Comedic device; mistaken for that

Saturday, June 28th, 2008

A comedic device is used in comedy to write humor in a common structure. They can become so common that they are difficult for writers to use without being perceived as cheesy.

Contents


List of comedic devices


Double entendre

A double entendre is a spoken phrase can be understood in either of two ways. The first, literal meaning is an innocent one, while the second meaning is often ironic or risqué and requires the hearer to have some additional knowledge.


Hyperbole

A hyperbole is a figure of speech in which statements are exaggerated or extravagant. It may be used due to strong feelings or is used to create a strong impression and is not meant to be taken literally.


Mistaken identity

The mistaken identity of twins is a centuries old comedic device used by Shakespeare in several of his works. The mistake can be either an intended act of deception or an accident. Modern examples include The Parent Trap, The Trouble with Cats and Dogs, Sister, Sister and Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen.


Monocle

It is a popular perception that the monocle can easily fall off with the wrong facial expression. As a comedic device, an upper-class gentleman drops his monocle when he makes a shocked expression. The monocle falls into the gentleman’s drink, smashes into pieces on the floor, etc.


Prank call

A prank call is a form of practical joke committed over the telephone. Prank calls range from annoying hang-ups to false calls to emergency services or bomb threats.


Pun

A pun consists of a deliberate confusion of similar words or phrases for humorous effect, whether humorous or serious. A pun can rely on the assumed equivalency of multiple similar words (homonymy), of different shades of meaning of one word (polysemy), or of a literal meaning with a metaphor. Bad puns are often considered to be cheesy.


Slapstick

Slapstick is a type of comedy involving exaggerated physical violence. Slapstick was heavily used by Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin, Laurel and Hardy, the Keystone Kops, the Three Stooges. Slapstick is also common in animated cartoons such as Tom and Jerry and Looney Tunes.


See also

  • Joke
  • Practical joke device


External links

  • Classroom connections – describes mistaken twins as a comedic device
  • Comic Devices and Conventions – analysis of comedic devices used in The Swaggering Soldier

ATC code C; agents

Friday, June 27th, 2008

A section of the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification System.


C Cardiovascular system

C01 Cardiac therapy
C02 Antihypertensives
C03 Diuretics
C04 Peripheral vasodilators
C05 Vasoprotectives
C07 Beta blocking agents
C08 Calcium channel blockers
C09 Agents acting on the renin-angiotensin system
C10 Lipid modifying agents

Navy Broadway Complex; Formally

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

The Navy Broadway Complex is a bayside military facility located in downtown San Diego, California. It houses the primary offices of the Navy Region Southwest, and is closely tied to regional United States Coast Guard operations.

In the early 1900s, Pacific Fleet ships frequently docked in the San Diego harbor at what is now the intersection of Broadway and Harbor Dr. With all the necessary maritime facilities in place, the site became a supply depot. After the city of San Diego was formally chartered in 1922, a small pier was constructed and the first materials were moved into the Depot’s warehouse in February 1923. Subsequent modifications have been made to the depot sporadically through the late 20th century.

Today, the Global Advanced Traceability and Control (ATAC) and function is housed in the Navy Broadway Complex. Being on extremely valuable property, the government has attempted to finance a portion of operations with revenue from real estate developers seeking to originate housing and industrial units.

As of July 18th, 2005, the site faces an uncertain future. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has proposed adding the complex to the list of military bases facing closure or shrinkage. The move was formally approved by the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission. In so doing, however, committee chairman Anthony Principi added that this “does not necessarily mean that the base will be realigned or closed” but will subject the complex to further evaluation of its necessity.

Implementation shortfall; price level

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

In financial markets, Implementation Shortfall is the difference between the decision price and the final execution price (including commissions, taxes, etc.) for a trade. This is also known as the “slippage”. Agency trading is largely concerned with minimizing implementation shortfall and finding liquidity.


Decision Price

The decision price is the price of the stock that prompted the decision to buy or sell. The most common decision prices are the close price or the arrival price. If we split the decision to buy a stock from the actual trading of the stock, as is often the case with fund managers (decision makers) and brokers (trade executors), you can see why both are used.

