Results 111 to 120 of about 210 (161)
ABSTRACT Background Elder mistreatment is associated with adverse health outcomes and increased Emergency Department (ED) and hospital utilization patterns in the period surrounding initial mistreatment identification. Less is known about outpatient primary care utilization, but it has been hypothesized that elder mistreatment victims may use this care
Jiani Yu +12 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract We evaluate whether deposit insurance (DI) promotes liquidity by influencing depositor behavior. We use the postal savings (PS) system and state‐adopted DI schemes during the 1920s to examine the effect of bank suspensions on PS deposit growth in pairs of border cities (DI versus non‐DI).
Lee K. Davison, Carlos D. Ramirez
wiley +1 more source
Another Look at the (Ir)Relevance of Long‐Run Risks for Equity Risk Premia
Abstract I investigate the empirical asset pricing implications of a three‐factor macro model that extends the baseline consumption model Consumption Capital Asset Pricing Model (CCAPM) by adding the innovations in expected long‐run consumption growth (consumption growth news) and expected long‐run consumption variance (variance news) as risk factors ...
PAULO MAIO
wiley +1 more source
EU ETS Market Expectations and Rational Bubbles
Abstract The European Union Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) experienced sharp allowance price increases from 2018 onward, prompting claims that rational bubbles were driving the surge. We reassess this hypothesis using expectations based on futures prices.
CHRISTOPH WEGENER +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Prior studies in multiple sclerosis (MS) suggest preserved recognition of positive emotions despite deficits for negative ones, but this dissociation may reflect methodological limitations (valence‐asymmetry: positive‐valence being limited to happiness/joy in basic‐emotion sets). This study tested whether emotion–recognition deficits in MS are
Laurent Zikos +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Recent studies acknowledge that the contribution of female directors at the board may not be uniform but instead varies depending on their individual characteristics and board context. In this study we focus on a pivotal yet insufficiently explored facet of female directors – their affiliation with the business owning family – and assess its ...
Yuliya Ponomareva +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Existing research explains the trickle‐down of unethical leader behaviour in organizations primarily in terms of social learning and social exchange processes. We highlight a key limitation of these explanations and propose a novel, meaning‐based mechanism.
Marius van Dijke +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Employee savings in defined contribution plans: Evidence from age‐based policies in employer plans
Abstract Retirement saving is a critical form of self‐insurance at older ages, but ensuring that such savings are adequate remains a challenge in the United States. This is especially true for those who save through defined contribution (DC) plans, in which participants are responsible for setting both the amount and the investment strategy.
Brent J. Davis +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Sleep‐Related Attentional Bias in Insomnia: A Drift Diffusion Model Approach
ABSTRACT Cognitive models propose that insomnia is maintained in part by selective attention to sleep‐related information, yet reaction‐time indices alone offer limited mechanistic specificity. We investigated sleep‐related attentional bias in adolescents and young adults with insomnia disorder (n = 201; aged 15–24 years; DSM‐5) using a sleep‐related ...
Isla Tsz Kwan Hui +12 more
wiley +1 more source
Sparse Causal Dynamic Linear Regression
ABSTRACT We develop a sparse causal dynamic regression framework for long multivariate time series. With very long time series, the potentially large number of lags and leads in a dynamic regression model often makes time‐domain estimation numerically unstable or intractable.
Rui Huang, Kung‐Sik Chan
wiley +1 more source

