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Current Search:
All of 'Patrick' and 'Madden' in all fields;
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Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 74 on page 1 of 3
Marked
Mark
An exploration of the state and status of nature awareness, appreciation and education in the Irish primary school system
(2019)
MADDEN, PATRICK ANTHONY
An exploration of the state and status of nature awareness, appreciation and education in the Irish primary school system
(2019)
MADDEN, PATRICK ANTHONY
Abstract:
Abstract This research explores the state and status of nature awareness, appreciation and education in the Irish primary system. The research was undertaken because personal observation, anecdotal evidence, media reports and literature seem to indicate that children today are not engaging deeply with nature both at home or at school. This perceived lack of engagement is a cause of concern in a time of increasing biodiversity depletion and environmental degradation. The research design consists of a mixed methods approach in which (1) mainly quantitative methods are used (a) to elicit the views of 219 practising primary teachers based in schools in the counties of all four provinces on the question, (b) the nature-knowledge of 253 first year ITE students based on the content that sixth-class pupils would be expected to be familiar with, and (c), the status accorded to nature by inspectors in 220 primary schools situated across the country. (2) Qualitative methods are main...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/86162
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Mark
The Base of Party Political Support in Ireland: An Update
(2019)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
The Base of Party Political Support in Ireland: An Update
(2019)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
A recent paper by Madden used concentration indices to examine the bases of party support in Ireland in the 2011 election. This note updates this work to incorporate the 2016 election using the latest wave of ESS data. The results show that in terms of the bases of party supports many of the features of the “earthquake election” of 2011 remain, in particular the widely differing support bases for Fine Gael and Sinn Fein. Concentration indices with respect to income show little change from the 2011 election. However, there is some evidence that the support base for Fianna Fail in 2016 was older and less well-educated than in 2011, with the change in support base for Fine Gael over the same period a mirror image.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/10951
Marked
Mark
Development of acquired resistance to lapatinib may sensitise HER2-positive breast cancer cells to apoptosis induction by obatoclax and TRAIL.
(2018)
O'Driscoll, Lorraine; Eustace, Alex J.; Conlon, Neil T.; McDermott, Martina S.J.; ...
Development of acquired resistance to lapatinib may sensitise HER2-positive breast cancer cells to apoptosis induction by obatoclax and TRAIL.
(2018)
O'Driscoll, Lorraine; Eustace, Alex J.; Conlon, Neil T.; McDermott, Martina S.J.; Browne, Brigid C.; O'Leary, Patrick; Holmes, Frankie A.; Espina, Virginia; Liotta, Lance A.; O'Shaughnessy, Joyce; Gallagher, Clair; Rani, Sweta; Madden, Stephen F.; O'Brien, Neil A.; Ginther, Charles; Slamon, Dennis; Walsh, Naomi; Gallagher, William M.; Zagozdzon, Radoslaw; Watson, William R.
Abstract:
Background: Lapatinib has clinical efficacy in the treatment of trastuzumab-refractory HER2-positive breast cancer. However, a significant proportion of patients develop progressive disease due to acquired resistance to the drug. Induction of apoptotic cell death is a key mechanism of action of lapatinib in HER2-positive breast cancer cells. Methods: We examined alterations in regulation of the intrinsic and extrinsic apoptosis pathways in cell line models of acquired lapatinib resistance both in vitro and in patient samples from the NCT01485926 clinical trial, and investigated potential strategies to exploit alterations in apoptosis signalling to overcome lapatinib resistance in HER2-positive breast cancer. Results: In this study, we examined two cell lines models of acquired lapatinib resistance (SKBR3-L and HCC1954-L) and showed that lapatinib does not induce apoptosis in these cells. We identified alterations in members of the BCL-2 family of proteins, in particular MCL-1 and BA...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/91091
Marked
Mark
The Base of Party Political Support in Ireland: An Update
(2020)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
The Base of Party Political Support in Ireland: An Update
(2020)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
A recent paper by Madden used concentration indices to examine the bases of party support in Ireland in the 2011 election. This note updates this work to incorporate the 2016 election using the latest wave of ESS data. The results show that in terms of the bases of party supports many of the features of the “earthquake election” of 2011 remain, in particular the widely differing support bases for Fine Gael and Sinn Fein. Concentration indices with respect to income show little change from the 2011 election. However, there is some evidence that the support base for Fianna Fail in 2016 was older and less well-educated than in 2011, with the change in support base for Fine Gael over the same period a mirror image.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/11690
Marked
Mark
Highly selective trace ammonium removal from dairy wastewater streams by aluminosilicate materials
(2019)
O'Connor, Elaine; Kavanagh, Oisín N.; Chovan, Drahomir; Madden, David G.; Cronin, ...
