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Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 1029 on page 1 of 42
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'Ancora Imparo' (Still I am Learning): An Inquiry into Visual Artists' Experience of Creativity in Old Age
(2007)
Mac Eoin, Ailbhe
'Ancora Imparo' (Still I am Learning): An Inquiry into Visual Artists' Experience of Creativity in Old Age
(2007)
Mac Eoin, Ailbhe
Abstract:
As a student of Irish Modern and Contemporary Art History, my contribution to The Lived Life project explores the topic of later-life artistic creativity amongst older visual artists. In their capacity as self-employed practioners artists are not obliged to retire at the age of 65, and as they must age like everyone else, it is likely that with the passing of time their vision and interpretatio of art might change also. An artist's skill and technical proficiency may develop throughout his or her lifetime, and although ageing may sometimes affect this proficiency in a negative sense, the experience of ageing can enrich an artist's life experience, which can then be reflected in his work. The progression of one's life is reflected in one's artistic developments.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/10598
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"A mosaic of movements": The Joycean Rigmarole
(2007)
Crowley, Ronan
"A mosaic of movements": The Joycean Rigmarole
(2007)
Crowley, Ronan
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/10499
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1/f noise in the half-metallic oxides CrO2, Fe3O4, and La2/3Sr1/3MnO3
(1999)
COEY, JOHN MICHAEL DAVID
1/f noise in the half-metallic oxides CrO2, Fe3O4, and La2/3Sr1/3MnO3
(1999)
COEY, JOHN MICHAEL DAVID
Abstract:
peer-reviewed
The excess low-frequency (1/f) electrical noise of three representative half-metallic oxides, CrO2, Fe3O4, and La2/3Sr1/3MnO3, has been studied as a function of the temperature (5–300 K) and a magnetic field (up to 12 T). In CrO2 and La2/3Sr1/3MnO3, the resistance fluctuations are investigated in the metallic regime, below Tc. The magnetite noise is measured across the Verwey transition, in the hopping regime. We find, in all these oxides, a high normalized noise level which roughly follows the temperature dependence of the resistivity. For CrO2 and La2/3Sr1/3MnO3, the form of the density of state of the responsible excitations is inferred. Oxygen displacement around grain boundaries, magnetic fluctuations, and reversed-spin electronic excitations in the band structure are discussed as possible explanations of the low-frequency fluctuations. For Fe3O4, the 1/f noise and its temperature dependence are attributed to fluctuations of the number of carriers in a critica...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/31737
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3D visualisation of confocal flourescence microscopy data
(2004)
O'SULLIVAN, CAROL ANN
3D visualisation of confocal flourescence microscopy data
(2004)
O'SULLIVAN, CAROL ANN
Abstract:
peer-reviewed
Confocal microscopes are able to non-invasively capture sub-micron details of fluorescent-labelled specimens at multiple depths, but there is a lack of applications capable of displaying this collected information in a meaningful and useful manner. We present a hardware-accelerated volume visualisation application developed for displaying and exploring confocal fluorescence microscopy data. Programmable graphics hardware is employed to improve visual quality and aid in highlighting significant properties of the volume, and an adapted marching cubes algorithm implemented to generate polygonal isosurfaces.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/18380
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52°38'31"N 8°31'39"W "an organism for living in"
(2011)
Moloney, Eleanor
52°38'31"N 8°31'39"W "an organism for living in"
(2011)
Moloney, Eleanor
Abstract:
As architecture is a culprit in physically detaching people from their surrounding environment I hope to create an architecture of layers each enclosing a particular climate or atmosphere expressed through a specific use of materials. Given the unique climatic and ecological context of any location and by studying this at a micro level, climate becomes the main protagonist of the design and a hierarchy of spaces emerges whereby "form follows climate".
