... http://www.annals-general-psychiatry.com/content/6/1/13 Because concomitant use of antipsychotics and antidepressants are not infrequent in our clinical practice we decided to explore arethereany differences in the length of QTc between patients ... included independent and dependent t test and Fisher's exact test longation in the group and group were ± 17 ms and ± 19 ms respectively (independent t test p = 0.840) Results and discussion Our ... transaminases, blood urea nitrogen and creatinine The serum levels of potassium, sodium and calcium ions were determined Body weight and height were measured and body mass index (BMI) was calculated...
... stress, fatigue and unsanitary living conditions [6] Cyclone Nargis hit the delta area of Myanmar on and May, 2008, causing many deaths, destroying infrastructure, and affecting economic and social ... 78% in 2007 to 82% in 2009 in urban areas and from 67% to 71% in rural areas (see Table 4), however, coverage declined to 62% in urban areas and to 48% in rural areas in the months of 2008 following ... review Conflict and Health 2010, 4:3 doi:10.1186/1752-1505-5-9 Cite this article as: Myint et al.: Arethereany changes in burden and management of communicable diseases in areas affected by...
... question AreThereAny Fallacies in the Reasoning? 99 Expanding Your Knowledge of Fallacies We recommend that you consult texts and some web sites to expand your awareness and understanding of ... tooth decay, and other health problems? What about milk and eggs? Milk and eggs are high in saturated animal fat and no doubt increase the cholesterol in the bloodstream, believed by many heart ... Reasoning Fallacies Thereare numerous reasoning fallacies And they can be organized in many different ways Many are so common that they have been given formal names You can find many lengthy lists...
... movie clips are usually preceded by an underscore (_alpha and _rotation, for example), the property names of most objects are not preceded by an underscore MovieClip properties break from what is ... class have property values that represent their transparency, visibility, horizontal position, vertical position, and rotation Changes to any of these properties affect the movie clip instance's ... same basic properties and abilities This is similar to how humans walk, talk, and sneeze (common abilities), but each human's way of doing it is unique We are all part of the Human class,...
... mutations are known, and only a handful are nonsense mutations or involve the replacement of a residue in the active site of GCase The vast majority of the disease-causing mutations occur randomly ... protein crystallography: liganded proteins tend to crystallize more readily than their unliganded counterparts because their structures are more stable Therefore, the obvious candidates for specific ... 80.2 unstable protein may aggregate when it unfolds, and such aggregates may themselves be toxic to the cell Thereare many severe human diseases that arise from either muta tions that...
... Contents Preface and Acknowledgments General Introduction and Outline of the Book References ix 14 P A R T WHYARETHERE SO MANY BANKING CRISES? 19 Chapter WhyArethere So Many Banking Crises? ... #1 i i WhyArethere So Many Banking Crises? i i i i i i “rochet” — 2007/9/19 — 16:10 — page ii — #2 i i i i i i i i “rochet” — 2007/9/19 — 16:10 — page iii — #3 i i WhyArethere So Many Banking ... in many other places: the Oslo BI School of Management (March 2002), the Bank of Finland (April 2002), the Bank of England (May 2002), Wuhan University (November 2002 and December 2004), and...
... “rochet” — 2007/9/19 — 16:10 — page 23 — #35 i WHYARETHERE SO MANY BANKING CRISES? i 23 • And finally the key to successful reform is independence and accountability of banking supervisors The ... on returns and signals More specifically, we will assume that the distributions of R andare normal, with respective ¯ means R andand respective precisions (i.e., inverse variances) α and β Denoting ... drastic reduction in loan portfolios, import and cost cuts, and shareholders were fully expropriated, which was not the case in Finland Of course, the shareholders of failed Norwegian banks later...
... Conditions (3.7) and (3.8) are satisfied if the costs of efforts e0 and e1 are small and if δ (the increase in the probability of success) and ∆β (the reduction in the probability of solvency) are large ... IFIAC Jacklin, C., and S Bhattacharya 1988 Distinguishing panics and informationbased bank runs: welfare and policy implications Journal of Political Economy 96:568–92 Jeanne, O., and C Wyplosz 2003 ... later At date t = 2, returns of the investments are divided between depositors and a bank’s shareholders 3.2.1 Banks and Depositors As in Diamond and Dybvig (1983), banks serve a large number of...
... banks (which are not detected because supervisors are inefficient) have no incentive to declare bankruptcy and thus are not closed: they borrow λI at the same terms as illiquid banks and invest it ... inequalities are always binding: BL = e1 pδ and BS = pg e1 −λ δp (3.31) Therefore, BN = max e1 , pδ pβN e0 βL + BS − BL ∆β βN (3.32) In other words, thereare two cases: (a) γ4 = 0, and γ1 > Here, ... discussion of the issue and a model of the IMF’s preferred creditor status to mitigate financial crises 24 Memorandum of Understanding between HM Treasury, the Bank of England, and the FSA (Available...
