourhood of Barnsbury. A new group of super wealthy professionals working in the City of London is slowly imposing its mark on this inner London housing market in a way that differentiates it and them both from traditional gentrifiers and from the traditional urban upper classes. We suggest that there is a close interaction between work in the newly globalizing industries of the financial services economy, elite forms of education, particularly Oxbridge, and residence in Barnsbury which is very different from other areas of gentrified inner London. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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19. Population structure and location choice: A study of London and South East England.
- Author
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Andrew, Mark and Meen, Geoffrey
- Subjects
POPULATION ,SEGREGATION ,SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
Many governments have introduced policies aimed at improving social mix, particularly in urban areas. In this article we develop a model of moving and location decisions, which demonstrates how cumulative processes of growth, decline and segregation occur that conflict with the aims of policies aimed at improving social mix. A nested multinomial logit model is estimated, using a micro data set for London and South East England to illustrate the likely outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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20. Rational Speculative Bubbles: An Empirical Investigation of the London Stock Exchange.
- Author
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Brooks, Chris and Katsaris, Apostolos
- Subjects
STOCK exchanges ,STOCK prices ,DIVIDENDS - Abstract
Abstract In recent years, a sharp divergence of London Stock Exchange equity prices from dividends has been noted. In this paper, we examine whether this divergence can be explained by reference to the existence of a speculative bubble. Three different empirical methodologies are used: variance bounds tests, bubble specification tests, and cointegration tests based on both ex post and ex ante data. We find that, stock prices diverged significantly from their fundamental values during the late 1990's, and that this divergence has all the characteristics of a bubble. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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21. Locating art worlds: London and the making of Young British art.
- Author
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While, Aidan
- Subjects
ART movements ,ART exhibitions ,21ST century art - Abstract
The international prominence of Young British art (YBa) in the 1990s gave London a contemporary art movement to match its role as one of the world's key centres of art exchange. Examining the rise of YBa in retrospect, this paper is concerned with the difference place makes in helping to shape the (hi)story of art. It is argued that London's established role as an international art centre was crucial in providing the density of networks, associations and facilities necessary to sustain an international art movement. At the same time, YBa's success can be linked to London's changing status as a cultural capital, as well as profound changes in the business of contemporary art. Attention is drawn to the ways in which the international art world is dominated by networks formed within and across a limited number of world art cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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22. Globalization, polarization and the informal sector: the case of paid domestic workers in London.
- Author
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Cox, Rosie and Watt, Paul
- Subjects
GLOBALIZATION ,HOUSEHOLD employees - Abstract
Considerable debate has occurred over whether ‘global cities’ are witnessing polarization of their labour forces into highly paid professionals and low paid personal service workers. This paper offers evidence on paid domestic labour in London, some of which occurs in the informal sector, and considers its potential significance for the polarization debate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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23. Public environmental information: understanding requirements and patterns of likely public use.
- Author
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Haklay, Mordechai
- Subjects
TELECOMMUNICATION ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection - Abstract
Public access to environmental information received much attention in the last decade. Recent developments promote access to this information through public telecommunication networks. This paper describes a Web-based survey that explored the requirements and needs of likely users of public environmental information systems for London: educated middle-class members of the public, with high interest in environmental issues and computer literacy. The survey demonstrated current information consumption patterns and the reasons to gather and use such information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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24. Growing up with rivers? Rivers in London children’s worlds.
- Author
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Tapsell, Susan, Tunstall, Sylvia, House, Margaret, Whomsley, John, and Macnaghten, Phillip
- Subjects
RIVERS ,SCHOOLS ,CHILDREN - Abstract
This paper presents the results from exploratory research which set out to investigate London children's perceptions and uses of river environments. Mainly qualitative, multi-method research was carried out in four primary schools with children aged 9-11, focusing on two rivers near to the schools. Rivers were found to be marginal to the children's everyday lives and outdoor play, being perceived as polluted, neglected, and initially dangerous places. However, when experienced on visits observed as part of the research, some of these perceptions changed and rivers were also found to afford many special activities and experiences for the children. The visits were generally seen to have a positive effect on the children's perceptions of rivers, at least in the short term. This suggests that, if managed appropriately, rivers could be potentially rewarding play areas for children. Moreover, children could provide valuable input for river managers in suggesting ways of improving suitable local rivers for increased recreational uses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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25. Patient expectations and health-related quality of life.