Highly selective trace ammonium removal from dairy wastewater streams by aluminosilicate materials
(2019)
O'Connor, Elaine; Kavanagh, Oisín N.; Chovan, Drahomir; Madden, David G.; Cronin, Patrick; Albadarin, Ahmad B.; Walker, Gavin M.; Ryan, Alan
Abstract:
The full text of this article will not be available in ULIR until the embargo expires on the 28/10/2021
Water is a key solvent, fundamental to supporting life on earth. It is equally important in many industrial processes, particularly within agricultural and pharmaceutical industries, which are major drivers of the global economy. The results of water contamination by common activity in these industries is well known and EU Water Quality Directives and Associated Regulations mandate that NH4+ concentrations in effluent streams should not exceed 0.3 mg L−1, this has put immense pressure on organisations and individuals operating in these industries. As the environmental and financial costs associated with water purification begin to mount, there is a great need for novel processes and materials (particularly renewable) to transform the industry. Current solutions have evolved from combating toxic sludge to the use of membrane technology, but it is well known that the production ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8639
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The impact of an economic boom on the level and distribution of well-being : Ireland, 1994-2001
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
The impact of an economic boom on the level and distribution of well-being : Ireland, 1994-2001
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
The impact of increased affluence on life satisfaction is a matter of some controversy. This paper examines the impact of the recent economic boom in Ireland upon the level and distribution of various domains of well-being. There is evidence of a substantial increase in life satisfaction in the domain of finance and of an improvement in mental wellbeing. There is a reduction in inequality and polarisation for virtually all domains of life satisfaction. A social welfare function which is increasing and concave in individual well-being would show an improvement in social welfare over the period.
Not applicable
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/2650
Marked
Mark
Methods for studying dominance and inequality in population health
(2012)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Methods for studying dominance and inequality in population health
(2012)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
This paper reviews methods for studying dominance and inequality in health economics. It concentrates on “pure inequality” as opposed to inequality which is related to income or some other measure of household resources. The paper reviews methods for cases when health can be measured cardinally and ordinally. There is also a brief review of statistical inference in this area.
Not applicable
ti, ab - TS 28.02.12
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/3714
Marked
Mark
Gender differences in mental well-being : a decomposition analysis
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Gender differences in mental well-being : a decomposition analysis
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
The General Health Questionnaire (GHQ) is frequently used as a measure of mental well-being. A consistent pattern across countries is that women report lower levels of mental well-being, as measured by the GHQ. This paper applies decomposition techniques to Irish data for 1994 and 2000 to examine the factors lying behind the gender differences in GHQ score. For 1994 most of the difference is accounted for by characteristics while in 2000 most of the difference arises from returns to characteristics. The issue of path dependence, or choice of reference group, is shown to be important, mostly arising from the differing effect of principal economic status on men and women.
Irish Research Council for the Humanities and Social Sciences
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/765
Marked
Mark
The socioeconomic gradient of obesity in Ireland
(2011)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
The socioeconomic gradient of obesity in Ireland
(2011)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
Using the nationally representative Slan dataset we calculate concentration indices for the incidence of obesity for men and women. We finder higher concentration indices for women than for men, but we also find that concentration indices fell between 2002 and 2007. However this appears to be owing to an increased incidence of obesity amongst better off people rather than decreased obesity amongst the less well-off. A decomposition of the concentration indices suggest that the greatest contribution to the gradient comes from the combination of lower rates of obesity amongst those with 3rd level education and their higher income.
Not applicable
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/2699
Marked
Mark
The socioeconomic gradient of obesity in Ireland
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
The socioeconomic gradient of obesity in Ireland
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
Using the nationally representative Slan dataset we calculate concentration indices for the incidence of obesity for men and women. We finder higher concentration indices for women than for men, but we also find that concentration indices fell between 2002 and 2007. However this appears to be owing to an increased incidence of obesity amongst better off people rather than decreased obesity amongst the less well-off. A decomposition of the concentration indices suggest that the greatest contribution to the gradient comes from the combination of lower rates of obesity amongst those with 3rd level education and their higher income.
