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Table 3. Maximum P2P communication rate of the internal and external communication in the VIOLA-testbed in MByte/s.
2007
"... In PAGE 66: ...0 2536.6 IB, 4 nodes Table3 . Performance [MFLOP/s] of SMXV.... ..."
Table 2. Important SMS internal API operations. Creation Navigation Modification Communication
"... In PAGE 5: ... From there the message can access SMS functions through the SMS internal API, open only to hosted smart messages. The internal API supports the following classes of operation: creation, navigation, modification and communication (see Table2 ). Under limited circumstances a smart message can generate its own events and therefore communicated with other messages.... ..."
Table 4 Statistics of the relative errors in simulated settlement
2002
"... In PAGE 10: ... Figure 10 shows the observed and simulat- ed ground subsidence at the eight survey points. Similar statistics concerning the relative errors were also calcu- lated and are shown in Table4 . It can be seen that about 46% of the survey points have a simulated settlement error of lt;5%.... ..."
Table 1: An example for the settlement of payments in the matrix auction
"... In PAGE 7: ...Table 1: An example for the settlement of payments in the matrix auction Table1 illustrates an example of this mechanism where three different items are allocated to three agents. According to the Vickrey principle agent C gets 60 currency units for performing task 2 and agent B gets 80 currency units as payment for performing the tasks 1 and 3 together.... ..."
Table 2a Initial Wage Settlements
"... In PAGE 14: ... Two extensive discussions of these two comprehensive data files are provided in the literature: Harrison (1996) includes an analysis of the appropriateness of combining the Wage Chronologies File and the Wage File; and Crossley, Harrison, and Ljutic (1996) look at variations over time in contract length. The samples that we analyse are summarized in Table2 . We begin with data covering the period 1952-96.... In PAGE 14: ... The fourth sample widens the scope still further by including all private sector contracts, again for the 1965-96 period. These four samples include only the initial wage change (see Table2 a), but the Wage File does, of course, contain details of the average wage increase over the life of the contract (what we have earlier called the lifetime definition). We make use of this information in samples 5 and 6, shown in Table 2b.... In PAGE 14: ... These four samples include only the initial wage change (see Table 2a), but the Wage File does, of course, contain details of the average wage increase over the life of the contract (what we have earlier called the lifetime definition). We make use of this information in samples 5 and 6, shown in Table2 b. These samples are identical to the third and fourth samples, except that the average wage increase replaces the initial wage increase.... In PAGE 14: ... These samples are identical to the third and fourth samples, except that the average wage increase replaces the initial wage increase. For each of the six samples, Table2 reports the number of contracts for various sizes of nominal wage change, including a count of those contracts with a change of zero. When we compare the third and the fifth samples or the fourth and the sixth, we quickly see confirmation of our earlier observation about different definitions of the wage increase.... In PAGE 15: ...193 what follows, we examine this question by analysing the effect of variations in price inflation (measured by the annual percentage change in the CPI) on the density at zero. As a precursor to this analysis, Table2 summarizes the range of values of CPI inflation associated with the observations in each subsample of nominal wage changes. In the case of initial wage changes of zero, the median inflation rate is close to 4 per cent, suggesting that low inflation alone cannot be blamed when nominal wages are unchanged from one contract to the next.... In PAGE 15: ... That the relationship between the proportion of zero nominal wage changes and levels of price inflation is complicated is reinforced by an examination of Figures 6 to 11. These figures relate in turn to each of the samples introduced above and summarized in Table2 . Each figure shows the proportion of settlements in each year for which the nominal wage change was zero, compared with the annual rate of inflation.... In PAGE 20: ... This enables us to isolate the effect of different rates of price inflation on just this baseline segment. Figures 12 to 17 show the fitted densities for the six samples summarized in Table2 . For each sample, the actual density is plotted together with three fitted densities.... ..."