- Author
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Staniszewska, Sophie
- Subjects
QUALITY of life ,PATIENTS - Abstract
Objective The measurement of health-related quality of life (HRQL) has become increasingly common in health services research. Whilst useful, its focus on behaviour, capacities and activities means that it remains relatively specific. This paper explores the possibility of extending the evaluation of health by considering the concept of patients’ expectations. Design In-depth and semi-structured interviews were used to explore the concept of expectations from the patients’ perspective. Patients’ expectations were then used in the construction of a two-part questionnaire. Settings and participants Expectations were explored with a group of 33 cardiac patients. The resulting questionnaire was given to 400 cardiac patients in a large teaching hospital in London. Results Patients identified a range of expectations which related to their health and seemed to represent the desired results of their hospital stay. Comparison of the content of patient expectations with a commonly used generic measure of HRQL, the Short-Form 36 (SF-36), found some overlap but indicated that patients seemed to adopt a broader approach to their health. Expectations that patients identified were used to construct two scales to measure expectations and their evaluation. The internal consistency of these scales was 0.82 and 0.88, respectively. Conclusion The study indicates the potential complexity of the concept of expectations and the need for further exploration. It also demonstrates the feasibility of constructing standardized scales to measure patient expectations. Whilst conceptually different from HRQL such standardized expectations scales could provide a useful adjunct to HRQL measurement and provide a meaningful context for the interpretation of HRQL data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
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26. Employment changes in Central London in the 1980s.
- Author
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Frost, M.E. and Spence, N.A.
- Subjects
- *
LABOR market , *EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
In the second of two papers (Paper I, Geogrl J. 157(1)) the motive forces driving current development of the Central London economy are set against possible constraints on its ability to grow in the future. It is concluded that, while growth in finance and business service activity which has been the prime dynamic force within the local economy over the recent past is likely to continue, the rate of this growth depends crucially on London maintaining its position as an international financial centre in the face of competition from other European cities. Labour shortages arising from the demographic structure of its population are identified as a source of difficulty but one that can be moderated by the smooth timing of growth and an effective rail system. It is clear, however, that investment in new rail facilities will be hampered if their financing is related too closely to current revenues which are exposed to short-run variations in property values rather than to the pursuit of a longer term strategy for the development of Central London. It is argued that such a long-term strategy might include the encouragement of less essential employment to move away from Central London in order to allow greater investment in road, rail and air connections outside the central area to improve London's international accessibility. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
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27. 32nd World Congress on Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology, 16-18 September 2022, London and virtual: presentations and awards.
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FETAL surgery ,UTERINE rupture ,AWARD presentations ,FETOFETAL transfusion ,GYNECOLOGY ,OBSTETRICS ,ULTRASONIC imaging ,AWARDS - Abstract
The Ian Donald Gold Medal is awarded once a year to an individual who has made a significant scientific contribution to the advancement of diagnostic ultrasound in obstetrics and gynecology and who has changed the way in which ultrasound is practiced, through research or innovation. Some 30 years ago, Eduard was resident in obstetrics and gynecology at Hospital Clinic in Barcelona. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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28. Medicines regulation and clinical pharmacology.
- Author
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Baber, N.S., Ritter, J.M., and Aronson, J.K.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,CLINICAL pharmacology ,DRUG development ,ANTIPSYCHOTIC agents - Abstract
Highlights the papers presented at the Medicines Regulation and Clinical Pharmacology in the 21st Century symposium, held in London, England. Formation and work of the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency and the National Institute for Clinical Excellence; Important aspects of practical drug development; Example of typical and atypical antipsychotic drugs.
- Published
- 2004
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29. Trading options before Black-Scholes: a study of the market in late seventeenth-century London.
- Author
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MURPHY, ANNE L.
- Subjects
STOCK exchanges ,STOCK options ,RISK aversion - Abstract
This article uses data from the ledgers of the financial broker Charles Blunt to explore the market in equity options that emerged in London during the stock market boom of the early 1690s. Blunt's ledgers provide a unique opportunity to observe the workings of an early modern derivatives market. They reveal a broadly based and highly active trade in options. The market functioned well, determined value using agreed criteria, and was utilized by a diverse range of individuals to facilitate both risk-seeking and risk-averse investment strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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30. Was the Russo-Japanese War World War Zero?