Not applicable
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/2662
Marked
Mark
A profile of obesity in Ireland, 2002-2007
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
A profile of obesity in Ireland, 2002-2007
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
Using the nationally representative Slan dataset we take a number of approaches to profile the change in obesity in Ireland over the 2002-2007 period. There is no evidence of either first or second order stochastic dominance between the two years. There is evidence that obesity and overweight are relatively more concentrated amongst males, the old and those with lower educational achievement. While obesity rose slightly over the period this was due to a rise in the average level of body mass index rather than a change in the shape of the distribution. Finally a semi-parametric decomposition of the change in the distribution over time indicates that the change in obesity arose not because of changes in population characteristics but rather the in the impact of these characteristics on body mass index.
Not applicable
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/2636
Marked
Mark
Distributional characteristics for Ireland : a note
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Distributional characteristics for Ireland : a note
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
The distributional characteristic is a measure which can be used in many applications in social cost-benefit analysis. In the application here, the distributional characteristics of a number of broad aggregates of goods are calculated for Ireland. These calculations can aid in assessing the distributional implications of price and tax changes.
Not applicable
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/2607
Marked
Mark
Omitted variables, dynamic specification and tests for homogeneity
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Omitted variables, dynamic specification and tests for homogeneity
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
This note examines the sensitivity of tests for homogeneity in demand systems to such factors as omitted variables and dynamic and stochastic specification. It estimates demand systems for Ireland using time-series data for different unconditional demand systems with differing dynamic and stochastic specification and also estimates a conditional demand system, thus attempting to reconcile disparate results from previous work in this area.
A hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UNI
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1756
Marked
Mark
How does unemployment affect direct and indirect tax reform?
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
How does unemployment affect direct and indirect tax reform?
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
This paper incorporates the stylised fact of labour market rationing into an analysis of marginal tax reform in Ireland. In the absence of weak separability between goods and leisure, labour market rationing will have both substitution and income effects. This paper estimates "matched pairs" of demands for Ireland and investigates the sensitivity of marginal tax reform recommendations to the presence of rationing, both with without weak separability between goods and leisure.
Foundation for Fiscal Studies
HCM Network on the Microeconometrics of Public Policy
A hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UNI
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1747
Marked
Mark
Labour supply, commodity demand and marginal tax reform
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Labour supply, commodity demand and marginal tax reform
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
This paper examines the implications of extending the Ahmad-Stern (1984) model of indirect tax reform to include labor supply. The inclusion of labor supply alters the basic measure of marginal revenue cost of indirect taxation and introduces the possibility of calculating a marginal revenue cost for direct taxation. The paper derives the expressions for these revised marginal revenue costs and provides estimates from Irish data. It then examines the sensitivity of the results to assumptions regarding functional form and, in particular, goods/leisure separability.
Foundation for Fiscal Studies
EC HCM Network
A hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UNI
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1742
Marked
Mark
Conditional demands and marginal tax reform
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Conditional demands and marginal tax reform
(2010)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
This paper examines Irish demand patterns using conditional demand functions. This overcomes the problems faced by traditional demand analysis which neglects the influence of labour supply and thus assumes weak separability. The conditional approach allows for more exact tests of weak separability using more flexible functional forms than is possible when estimating an unconditional commodity demand–labour supply model. The impact of the conditioned demand responses and the relaxation of weak separability on measures of marginal tax reform is examined.
Foundation for Fiscal Studies
HCM Network on the Microeconometrics of Public Policy Grant 930225
A hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UNI
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1741
Marked
Mark
An analysis of indirect tax reform in Ireland in the 1980s
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
An analysis of indirect tax reform in Ireland in the 1980s
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
This paper applies the Ahmad-Stern model of indirect tax reform to the Irish economy for two different years, 1980 and 1987. It introduces a modification to the traditional marginal social cost measure used in these studies, identify welfare-improving, revenue-neutral tax changes at the margin and examines their sensitivity to such issues as inequality aversion and consumer preferences. It also estimates the implied degree of inequality aversion for Ireland for these two years. Results suggest that the government's social welfare function, as implied by the indirect tax system, has become less inequality averse.
A hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UNI
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1729
Marked
Mark
Marginal tax reform and the specification of consumer demand systems
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Marginal tax reform and the specification of consumer demand systems
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
This paper examines the conjecture that tax reform recommendations are not as sensitive to underlying consumer demand systems as are derived optimal tax rates. Tax reform recommendations for Ireland using the Ahmad-Stern model of indirect tax reform with different underlying consumer demand systems are examined. They are found to exhibit little sensitivity to the underlying deterministic demand system, but they do display considerable sensitivity to dynamic specification. They also display sensitivity with regard to the imposition of the restrictions implied by utility maximisation, especially symmetry.
A hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UNI
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1707
Marked
Mark
A new set of consumer demand estimates for Ireland
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
A new set of consumer demand estimates for Ireland
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
This paper provides a new set of consumer demand estimates for Ireland, incorporating a variety of different consumer demand models. Own-price and expenditure elasticities are presented and tests of the propositions implied by utility-maximisation are carried out, including the use of small-sample corrections. The results obtained show reasonable agreement across the different deterministic models but stochastic specification appears to be of crucial importance both for plausibility of estimates obtained and for rejection or non-rejection implied by utility-maximisation.
Foundation for Fiscal Studies
A hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UNI
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1684
Marked
Mark
Can we infer external effects from a study of the Irish indirect tax system?
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Can we infer external effects from a study of the Irish indirect tax system?
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
A hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UNI
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1680
Marked
Mark
Results from a preliminary investigation into the reform of indirect taxation in Ireland
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Results from a preliminary investigation into the reform of indirect taxation in Ireland
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
A hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UNI
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1569
Marked
Mark
Poverty in Ireland, 1987-1994 : a stochastic dominance approach
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick); Smith, Fiona
Poverty in Ireland, 1987-1994 : a stochastic dominance approach
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick); Smith, Fiona
Abstract:
Poverty dominance analysis uses stochastic dominance to provide rankings of distributions in terms of poverty which are not sensitive to the choice of poverty line. This analysis is carried out for Ireland using Household Budget Survey data for 1987 and 1994 including tests for the statistical significance of the results. We find that for a wide range of absolute poverty lines, poverty in Ireland fell over the 1987-1994 period. When relative poverty lines are used, second-order dominance for 1987 over 1994 is found for the case of expenditure and third-order dominance for 1994 over 1987 for the case of income.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/780
Marked
Mark
Concentration curves, inequality and tax reform
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Concentration curves, inequality and tax reform
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Abstract:
This paper applies the concept of welfare dominance using concentration curves to household data for Ireland. It identifies marginal tax reforms which would be welfare-enhancing for all social welfare functions satisfying weak restrictions. It also examines cases where stronger restrictions need to be imposed on the social welfare function to yield dominance. These stronger restrictions which we label limited third degree stochastic dominance extends the range of welfare-enhancing marginal tax reforms.
A hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UNI
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/781
Marked
Mark
GP reimbursement and visiting behaviour in Ireland
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick); Nolan, Brian; Nolan, Anne
GP reimbursement and visiting behaviour in Ireland
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick); Nolan, Brian; Nolan, Anne
Abstract:
In Ireland, approximately 30 per cent of the population (“medical cardholders”) receive free GP services while the remainder (“non-medical cardholders”) must pay for each visit. In 1989, the manner in which GPs were reimbursed by the State for their medical cardholder patients was changed from fee-for-service to capitation while other patients continued to pay on a fee-for-service basis. Concerns about supplier-induced demand were in part responsible for this policy change. The purpose of this paper is to examine the extent to which the utilisation of GP services is influenced by the reimbursement system facing GPs, by comparing visiting rates for the two groups before and after this change. Using a difference-in-differences approach on pooled micro-data from 1987, 1995 and 2000, we find that medical card eligibility exerts a consistently positive and significant effect on the utilisation of GP services. However, the differential in visiting rates between medical cardholders and oth...
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/795
Marked
Mark
Can we infer external effects from a study of the Irish indirect tax system?
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
Can we infer external effects from a study of the Irish indirect tax system?
(2009)
Madden, David (David Patrick)
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/796
Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 74 on page 1 of 3
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