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Hysteresis [PDF]

open access: possible, 2023
Three competing conceptualizations of hysteresis in economics are identified: the unit/zero root approach, “true” hysteresis, and hysteresis conceived as a product of historical time. The properties of these conceptualizations are discussed and their pros and cons considered.
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Pulmonary hysteresis

Journal of Applied Physiology, 1962
The pressure-volume (P-V) diagram of the human lung was recorded on three subjects at minute ventilation from 2.5 to 180 liters/min. The area included between the inspiratory and expiratory curve is the expression of the work necessary to overcome a) airway resistance to the flow, b) lung viscosity, and c) eventual pulmonary hysteresis.
G. Cavagna   +3 more
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Hysteresis

The Handbook of Economic Methodology is a major multidisciplinary reference work on the developing field of economic methodology.
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MULTIPURPOSE HYSTERESIS CNN

International Journal of Bifurcation and Chaos, 2004
In this paper, we propose a multipurpose hysteresis CNN (cellular neural network) made of first-order cells with hysteresis switches. The hysteresis CNN has applications not only in image processing, but also in pattern formation, nonlinear wave propagation and associative and dynamic memories, because each hysteresis CNN cell has two operating modes,
Itoh, Makoto, Chua, Leon O.
openaire   +2 more sources

Hysteresis in Unemployment [PDF]

open access: possible, 2009
Hysteresis is central to long-run unemployment movements in many countries. This essay addresses two broad issues. The first is whether there is clear evidence of hysteresis effects. To put it differently, can we reject the hypothesis that the NAIRU, and hence the long run behavior of unemployment, is independent of aggregate demand?
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Hysteresis and Emu

Metroeconomica, 2000
We consider how differences between the way firms react to a common monetary policy affect the performance of a monetary union. A model is presented in which heterogeneous firms respond discontinuously to monetary shocks. The implication is that the level of economic activity has a selective memory of the extremum values of the shocks experienced, and ...
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Thermal hysteresis proteins

The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology, 2001
Extreme environments present a wealth of biochemical adaptations. Thermal hysteresis proteins (THPs) have been found in vertebrates, invertebrates, plants, bacteria and fungi and are able to depress the freezing point of water (in the presence of ice crystals) in a non-colligative manner by binding to the surface of nascent ice crystals.
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