TOC: Introduction / Pocket Utopia / Problems / Politics / Primers / Proposal / Place / Potential / People / Bibliography
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/1324
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A Cocktail Menu is Essential to Growing Sales
(2011)
Murphy, James Peter
A Cocktail Menu is Essential to Growing Sales
(2011)
Murphy, James Peter
Abstract:
<p>The earliest mention of a cocktail menu list in Ireland dates back to Saturday 10<sup>th</sup> July 1886 when the original Burlington Hotel, Andrew Street, Dublin advertised it’s range of available cocktails (Irish Times Ltd, p.7). The cocktail menu has indeed been around quite a long time but unfortunately a lot of bars do not afford it the same level of attention which they would give to their food or wine menus. Your cocktail menu is a most crucial component towards creating the right image, attention to detail and innovative approaches to your bars cocktails for your customers. The menus form, layout, content, and perhaps even the character of the menu can provide your customers with an insight into the very heart of your bar. In most cases, the menu placed in front of a customer (in the bar or over the internet) is the only chance that you have to communicate what your unique product is, and why it is better then your competitors. Cocktails all...
http://arrow.dit.ie/tfschcafoth/1
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Metaphor and space
(2005)
FRENDA, ALESSIO SALVATORE
Metaphor and space
(2005)
FRENDA, ALESSIO SALVATORE
Abstract:
The present research study aims at providing an insight on the issue of metaphor and space conceptualization through the comparative analysis of Irish and Italian prepositions, based on the theoretical foundations of cognitive linguistics, an insight into which was provided in the form of a literature review. In order to pursue this end, two distinct corpora were set up for the two languages by drawing textual strings containing instances of morphologically simple prepositions. Subsequently, it was illustrated how simple prepositions, both in Irish and Italian, primarily express relations of a spatial kind. Once this was done, prepositions were grouped together according to their basic spatial meaning (BSM), and three such BSMs were chosen for being analyzed cross-linguistically with respect to their nonspatial readings, which were shown to be linked to their spatial meanings by means of metaphorical mapping of conceptual structure, according to the expectations that the theoretical...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/1117
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A comparative study on the treatment performance of a conventional septic tank system and reed bed-soil absorption system receiving domestic effluent
(2009)
O'LUANAIGH, NIALL; JOHNSTON, PAUL; MISSTEAR, BRUCE; PATEL, TITIKSH; GILL, LAURENCE
A comparative study on the treatment performance of a conventional septic tank system and reed bed-soil absorption system receiving domestic effluent
(2009)
O'LUANAIGH, NIALL; JOHNSTON, PAUL; MISSTEAR, BRUCE; PATEL, TITIKSH; GILL, LAURENCE
Abstract:
peer-reviewed
In Ireland, the most prevalent domestic wastewater treatment application in unsewered areas is the conventional septic tank system comprising of septic tank and soil absorption system, the latter more commonly referred to as a percolation area in Ireland. Recent concern has been expressed over the discharge of on-site effluent to highly permeable soils which, although permitted in current Irish EPA guidelines, has generated debate as to whether an insufficient level of treatment in the subsoil’s vadose zone is being achieved. In situations where a septic tank installation is considered unsuitable according to a rigorous site assessment, a secondary treatment system such as a horizontal subsurface-flow reed bed can be installed to improve the effluent quality before discharge to the subsoil. On-site research was thus carried out to assess and compare the treatment capabilities of freely-draining subsoils receiving both septic tank and secondary effluents in tandem w...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/34967
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A comparison of strain and fluid shear stress in stimulating bone cell responses - a computational and experimental study
(2005)
PRENDERGAST, PATRICK JOHN
A comparison of strain and fluid shear stress in stimulating bone cell responses - a computational and experimental study
(2005)
PRENDERGAST, PATRICK JOHN
Abstract:
Bone undergoes continuous remodeling in response to mechanical loading. However, the underlying mechanisms by which bone cells respond to their changing mechanical environment, that is, strain in the load-bearing matrix or fluid flow through the canalicular network, are not well understood. It has been established in vitro that bone cells respond differently to substrate strain and fluid shear stress treatments. Uncovering the mechanical basis of these differences represents a significant challenge to our understanding of cellular mechanotransduction and bone remodeling. To investigate this problem, we developed a biomechanical model of an adherent cell, to test the hypothesis that bone cells respond differently to 0.6 Pa fluid shear stress and 1,000 mu(epsilon) substrate strain stimulation because of qualitative and quantitative differences in the cellular deformation caused. Fluid shear stress loading conditions resulted in maximum displacements at the apical surface of the cell a...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/39597
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A comparison of the osteogenic potential of adult rat mesenchymal stem cells cultured in 2-D and on 3-D collagen glycosaminoglycan scaffolds.