- Author
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STEINBERG, JOHN W.
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *RUSSO-Japanese War, 1904-1905 , *WAR - Abstract
Information about several papers discussed at the conference titled "Re-imagining Culture in the Russo-Japanese War" held in London, England in March 2004 is presented. Topics focus on the impact of the Russo-Japanese war on society. The conference featured several writers including Naoko Shimazu, Rosamund Bartlett, and David Crowley.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Patterns and determinants of manufacturing plant location in interwar London.
- Author
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Scott, Peter and Walsh, Peter
- Subjects
FACTORIES ,EMPLOYMENT ,MANUFACTURED products - Abstract
This article examines the location patterns of manufacturing plants in Greater London, England. The London conurbation represented the most dynamic growth area of interwar Britain, accounting for almost 35 per cent of national population growth compared with only 17.5 percent during the decade to 1911. This was accompanied by a relative employment shift in favor of manufacturing, which increased its share of total employment in London and Middlesex from 30.2 to 31.4 percent between 1911 and 1931, while the national ratio had declined from 33.5 to 32.5 percent. Meanwhile, London's cultural and social facilities also proved important in attracting particular types of valuable labor, such as management, technical, and scientific staff. This was especially important with regard to overseas-based multinationals, whose staff showed a strong preference for London both on account of its general cosmopolitan culture and because of the presence of expatriate communities. The capital's highly developed business and financial services sector also constituted a strong attraction to firms, allowing them to outsource some activities that might be done internally and facilitating access to services generally provided externally, such as advertising and banking.
- Published
- 2004
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32. British Society for Matrix Biology Meeting, London, 3-4 April 2000.
- Subjects
- *
SCIENCE associations , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *MOLECULAR biology - Abstract
Highlights papers presented at the April 2000 meeting of the British Society for Matrix Biology (BSMB), held in London, England. Conference's focus on the theme 'Molecular Cell Biology of the Synovial Joint'; Stages of mammalian tendon development; Work on the changes in cell populations and the extracellular matrix of patients with chronic tendon pathology.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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33. Cost Efficiency Benchmarking for Operational Units with Multiple Cost Drivers.
- Author
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Troutt, Marvin D., Gribbin, Donald W., Shanker, Murali, and Aimao Zhang
- Subjects
COST accounting ,COST effectiveness ,BENCHMARKING (Management) ,INDUSTRIAL management - Abstract
We consider the activity-based costing situation, in which for each of several comparable operational units, multiple cost drivers generate a single cost pool. Our study focuses on published data from a set of property tax collection offices, called rates departments, for the London metropolitan area. We define what may be called benchmark or most efficient costs per unit of driver. A principle of maximum performance efficiency is proposed, and an approach to estimating the benchmark unit costs is derived from this principle. A validation approach for this estimation method is developed in terms of what we call normal-like-or-better performance effectiveness. Application to longitudinal data on a single unit is briefly discussed. We also consider some implications for the more routine case when costs are disaggregated to subpools associated with individual cost drivers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Wretched, hatless and miserably clad: women and the inebriate reformatories from 1900-1913.
- Author
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Hunt, G., Mellor, J., and Turner, J.
- Subjects
- *
PEOPLE with alcoholism , *SOCIAL legislation , *ALCOHOLISM treatment , *REFORMATORIES for women - Abstract
The Inebriate Act passed in 1898 enabled local authorities to set up State and Certified Reformatories to treat habitual drunkards over a two to three year period as an alternative to a short prison sentence. A large proportion of offenders sentenced under this Act were women. This development has been a somewhat neglected area of social policy, perhaps because it was a short-lived experiment and few local authorities chose to take up the option; although institutional treatment was enthusiastically supported by members of the Society for the Study of Inebriety who campaigned tirelessly to extend the powers of the Act. This legislation is an interesting subject both because of the regimes that were developed to treat inebriety and also because it was one of the few attempts that were actually put into practice to impose an institutional solution on the problem of the 'undeserving' poor. This paper looks at the methods of treatment to be found in the reformatories and the way in which the campaign was proselytised in the Society's journal. We examine the records of one female reformatory run by the London County Council in an attempt to illustrate the characteristics and social backgrounds of women found in the reformatories. Finally, we make some tentative suggestions which might account for the fact that, although more men than women were prosecuted under the Act, the institutional solution was used predominantly for women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The Stock Exchange Revisited: A New Look at the Market in Securities in London in the Eighteenth Century.
