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research, for many fruitful discussions. I gratefully acknowledge the invaluable assistance of

by Stephen C. Smith, Especially Bettina Schwethelm, Rosalia Rodriguez-garcia , 2001
"... comments. A special thanks to Sanjay Jain, with whom I am collaborating on related theoretical ..."
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comments. A special thanks to Sanjay Jain, with whom I am collaborating on related theoretical

CERP for many fruitful discussions. Moreover, we would like to thank Axel Börsch-Supan, Elsa Fornero,

by Tabea Bucher-koenen, Michael Ziegelmeyer, Martin Gasche, Michael Haliassos, Lena Janys, Johannes Koenen, Lisa Kramer, Annamaria Lusardi, Chiara Monticone, Matthias Weiss , 2010
"... Preliminary draft, comments welcome. ∗We are grateful to participants at the DIW Conference on Aging, Saving and Retirement, the SAVE ..."
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Preliminary draft, comments welcome. ∗We are grateful to participants at the DIW Conference on Aging, Saving and Retirement, the SAVE

The many faces of Publish/Subscribe

by Patrick Th. Eugster, Pascal A. Felber, Rachid Guerraoui, Anne-Marie Kermarrec , 2003
"... This paper factors out the common denominator underlying these variants: full decoupling of the communicating entities in time, space, and synchronization. We use these three decoupling dimensions to better identify commonalities and divergences with traditional interaction paradigms. The many v ..."
Abstract - Cited by 743 (23 self) - Add to MetaCart
This paper factors out the common denominator underlying these variants: full decoupling of the communicating entities in time, space, and synchronization. We use these three decoupling dimensions to better identify commonalities and divergences with traditional interaction paradigms. The many

Bayesian Model Selection in Social Research (with Discussion by Andrew Gelman & Donald B. Rubin, and Robert M. Hauser, and a Rejoinder)

by Adrian Raftery - SOCIOLOGICAL METHODOLOGY 1995, EDITED BY PETER V. MARSDEN, CAMBRIDGE,; MASS.: BLACKWELLS. , 1995
"... It is argued that P-values and the tests based upon them give unsatisfactory results, especially in large samples. It is shown that, in regression, when there are many candidate independent variables, standard variable selection procedures can give very misleading results. Also, by selecting a singl ..."
Abstract - Cited by 585 (21 self) - Add to MetaCart
It is argued that P-values and the tests based upon them give unsatisfactory results, especially in large samples. It is shown that, in regression, when there are many candidate independent variables, standard variable selection procedures can give very misleading results. Also, by selecting a

GPFS: A Shared-Disk File System for Large Computing Clusters

by Frank Schmuck, Roger Haskin - In Proceedings of the 2002 Conference on File and Storage Technologies (FAST , 2002
"... GPFS is IBM's parallel, shared-disk file system for cluster computers, available on the RS/6000 SP parallel supercomputer and on Linux clusters. GPFS is used on many of the largest supercomputers in the world. GPFS was built on many of the ideas that were developed in the academic community ove ..."
Abstract - Cited by 521 (3 self) - Add to MetaCart
existing ideas scaled well, new approaches were necessary in many key areas. This paper describes GPFS, and discusses how distributed locking and recovery techniques were extended to scale to large clusters.

A model of growth through creative destruction

by Philippe Aghion, Peter Howitt , 1990
"... This paper develops a model based on Schumpeter's process of creative destruction. It departs from existing models of endogeneous growth in emphasizing obsolescence of old technologies induced by the accumulation of knowledge and the resulting process or industrial innovations. This has both ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1941 (27 self) - Add to MetaCart
positive and normative implications for growth. In positive terms, the prospect of a high level of research in the future can deter research today by threatening the fruits of that research with rapid obsolescence. In normative terms, obsolescence creates a negative externality from innovations, and hence

Estimation and Inference in Econometrics

by James G. Mackinnon , 1993
"... The astonishing increase in computer performance over the past two decades has made it possible for economists to base many statistical inferences on simulated, or bootstrap, distributions rather than on distributions obtained from asymptotic theory. In this paper, I review some of the basic ideas o ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1204 (4 self) - Add to MetaCart
The astonishing increase in computer performance over the past two decades has made it possible for economists to base many statistical inferences on simulated, or bootstrap, distributions rather than on distributions obtained from asymptotic theory. In this paper, I review some of the basic ideas

From SHIQ and RDF to OWL: The Making of a Web Ontology Language

by Ian Horrocks, Peter F. Patel-Schneider, Frank Van Harmelen - Journal of Web Semantics , 2003
"... The OWL Web Ontology Language is a new formal language for representing ontologies in the Semantic Web. OWL has features from several families of representation languages, including primarily Description Logics and frames. OWL also shares many characteristics with RDF, the W3C base of the Semantic W ..."
Abstract - Cited by 615 (39 self) - Add to MetaCart
The OWL Web Ontology Language is a new formal language for representing ontologies in the Semantic Web. OWL has features from several families of representation languages, including primarily Description Logics and frames. OWL also shares many characteristics with RDF, the W3C base of the Semantic

Understanding and Using Context

by Anind K. Dey - Personal and Ubiquitous Computing , 2001
"... Context is a poorly used source of information in our computing environments. As a result, we have an impoverished understanding of what context is and how it can be used. In this paper, we provide an operational definition of context and discuss the different ways that context can be used by contex ..."
Abstract - Cited by 865 (0 self) - Add to MetaCart
Context is a poorly used source of information in our computing environments. As a result, we have an impoverished understanding of what context is and how it can be used. In this paper, we provide an operational definition of context and discuss the different ways that context can be used

The Proposition Bank: An Annotated Corpus of Semantic Roles

by Martha Palmer, Paul Kingsbury, Daniel Gildea - Computational Linguistics , 2005
"... The Proposition Bank project takes a practical approach to semantic representation, adding a layer of predicate-argument information, or semantic role labels, to the syntactic structures of the Penn Treebank. The resulting resource can be thought of as shallow, in that it does not represent corefere ..."
Abstract - Cited by 556 (22 self) - Add to MetaCart
coreference, quantification, and many other higher-order phenomena, but also broad, in that it covers every instance of every verb in the corpus and allows representative statistics to be calculated. We discuss the criteria used to define the sets of semantic roles used in the annotation process
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