(2007)
FARRELL, ERIC RAYMOND; PRENDERGAST, PATRICK JOHN; CAMPBELL, VERONICA ANN; BYRNE, ELAINE
A comparison of the osteogenic potential of adult rat mesenchymal stem cells cultured in 2-D and on 3-D collagen glycosaminoglycan scaffolds.
(2007)
FARRELL, ERIC RAYMOND; PRENDERGAST, PATRICK JOHN; CAMPBELL, VERONICA ANN; BYRNE, ELAINE
Abstract:
Adult mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have the capability to differentiate along several lineages including those of bone, cartilage, tendon and muscle, thus offering huge potential for the field of tissue engineering. The purpose of this study was to characterise the differentiation capacity of rat MSCs cultured on standard plastic coverslips in 2 dimensions and on a novel collagen glycosaminoglycan scaffold in the presence of a standard combination of osteoinductive factors. Cells were cultured for 3, 7, 14 and 21 days and several markers of osteogenesis were analysed. While the initial response of the cells in 3-D seemed to be faster than cells cultured in 2-D, as evidenced by collagen type I expression, later markers showed that osteogenic differentiation of MSCs took longer in the 3-D environment of the collagen GAG scaffold compared to standard 2-D culture conditions. Furthermore, it was shown that complete scaffold mineralisation could be evoked within a 6 week timeframe. This ...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/39604
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A computational stylometric analysis of characterization by playwrights
(2008)
Lynch, Gerard
A computational stylometric analysis of characterization by playwrights
(2008)
Lynch, Gerard
Abstract:
Is it possible for an author to create characters truly independent of their own voice? Do characters from the same play exhibit similar characteristics in style? Are some playwrights arguably better at creating unique characters that transcend their own personal style and become individual entities in their own right? Are playwrights who adhere to iambic pentameter or other metrical constraint thereby confined to the construction of characters whose language cannot be differentiated on the basis of the syntax of their language? This study seeks to address these questions and provide more information about what constitutes characterization in plays. Methods from the field of authorship attribution, which are normally used to determine the provenance of anonymous texts are used on the individual text of characters from a number of playwrights.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/21427
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A context and housing for students in Belfast
(2011)
O'Callaghan, Eugene
A context and housing for students in Belfast
(2011)
O'Callaghan, Eugene
Abstract:
Architecture is better understood in a context, and this dissertation tries to provide the context for student housing on a city block in the centre of Belfast. The dissertation embodies the thesis idea of the building as a material organisation of the spatial and temporal history of its place; and in particular, how this reading might address a city that too often seems empty. The writing is structured as a spiralling description of context; from the widest, most generic terms towards the narrow and the specific.
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/1325
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A context information service using ontology-based queries
(2004)
CONLAN, OWEN; LEWIS, DAVID; O'SULLIVAN, DECLAN; POWER, RUAIDHRI SEAN; WADE, VINCEN...