- Author
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Cope, S.R.
- Subjects
STOCK exchanges ,FINANCIAL markets ,PUBLIC debts ,STOCKS (Finance) ,CAPITAL ,BROKERS - Abstract
The purpose of the present paper is to review, and sometimes to reinterpret, material used by others, to uncover fresh facts and to indicate some of the gaps that future students might fill. It thus takes the form not of a comprehensive description, but of comments on some key features of the market during its formative period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. INTERIOR INSIGHTS: Design, ethnography and the home, Royal College of Art, London, 24–25 November 2005.
- Author
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Melhuish, Clare
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,ARCHITECTURE - Abstract
The article highlights the Interior Insights conference, organized by Alison Clarke and Inge Daniels of the Center for the Study of the Domestic Interior, Arts, and Humanities Research Council, held at Royal College of Art in London, England on November 24-25, 2005. The event convened people from a wide range of disciplines from the worlds of architecture and design and anthropology.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. ELITE CULTURES.
- Author
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Bof, Adriane and Peters, Pet
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ANTHROPOLOGY -- Congresses - Abstract
Reports on the annual conference entitled `Elite Cultures: Anthropological Perspectives' held in London, England on March 29-31, 2000. Topics discussed; Participants.
- Published
- 2000
38. Meeting Report – Imaging Membrane Dynamics, 14–17 September, Royal Holloway – University of London, UK.
- Author
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Stephens, David J and Duden, Rainer
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *CYTOLOGY - Abstract
Information about several papers discussed at a meeting entitled "Imaging Membrane Dynamics" held at Royal Holloway in London, England on September 14 to 17, 2006 is presented. The meeting was collaborated by the British Society for Cell Biology and Royal Microscopical Society and it was attended by 130 participants. Some of the speakers of the event includes Catherine Rabouille, Ben Glick, David Owen, and Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The Medication Adherence Report Scale: A measurement tool for eliciting patients' reports of nonadherence.
- Author
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Chan, Amy Hai Yan, Horne, Rob, Hankins, Matthew, and Chisari, Claudia
- Subjects
PATIENT compliance ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,SCALING (Social sciences) ,DASH diet ,PRINCIPAL components analysis ,SELF medication ,BLOOD pressure ,STATISTICAL reliability - Abstract
Aims: This study aimed to establish the psychometric properties of a questionnaire measure of patients' adherence to medications to elicit patients' report of medication use in a variety of clinical samples. The reliability and validity were assessed in patients with hypertension. Additional analyses were performed on other patient groups. Methods: Using a cross‐sectional study design, a 10‐item version of the Medication Adherence Report Scale (©Professor Rob Horne) was piloted in two samples of patients receiving treatment for hypertension (n = 50 + 178), asthma (n = 100) or diabetes (n = 100) at hospital outpatient or community clinics in London and the south‐east of England. Following principal components analysis, five items were retained to form MARS‐5 (©Professor Rob Horne). Evaluation comprised internal reliability, test‐retest reliability, criterion‐related validity (relationship with blood pressure control) and construct validity (relationship with patients' beliefs about medicines). Results: The MARS‐5 demonstrated acceptable reliability (internal and test‐retest) and validity (criterion‐related and construct validity) in these patient groups. Internal reliability (Cronbach's α) ranged from 0.67 to 0.89 across all patient groups; test‐retest reliability (Pearson's r) was 0.97 in hypertension. Criterion‐related validity was established with more adherent hypertension patients showing better blood‐pressure control (χ2 = 4.24, df = 1, P <.05). Construct validity with beliefs about medicines was demonstrated with higher adherence associated with stronger beliefs in treatment necessity and lower treatment concerns. Conclusions: The MARS‐5 performed well on several psychometric indicators in this study. It shows promise as an effective self‐report tool for measuring patients' reports of their medication use across a range of health conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. LIABILITY OF FOREIGNNESS IN GLOBAL COMPETITION? FINANCIAL SERVICE AFFILIATES IN THE CITY OF LONDON.