Table 2b Average Wage Settlements
"... In PAGE 14: ... Two extensive discussions of these two comprehensive data files are provided in the literature: Harrison (1996) includes an analysis of the appropriateness of combining the Wage Chronologies File and the Wage File; and Crossley, Harrison, and Ljutic (1996) look at variations over time in contract length. The samples that we analyse are summarized in Table2 . We begin with data covering the period 1952-96.... In PAGE 14: ... The fourth sample widens the scope still further by including all private sector contracts, again for the 1965-96 period. These four samples include only the initial wage change (see Table2 a), but the Wage File does, of course, contain details of the average wage increase over the life of the contract (what we have earlier called the lifetime definition). We make use of this information in samples 5 and 6, shown in Table 2b.... In PAGE 14: ... These four samples include only the initial wage change (see Table 2a), but the Wage File does, of course, contain details of the average wage increase over the life of the contract (what we have earlier called the lifetime definition). We make use of this information in samples 5 and 6, shown in Table2 b. These samples are identical to the third and fourth samples, except that the average wage increase replaces the initial wage increase.... In PAGE 14: ... These samples are identical to the third and fourth samples, except that the average wage increase replaces the initial wage increase. For each of the six samples, Table2 reports the number of contracts for various sizes of nominal wage change, including a count of those contracts with a change of zero. When we compare the third and the fifth samples or the fourth and the sixth, we quickly see confirmation of our earlier observation about different definitions of the wage increase.... In PAGE 15: ...193 what follows, we examine this question by analysing the effect of variations in price inflation (measured by the annual percentage change in the CPI) on the density at zero. As a precursor to this analysis, Table2 summarizes the range of values of CPI inflation associated with the observations in each subsample of nominal wage changes. In the case of initial wage changes of zero, the median inflation rate is close to 4 per cent, suggesting that low inflation alone cannot be blamed when nominal wages are unchanged from one contract to the next.... In PAGE 15: ... That the relationship between the proportion of zero nominal wage changes and levels of price inflation is complicated is reinforced by an examination of Figures 6 to 11. These figures relate in turn to each of the samples introduced above and summarized in Table2 . Each figure shows the proportion of settlements in each year for which the nominal wage change was zero, compared with the annual rate of inflation.... In PAGE 20: ... This enables us to isolate the effect of different rates of price inflation on just this baseline segment. Figures 12 to 17 show the fitted densities for the six samples summarized in Table2 . For each sample, the actual density is plotted together with three fitted densities.... ..."
Table 5 Optimal policy for settlement day
2000
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Table 6: Settlement Rate Regressions over Time
"... In PAGE 22: ...ote: All variables are de#1Cned in Table 4. #10Between#11 is a means-on-means regression. Heteroskedastic- consistent standard errors are shown in parenthesis. Table6 pools the data across years to extract additional information from the... ..."
Table 4. Filing and Settlement Rates, by Ownership Type
2001
Table 1: Logical Flow of the TNG Labor Market Framework with internal behavioral rules. The agents can therefore engage in anticipatory behavior. More- over, using stored agent addresses together with internalized communication protocols, they can communicate with each other at event-triggered times, a feature not present in standard economic
1998
"... In PAGE 7: ...4 Although highly simpli ed, these parametric speci cations will be seen in Section IV, below, to permit the study of a variety of labor market structures operating under di erent ex ante capacity constraints. As outlined in Table1 , each agent in the initial generation is constructed and assigned a random strategy governing worksite interactions. The agents then enter into a nested pair of generation cycle and trade cycle loops during which they repeatedly determine contractual partnerships, engage in worksite interactions, update their expected utility assessments for worksite partners based on newly recorded payo s, and evolve their worksite strategies over time.... In PAGE 8: ...ith internal behavioral rules. The agents can therefore engage in anticipatory behavior. More- over, using stored agent addresses together with internalized communication protocols, they can communicate with each other at event-triggered times, a feature not present in standard economic models.Second, as seen in Table1 , the TNG labor market framework is modular in design. This means that experimentation with alternative speci cations for market structure, search and matching among workers and employers, worksite interactions, expectation formation and updating, and evolution of worksite strategies can easily be undertaken | much like changing a lightbulb in a multi-bulb lamp | as long as the interfaces (inputs and outputs) for the modules implement- ing these speci cations remain unchanged.... ..."
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