From the fund manager’s point of view, their decision to trade is often based on the closing price of the day’s trading (along with the entire history of the stock and other signals/indicators). When they decide to buy a particular stock the next day, it is because they believe that the price will go up from that closing price. Thus their decision price is the close price.

However the broker, unless they are explicitly told what levels to buy at or what prompted the desire to buy, does not know when or why the decision was made. Their best guess is that the current price at the time the order is received is what prompted the decision and thus their decision price is the arrival price. There is no common definition of this price, but the broker normally uses the last traded price or the “mid price” - equal to the average of the current bid and ask prices being quoted at the time the order was received.


See also

  • Algorithmic Trading
  • Algorithmic Trading Platforms
  • Market Impact


External links

  • RiskGlossary on Transaction Costs

FileMan; of utilities

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

FileMan is a set of utilities written by George Timson in the late 1970s and early 1980s, using MUMPS, which provide a meta-data function for MUMPS applications. The FileMan utilities allow the definition of data structures, menus and security, reports, and forms, allowing someone to set up applications without tremendous experience in the MUMPS programming language.

Its first use was in the development of medical applications for the Veterans Administration, now called the Department of Veterans Affairs, a branch of the United States Government.
Since it was a work created by the US federal government, a copyright cannot be placed on the source code, making the source code in the public domain. Because of this, it has been used for rapid development of applications across a number of organizations, including commercial products.

FileMan may be used standalone, or may be used with the VA Kernel, which provides an operating system neutral environment for applications.

Polyconomics; In economics

Sunday, June 22nd, 2008

Polyconomics was a private company founded in 1978 by Jude Wanniski. Based in Parsippany, New Jersey, USA, Polyconomics offered financial advice based on the principles of supply-side economics. The company ceased operations on June 30, 2006.


External link

  • Polyconomics website

Carucate; is analogous

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

The carucate was a unit of assessment for tax found in most of the Danelaw counties of England. The word derives from caruca, Latin for a plough. It is analogous to the hide, the measurement of land for tax assessment used outside the Danelaw counties.

In the Domesday Book the carucate was nominaly 120 acres (490,000 m²), based on the area a plough team of eight oxen could till in a year. A carucate was sub-divided into bovates and these were based on the area a single oxen could till in a year, they were therefore one eighth of a carucate.

The tax levied on each “carucate” of land came to be known as “carucage”.


See also

  • Feudal measurement

Trifascicular block; preferred bundle

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Trifascicular block is a problem with the electrical conduction of the heart. It is diagnosed on an electrocardiogram (ECG/EKG) and has three features:

  • prolongation of the PR interval (first degree AV block)
  • right bundle branch block
  • either left anterior fascicular block or left posterior fascicular block

Alternatively, trifascicular block is suggested by alternating right bundle branch block and left bundle branch block.

Contents


Differential diagnosis

Trifascicular block is important to diagnose because it is difficult to tell based on the surface ECG whether the prolonged PR interval is due to disease in the AV node or due to diffuse distal conduction system disease.

  • In the former case, if the block at the AV node level becomes complete, the escape rhythm will originate from the bundle of His, which typically will generate heart rates in the 40s, allowing the individual to survive and complain of symptoms of fatigue or near-syncope to their physician.
  • In the later case, however, because the conduction system disease is diffuse in nature, the escape rhythm may be fascicular or ventricular, which may be at rates that are life-threateningly low.


Diagnosis

The diagnosis of whether the PR prolongation is due to AV nodal disease or diffuse conduction system disease is typically made by an electrophysiologic study of the conduction system. In an electrophysiologic study, trifascicular block due to AV nodal disease is represented by a prolonged AH interval (denoting prolonged time from impulse generation in the atria and conduction to the bundle of His) with a relatively preserved HV interval (denoting normal conduction from the bundle of His to the ventricles). Trifascicular block due to distal conduction system disease is represented by a normal AH interval and a prolonged HV interval.