- Author
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Nachum, Lilach
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,BUSINESS enterprises ,FINANCIAL services industry ,FOREIGN corporations ,BANKING industry ,BRITISH corporations ,COMPETITIVE advantage in business - Abstract
This study was inspired by the observation that foreign financial service firms operating in the City of London do not suffer the liability of foreignness to the extent suggested by theory. To examine the reasons for this departure from theory, the study advances a theoretical framework that distinguishes between three types of advantages that together account for the competitive performance of MNEs relative to that of indigenous firms. Empirical analyses of a sample of 296 foreign financial service firms in the in the City of London show that in this particular context major sources of competitive performance are the firm-specific advantages and the advantages of multinationality, where British firms may not necessarily possess an advantage over foreign firms. An examination of the validity of the findings, in order to assess the extent to which this situation is unique to the City of London or rather signifies a more general trend that requires theoretical modification and extensions, is emphasized as a major task for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Insight launch helps grab headlines for SCI.
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,CHEMISTRY ,CHEMICAL industry ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
Reports on the launch of the "Strategic Chemistry-Based Science Education Into the 21st Century" Insight research paper at Belgrave Square in London, England on March 14, 2006. Concerns over chemistry education in Great Britain that are addressed by the research paper; Members of the Society of Chemical Industry who attended the launch.
- Published
- 2006
42. A valuable Insight into issues that matter.
- Author
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Gray, Sandra
- Subjects
SCIENTIFIC communication ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,CHEMISTRY ,INTERDISCIPLINARY research - Abstract
Reports on the launching of the Insight Series of science communication initiatives of the Society of Chemistry Industry. Overview of the series which is comprised of situation papers on topics related to chemistry and interdisciplinary sciences; Background of the association; Details of the launching of the first paper of the series on June 6, 2005 in London, England.
- Published
- 2005
43. Market forces shaping human capital in eighteenth-century London.
- Author
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Justman, Moshe and Beek, Karine
- Subjects
HUMAN capital ,WORKING class ,APPRENTICESHIP programs ,JOURNEY workers ,WAGES ,REGRESSION analysis ,HISTORY ,EIGHTEENTH century ,SOCIAL conditions in England ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
This article draws on quantitative and descriptive data from Robert Campbell's manual for prospective apprentices, The London tradesman (1747), to demonstrate the responsiveness of apprenticeship premiums in mid-eighteenth-century London to market forces of supply and demand. It first shows that Campbell's data on mid-eighteenth-century journeymen wages, apprenticeship premiums, and masters' set-up costs in London are consistent with other sources. It then applies instrumental variable regressions to estimate the elasticity of apprenticeship premiums with respect to journeymen wages and set-up costs, using Campbell's education and ability requirements by trade to instrument for wages. We find an elasticity of one with respect to wages, and of 0.25 with respect to set-up costs, both statistically significant at a p-value less than 0.1%. We interpret these findings as supporting the thesis that apprenticeship played an important role in adapting the English workforce to the skill requirements of the industrial revolution in its early stages, insofar as the institution of apprenticeship in London was representative of other parts of England. Furthermore, by demonstrating the internal and external consistency of Campbell's observations, our findings should encourage their use as an unparalleled source of detailed, trade-specific wage data from the early years of the industrial revolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Conferences.
- Author
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Evans, Gillian and McLoughlin, Ruth
- Subjects
ANTHROPOLOGY -- Congresses ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,CHILDREN'S rights - Abstract
Conferences reviewed: Children in their Places . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The development of stage coaching and the impact of turnpike roads, 1653-1840.
- Author
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Gerhold, Dorian
- Subjects
TOLL roads ,STAGECOACHES ,NEWSPAPER advertising ,MODERNIZATION (Social science) ,ECONOMIC development ,ROADS ,TRANSPORTATION ,HISTORY of London, England ,HISTORY - Abstract
This article uses newspaper advertisements to chart the changes in speeds and fares of stage coaches, identifying the main periods of increasing speeds among London coaches as the 1760s-80s and 1810s-20s, separated by a period when speeds declined. It then measures productivity growth. Fares of London coaches in 1835-6 were about 27 per cent of what they would have been but for improvements in horses, vehicles, and roads from 1750, and the two main periods of productivity growth correspond to those of rising speeds. Speeds and productivity of regional coaches increased more smoothly. The rising productivity firmly identifies road transport as one of the modernizing sectors of the economy. New figures are put forward for the growing number of London and regional coaches, indicating rapid growth in passenger miles. While turnpike trusts had little impact before the 1750s, their increasing effectiveness, together with the use of steel springs and improved horses, was crucial to the rising productivity of the 1760s-80s, and even more so to that of the 1810s-20s. The cross roads were apparently poorer than London roads in the late eighteenth century, but thereafter the gap narrowed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Material London, ca. 1600 (Book).