A context information service using ontology-based queries
(2004)
CONLAN, OWEN; LEWIS, DAVID; O'SULLIVAN, DECLAN; POWER, RUAIDHRI SEAN; WADE, VINCENT PATRICK
Abstract:
peer-reviewed
Ubiquitous computing environments have the potential to provide rich sources of information about a user and their surroundings. However, the nature of context information means that it must be gathered in an ad-hoc and distributed manner with many devices and sensors storing potentially relevant data. In an ad-hoc ubiquitous computing environment, retrieval of context information cannot rely on a fixed meta-data schema. This works shows how an ontology driven context service architecture may perform distributed open schema queries over heterogeneous context sources in a potentially decentralised manner.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/22604
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A Double-Tuned 1H/23Na Two Element Phased Array System for In Vivo 23Na Magnetic Resonance Microscopy at 7 T
(2010)
FAGAN, ANDREW JOHN; WETTERLING, FRIEDRICH
A Double-Tuned 1H/23Na Two Element Phased Array System for In Vivo 23Na Magnetic Resonance Microscopy at 7 T
(2010)
FAGAN, ANDREW JOHN; WETTERLING, FRIEDRICH
Abstract:
Accurate identification of the potentially salvageable ischaemic penumbra is critical in identifying stroke patients who will benefit from thrombolysis and in designing future clinical trials of potential neuroprotectants. The perfusion/diffusion mismatch technique, currently used to detect penumbra is an indirect measure, lacking precision. The ability to accurately quantify TSC in vivo could allow developing of a direct bio-marker for tissue viability in stroke [1]. However, quantitative 23Na-Magnetic Resonance Microscopy (qNa-MRM) of the rat brain is challenging due to the low SNR measured in the MRM images, which results from the 23Na nucleus’s low in vivo concentration, low gyromagnetic ratio, fast transversal signal decay, and the required small voxel size (< 4 μl).
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/50650
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A Framework for Benchmarking Interactive Collision Detection
(2009)
WOULFE MUIRIS; MANZKE MICHAEL
A Framework for Benchmarking Interactive Collision Detection
(2009)
WOULFE MUIRIS; MANZKE MICHAEL
Abstract:
Collision detection is a vital component of applications spanning myriad fields, yet there exists no means for developers to analyse the suitability of their collision detection algorithms across the spectrum of scenarios that could be encountered. To rectify this, we propose a framework for benchmarking interactive collision detection, which consists of a single generic benchmark that can be adapted using a number of parameters to create a large range of practical benchmarks. This framework allows algorithm developers to test the validity of their algorithms across a wide test space and allows developers of interactive applications to recreate their application scenarios and quickly determine the most amenable algorithm. To demonstrate the utility of our framework, we adapted it to work with three collision detection algorithms supplied with the Bullet Physics SDK. Our results demonstrate that those algorithms conventionally believed to offer the best performance are not always the...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/36010
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A Good News Story About Irish Health Care
(2011)
LAYTE, RICHARD
A Good News Story About Irish Health Care
(2011)
LAYTE, RICHARD
Abstract:
Life expectancy for older people in Ireland has been increasing steadily since the 1980s. Despite this, Irish life expectancies for the over 65s lagged seriously behind the EU average as recently as the mid 1990s. But Irish death rates for the over 65s dropped dramatically between 2000 and 2005, moving Ireland closer to the European average. Whereas between 1996 and 1999 death rates (from all causes) in Ireland had fallen by just over 5%, between 2000 and 2004 the decrease was over 26%. What lies behind this rare and welcome good news story? An article** by researchers from the ESRI and the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics at Trinity College Dublin sets out the background to this sharp fall in death rates, and examines how the greater use of effective drug therapies contributed to this result
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/56901
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A Hybrid Software and Hardware System for Collision Detection
(2010)
Woulfe, Muiris
A Hybrid Software and Hardware System for Collision Detection
(2010)
Woulfe, Muiris
Abstract:
Collision detection is a fundamental problem in myriad applications, spanning a wide variety of fields. Although the core concept is relatively straightforward, significant complexities result from the demand for interactive or real-time performance for ever-increasing workloads. In this thesis, a different approach is applied to the problem of collision detection. This approach consists of a hybrid software and hardware system that utilises the properties of both software and hardware to achieve an acceleration over the current state of the art. At its core, the system consists of a custom microarchitecture performing broad phase collision detection, with the narrow phase executing in software. The microarchitecture consists of a plurality of memories internal to the microarchitecture, which parallelise the input data. These data are then formed into pairs using a custom data access algorithm, before being processed using a parallel version of the all-pairs algorithm. Two equivale...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/41259
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A Knowledge-Light Mechanism for Explanation in Case-Based Reasoning
(2005)
Doyle, Dónal
A Knowledge-Light Mechanism for Explanation in Case-Based Reasoning
(2005)
Doyle, Dónal
Abstract:
Decision support systems are currently achieving higher classification accuracies by using more complex reasoning mechanisms. Examples of such mechanisms include support vector machines and neural networks. However in spite of these increases in accuracy many decision support systems are not accepted by users. In domains where there is a high cost associated with incorrect classifications, such as medical domains, users are not always willing to accept a decision support system's classification without proper justification. In every walk of life, from the home to the workplace, people use explanations all the time to justify their opinions. Explanations can have many different forms depending on the context in which they are used. Over the last few decades there has been a vast amount of research by philosophers into the importance and the requirements of suitable explanations. In spite of the importance of suitable explanations to justify an opinion, many decision support syst...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/847
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A Leage of Their Own: Landmark Supreme Court Judgement Clears Irish league Credit Unions of Abuse of Dominance
(2008)
Massey, Patrick
A Leage of Their Own: Landmark Supreme Court Judgement Clears Irish league Credit Unions of Abuse of Dominance
(2008)
Massey, Patrick
Abstract:
In a unanimous judgment handed down on 8th May 2007, the Irish Supreme Court upheld an appeal by the Irish League of Credit Unions (ILCU) against a High Court judgment that ILCU had abused a dominant position. The Irish Competition Authority had alleged that ILCU had abused its dominant position in the market for savings protection services (SPS) by limiting access to SPS services to its own members. The Authority claimed that credit unions wishing to obtain SPS services were required to also purchase credit union representation services from ILCU and that such tying amounted to an abuse of dominance by ILCU. This was the first abuse of dominance case brought by the Irish Competition Authority to go to a full hearing, the first to be appealed to the Supreme Court and the first Irish case under EC Regulation 1/2003. The case raised a number of interesting economic issues, which are of interest in the context of the debate on the need for a more economics based approach to Article 82....
http://eprints.nuim.ie/877/
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A market microstructure explanation of IPOs underpricing
(2007)
Leoni, Dr Patrick
A market microstructure explanation of IPOs underpricing
(2007)
Leoni, Dr Patrick
Abstract:
In a typical IPO game with first-price auctions, we argue that risk-averse investors always underbid in equilibrium because of sucbjective interpreetations of the firm' communications about its actual value and resulting risk aversion about the likelihood of facing investors with higher valuations. We show that the noisier the investors' inferences of the firm' value(in the sense of first-order stochastic dominance) the higher the underbidding level. Our finding is independent of winner's curse effects and possible irrational, and allows for a testable theory.
http://eprints.nuim.ie/645/
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A Midsummer Night's Dream
(2009)
DIT Conservatory of Music and Drama; Ba in Drama Graduating Production; Dublin Institut...