... Switzerland Furlong, F., and M Keeley 1989 Bank capital regulation and risk taking: a note Journal of Banking and Finance 13:883–91 Gorton, G., and A Santomero 1990 Market discipline and bank ... for more detail Thereare n banks, and three periods, t = 0, 1, Banks and investors (depositors, consumers) are risk neutral with a time separable utility That is, an agent with random consumption ... welfares of banks andand their depositors as in the autarkic case, 15 subject to (i) the interim incentive constraints guaranteeing that the banks are diligent when they are not liquidated, and...
... constraint andthereare complementary systems, so that any failure puts several systems at risk.) Closer to our paradigm is the case where interbank loans (especially to the large banks) are implicitly ... risk: what is it andwhat will happen if we try to reduce it? Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis, Jan/Feb, pp 1–17 Goodhart, C., and D Schoenmaker 1993 Institutional separation between supervisory and ... the other banks without provoking withdrawals by depositors (this is what we call resiliency) andwhatare the implications in terms of market discipline In the next section we consider the issue...
... case where thereare three locations (N = 3) Locations andare peripheral locations and location is a money center location All the travelers of locations and must consume at location 1, and one-half ... banks are solvent Thereare no other equilibria when α = D0 Indeed, if x i = 0, then equation (7.5) implies that Xi = or Di = Ri But Xi cannot be zero (unless all x j are also zero) and Di ... markets are supposed to be complete and depositors are perfectly informed about the failure risks of banks Then the Modigliani–Miller indeterminacy principle applies and the market values of banks are...
... is the increment of a Wiener process and µ and σ are the drift and volatility of asset value For simplicity, we assume that all investors are risk neutral 11 and discount the future at a constant ... Kahane, Y 1977 Capital adequacy and the regulation of financial intermediaries Journal of Banking and Finance 2:207–17 Kareken, J H., and N Wallace 1978 Deposit insurance and bank regulation: a partial ... Risk-Bearing Amsterdam: NorthHolland Dothan, U., and J Williams 1980 Banks, bankruptcy and public regulation Journal of Banking and Finance 4:65–88 Hart, O D., and D M Jaffee 1974 On the application...
... of Banking and Finance 14(1):69–84 Gennotte, G., and D Pyle 1991 Capital controls and bank risk Journal of Banking and Finance 15:805–24 Gropp, R., J Vesala, and G Vulpes 2002 Equity and bond market ... externality for debtholders and the continuation (or expansion) decisions are suboptimal because equityholders not internalize this effect Anderson and Sundaresan (1996) and Mella-Barral (1999) elaborate ... on two strands of the literature: • Corporate finance models like those of Leland and Toft (1996) and Ericsson (2000) that analyze the impact of debt maturity on asset substitution and firm value...
... Contents Preface and Acknowledgments General Introduction and Outline of the Book References ix 14 P A R T WHYARETHERE SO MANY BANKING CRISES? 19 Chapter WhyArethere So Many Banking Crises? ... #1 i i WhyArethere So Many Banking Crises? i i i i i i “rochet” — 2007/9/19 — 16:10 — page ii — #2 i i i i i i i i “rochet” — 2007/9/19 — 16:10 — page iii — #3 i i WhyArethere So Many Banking ... WhyArethere So Many Banking Crises? i i i i i i “rochet” — 2007/9/19 — 16:10 — page 20 — #32 i i i i i i i i “rochet” — 2007/9/19 — 16:10 — page 21 — #33 i i Chapter One WhyArethere So Many...
... activities of the organization and to the job behavior of managers and others It strengthens their confidence in understanding where the organization is heading andwhat for, how best to make the ... inertia and insular outlook; it induces them to look beyond those noses, beyond today and tomorrow, and beyond immediate concerns It encourages them to probe and cut through complexities and uncertainties ... true Without a plan, people are set up to encounter errors, waste, and delays A plan, on the other hand, helps people organize resources and activities efficiently and effectively to achieve goals...
... that whatever combination of hardware and software are used to output the delivered dose online, the output dose is in agreement with the empirically determined bioassay validated dose Any online ... distributions, the performance in terms of microbes with any sensitivity can be calculated directly and exactly a) Direct methods for quantifying dose distributions are being developed and involve challenging ... reactors and placing an unjustified - 86 - Journal of Water and Environment Technology, Vol.3, No.1, 2005 expense (in terms of over sizing and operation with more power than necessary) on the owner and...
... your recipt and you are given a new one or your money back Not to forget about sales and special offers such as "buy one get one free" or "two for the pirce of one" are always found there One the ... packing and displays versuade people to buy things they not actually need For many of us the major disadvantage of shopping in supermarkets id that it is time consuming and it takes a while to getthere ... other hand shopping in supermarkets can be annoying beckause there is a big choice which can cause confusion People often buy unnecessary things beckause they seeing to have a good price and you...
... passage andare having difficulty seeing where it is going, skip ahead to the end Clue No 4: Remember what a conclusion is not Conclusions will not be any of the following: WhatAre the Issue and ... QUESTION IS IMPORTANT WhatAre the Reasons? Once you have identified the issue and conclusion, you need to understand why an author has come to a certain conclusion Reasons are the why If the author ... a conclusion because no one has offered any basis for belief In contrast, unsupported claims arewhat we refer to as mere opinions What Are the Issue and the Conclusion? 19 The last paragraph...