- Author
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Dyer, Alan
- Subjects
NONFICTION - Abstract
Reviews the book 'Material London, ca. 1600,' edited by Lena Cowen Orlin.
- Published
- 2001
47. TRANSATLANTIC CAPITAL MARKET PRICE DISCOVERY DURING A FINANCIAL CRISIS.
- Author
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Hoag, Christopher and Norman, Stephen
- Subjects
CAPITAL market ,FINANCIAL crises ,INTERNATIONAL markets ,STOCK exchanges ,CROSS listing of securities - Abstract
ABSTRACT Previous results show relatively small amounts of time variation in the Hasbrouck (1995) information share across international markets. Using data from a security that was cross-listed on the New York and London Stock Exchanges in the 1860s, we find that the information share changes dramatically during a financial crisis that began in the foreign market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Do Low-Priced Stocks Drive Long-Term Contrarian Performance on the London Stock Exchange?
- Author
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Wu, Yuliang, Li, Youwei, and Hamill, Philip
- Subjects
CONTRARIAN investing ,PRICE levels ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,FINANCIAL performance ,LOSERS - Abstract
We investigate whether low-priced stocks drive long-term contrarian performance on the U.K. market. We find that contrarian performance at low, middle, and high price levels is positive. On the Fama-French risk adjusted basis, we find both low-priced and middle-priced losers have significantly positive returns. When we adjust returns by market and liquidity risk, only middle-priced losers maintain their positive returns. Our results reveal that low-priced stocks are not fully responsible for contrarian performance. Our empirical evidence is generally consistent with the overreaction hypothesis and behavioral models of value investing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. PROCEEDINGS OF THE BPS, CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGICAL SECTION, 13-15 DECEMBER 2011, QUEEN ELIZABETH II CONFERENCE CENTRE, LONDON.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,PARASYMPATHOLYTIC agents ,DRUGS ,OLDER people - Abstract
The article offers information on the British Pharmacological Society (BPS) Clinical Pharmacological Section, that was held at Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre in London, England from 13-15, December 201 It offers information on anticholinergic drug prescribed for older people. It presents information on anticholinergic risk scale (ARS) that helps in ranking the prescribed medications with anticholinergic (antimuscarinic) effects.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The role of magnetic resonance imaging in the follow-up of children with convulsive status epilepticus.
- Author
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YOONG, MICHAEL, MADARI, RODICA, MARTINOS, MARINA, CLARK, CHRISTOPHER, CHONG, KLING, NEVILLE, BRIAN, CHIN, RICHARD, and SCOTT, ROD
- Subjects
EPILEPSY research ,CHILDHOOD epilepsy ,PEDIATRIC diagnosis - Abstract
Aim The aim of this study was to determine the yield of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) after an episode of childhood convulsive status epilepticus (CSE) and to identify the clinical predictors of an abnormal brain scan. Method Children were recruited following an episode of CSE from an established clinical network in north London. Eighty children (age range 1mo-16y; 39 males; 41 females) were enrolled and seen for clinical assessment and brain MRI within 13 weeks of suffering from an episode of CSE. Scans were reviewed by two neuroradiologists and classified as normal (normal/normal-variant) or abnormal (minor/major abnormality). Factors predictive of an abnormal scan were investigated using logistic regression. Results Eighty children were recruited at a mean of 31.8 days (5-90d) after suffering from CSE. Structural abnormalities were found in 31%. Abnormal neurological examination at assessment (odds ratio [OR] 190.46), CSE that was not a prolonged febrile seizure (OR 77.12), and a continuous rather than an intermittent seizure (OR 29.98) were all predictive of an abnormal scan. No children with previous neuroimaging had new findings that altered their clinical management. Interpretation Brain MRI should be considered for all children with a history of CSE who have not previously undergone MRI, especially those with non-prolonged febrile seizure CSE, those with persisting neurological abnormalities 2 to 13 weeks after CSE, and those with continuous CSE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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