Treatment

The treatment for diffuse distal conduction system disease is insertion of a pacemaker. If the PR prolongation is due to AV nodal disease, a case may be made for observation, as it may never progress to complete heart block with life threateningly low heart rates.

Regardless of where in the conduction system the block is, if the block is believed to be the cause of syncope in an individual, a pacemaker is an appropriate treatment.


References


External links

  • http://library.med.utah.edu/kw/ecg/mml/ecg_0293_mod.html
  • http://www.ecglibrary.com/trifas.html


See also

  • Bifascicular block

Orchidales; by Bentham to distinguish

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Orchidales is a botanical name of an order of flowering plants. In taxonomical systems, this is a relatively recent name, as early systems used descriptive botanical names for the order containing the orchids. The Bentham & Hooker and the Engler systems had the orchids in order Microspermae while the Wettstein system treats them as order Gynandrae. Circumscription of the order will vary with the taxonomic system being used. Although mostly the order will consist of the orchids only (usually in one family only, but sometimes divided into more families, as in the Dahlgren system, see below), sometimes other families are added:

Contents


Circumscription in the Takhtajan system

Takhtajan system:

  • order Orchidales

    family Orchidaceae


Circumscription in the Cronquist system

Cronquist system (1981):

  • order Orchidales

    family Geosiridaceae
    family Burmanniaceae
    family Corsiaceae
    family Orchidaceae


Circumscription in the Dahlgren system

Dahlgren system:

  • order Orchidales

    family Neuwiediaceae
    family Apostasiaceae
    family Cypripediaceae
    family Orchidaceae


Circumscription in the Thorne system

Thorne system (1992):

  • order Orchidales

    family Orchidaceae


APG system

The order is not recognized in the APG II system, which assigns the orchids to order Asparagales.


See also

  • Taxonomy of the orchid family

Venlo Incident; those agents that can

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

The Venlo Incident in 1939 was a Gestapo-engineered capture of two British SIS agents in the early months of World War II, on November 9, 1939.

British agents had met supposed German officers who said that they were plotting against Hitler in the town of Venlo, The Netherlands, 8 km from the border of Germany. German agents who adopted the guise of refugees in the Netherlands, but actually worked for Gestapo, arranged the meeting. One of them was named Walter Schellenberg. Their intent was to gather more information about British intelligence methods and pass false information to them.

SIS had assigned two agents, Captain Sigismund Payne Best and Major Richard H. Stevens to the case. They met three officers, including “Major Schaemmle” (Walter Schellenberg) in The Netherlands. “Schaemmle” claimed the German high command was concerned about high losses suffered during the campaign in Poland and intended to have Hitler arrested.

Heinrich Himmler, however, ordered the British spies captured. On the night of November 8-9, 1939 German agents including Alfred Naujocks crossed into Netherlands. They were to meet with British agents in a café in Venlo. The British had been promised that they were to meet the general who was the leader of the plotters and Best and Stevens took with them Dutch intelligence officer Dirk Klop.

When Best and the others arrived, the Germans stopped their car with machine-gun fire, killed Klop and forcibly dragged the British along with Klop’s body over the border to Germany.

Stevens had a list of British agents with him when they were captured. The agents were forced to reveal more under interrogation in Düsseldorf. With this information the Gestapo was able to arrest British agents in occupied territories, especially Czechoslovakia. They also obtained information about SIS organization and collected a list of SIS officers to be arrested when Britain was invaded.

This incident also subsequently made the British very suspicious of any approach from any kind of professed German anti-Hitler resistance. Hitler used it as an excuse to claim that The Netherlands was involved with Britain and had violated its own neutrality.

Best and Stevens remained imprisoned until the end of the war.

The article suggest that the Gestapo officers and British and Dutch agents actually travelled
8km across the border into the town Venlo. The incident actually happened right across the border in a rural area in front of a cafe (”Cafe Backus”) located there. This in clear sight of the border. The shooting and subsequent dragging/driving across was a result of surpise and swift action.

The Venlo Incident is used by William Boyd in his 2006 book, “Restless”. Venlo and Klop are renamed, respectively, Prenslo and Lt. Joos. The two SIS officers are not named. Café Backus is named.