A Midsummer Night's Dream
(2009)
DIT Conservatory of Music and Drama; Ba in Drama Graduating Production; Dublin Institute of Technology
Abstract:
<p>PLEASE NOTE THIS IS A HIGH RESOLUTION COLOUR FILE WHICH MAY BE SLOW TO DOWNLOAD.</p>
http://arrow.dit.ie/aaconmuscp/1
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A Mobility-Aware File System - file availability in a mobile-aware, context aware environment
(2005)
O'Flaherty, Owen
A Mobility-Aware File System - file availability in a mobile-aware, context aware environment
(2005)
O'Flaherty, Owen
Abstract:
The rapid growth in number of portable electronic devices with wireless networking capabilities in recent times has thrown up many new computing problems and opportunities. Such devices typically lack the processing power common to more familiar desktop and laptop computers. They are also constrained by their limited power supply. Given the scenario of an urban environment in which a large number of people using such devices constantly move about with a need to share information, it is clear that existing network topologies are inherently unsuited to supporting the sort of applications that they might need. This dissertation project addresses the changing role of that most integral part of computer systems in this new environment - the file system. A distributed file system called Stirling is presented that takes advantage of both the ad hoc nature of the network environment and the structure provided by the WAND (Wireless Ad-hoc Network for Dublin.) This filesystem offers a set of ...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/857
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A Multiple Autonomous Agent System for Negotiating Valued Information Exchange on the Web
(2000)
O'Neill, Larry
A Multiple Autonomous Agent System for Negotiating Valued Information Exchange on the Web
(2000)
O'Neill, Larry
Abstract:
The amount of detailed personal information being recorded electronically about individuals is growing rapidly. The increasing commercial pervasiveness of the Internet is a major factor in this growth. This information has a significant economic value yet it is only relatively recently that data subjects have begun to expect and receive some reward for the surrender and/or use of their information. It is considered likely that this trend will continue, producing a growing uneasiness over the erosion of personal privacy. In time, legislation or acceptable practice may oblige data users who wish to gather consumer information, to pay data subjects to provide that information. The mechanics and logistics of data subjects supplying their own information to data users necessitates an automated system to carry out the transactions. Any such system has to be able to cope with the widest variety possible of data formats and quantities. It should allow the data sellers to specify at a very f...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/750
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A murine model for cerebral toxocariasis: characterisation of host susceptibility and behaviour.
(2006)
STAFFORD, PETER; HOLLAND, CELIA
A murine model for cerebral toxocariasis: characterisation of host susceptibility and behaviour.
(2006)
STAFFORD, PETER; HOLLAND, CELIA
Abstract:
Toxocara canis, the parasitic roundworm of dogs, can infect a number of paratenic hosts, such as mice and humans, due to the widespread dissemination of its ova in the environment. In these paratenic hosts, larvae have been shown to exhibit a predilection for the central nervous system, resulting in an increasing number of parasites migrating to the brain as infection progresses. In an initial experiment, we investigated the differential brain involvement of T. canis in 7 strains of inbred mice, and chose 2 strains, susceptible (BALB/c) and resistant (NIH) to cerebral infection. In a second experiment, both strains were investigated in terms of course of migration, larval accumulation, and behavioural response to T. canis infection. Results revealed that infected BALB/c mice took significantly longer to drink from a water source (following a period of deprivation), compared with control mice, indicating some degree of memory impairment. Cerebral larval recoveries from both strains o...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/40171
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A New Approach for Analysing Income Convergence across Countries.
(2003)
O'Neill, Donal; Van Kerm, Philippe
A New Approach for Analysing Income Convergence across Countries.
(2003)
O'Neill, Donal; Van Kerm, Philippe
Abstract:
In this paper we develop a coherent framework that integrates both traditional measures of b-convergence and s-convergence within a study of cross-country income dynamics. To do this we exploit the close links that exist between studies of income mobility and studies analysing the progressivity of the tax system. We also develop a welfare interpretation for the concept of b-convergence, which distinguishes it from the more general form of s-convergence and which also suggests that the b-process may be worthy of independent study. We illustrate our approach using data for the period 1960-200
http://eprints.nuim.ie/114/
Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 1029 on page 1 of 42
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Institution
Dublin Institute of Technology (358)
NUI Galway (14)
NUI Maynooth (149)
Trinity College Dublin (424)
University College Cork (2)
University College Dublin (3)
University of Limerick (79)
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2012 (53)
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