References

  • Best, S. Payne (1950), The Venlo Incident

Klipper; utility;

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

Klipper is a clipboard utility for the KDE interface. It allows users of Unix-like operating systems running the KDE desktop environment to access a history of X Selections, any item of which can be reselected for pasting.


Similar Software

  • Glipper
  • Clipman
  • Desktop Data Manager


See also

  • X Window selection

Seal of Northampton County, Virginia; represents a

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

The seal of Northampton County, Virginia was developed to reflect the county’s history, its traditional way of life and its ties to the marine environment.

The gold rope which borders the seal represents the county’s bond to the sea and its geographic location between the Atlantic Ocean and the Chesapeake Bay. The four panels represent the county’s economy (in agriculture and fisheries), life-style (coastal) and the community’s relationship with the environment (depicted by the crabs, fish and geese).

The three dates in the inner circle represent:

  • The first recorded English landing in 1603 by Bartholomew Gilbert.
  • The first permanent English settlement in 1620.
  • Recognition as an original shire of the colony governed by England in 1634.

The black stems separating the gold band signifies points of the compass and the county’s nautical history. The blue field surrounding the map represents clear skies and calm seas. The gold band depicts the county as a “unique area; precious and rare.” Northampton County, shown in white, represents sunlight and a desire to do well.

Road cycling; sources of utility for

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Road cycling is the most widespread and popular form of bicycle riding. It takes place primarily on paved surfaces. It includes recreational, racing, and utility cycling. Experienced road cyclists generally obey the same rules and laws as other vehicle drivers and are often referred to as vehicular cyclists.

In the context of utility cycling, road cycling fulfils various purposes including commuting and also general transport for work, e.g., bicycle messengering and leisure. There are many types of bikes that are used on the roads, from BMX bikes through to high end road bikes with the Road bicycle being the most common type.

Bikes are usually made from one of four different materials (or a combination of two or more of these materials). These are steel, aluminium, titanium, and carbon fiber. Throughout the world the most commonly used material is steel as it is relatively cheap, strong and is much easier to repair than the other materials that can be used.


See also

  • Bicycle touring
  • Cycling
  • Cyclosportive
  • Road bicycle racing
  • Utility cycling
  • Vehicular cycling

Survival function; function for consumers

Monday, June 9th, 2008

The survival function, also known as a survivor function or reliability function, is a property of any random variable that maps a set of events, usually associated with mortality or failure of some system, onto time. It captures the probability that the system will survive beyond a specified time. The term reliability function is common in engineering while the term survival function is used in a broader range of applications, including human mortality.


Definition

Let X be a continuous random variable with cumulative distribution function F(t) on the interval [0,∞). Its survival-, or reliability-function is:

<math>R(t) = P(\{T > t\}) = \int_t^{\infty} f(u)\,du = 1-F(t).</math>


Properties

Every survival function R(t) is monotone decreasing, i.e. <math>R(u) < R(t)</math> for <math>u > t</math>

The time, t = 0, represents some origin, typically the beginning of a study or the start of operation of some system. R(0) is commonly unity but can be less to represent the probability that the system fails immediately upon operation.


See also

  • Survival analysis
  • Failure rate
  • Cumulative hazard function
  • Mean time to failure
  • Mean residual life

Aéropostale; Formally the

Saturday, June 7th, 2008
  • Aéropostale (clothing), an apparel retailer based in the United States for teen males and females. Aeropostale is based on the aviation/vintage look.
  • Aéropostale (aviation), formally la Compagnie générale aéropostale, a defunct French airmail company after which the clothing company took its name.

PithHelmet; for utility being

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

PithHelmet is an ad-blocking utility for the Apple Safari web browser.


History

PithHelmet began in January 2003 as one user’s utility to filter content in Safari and has since become a popular utility for other users of Apple’s web browser.

As of July 2007 PithHelmet’s most recent version is 2.7-78, a beta designed to work with the Safari 3 beta. The most recent official release is 2.6.7 from June 2006.


External link

  • PithHelmet

Editions of You; pleasure remains

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

“Editions of You” is the fourth song from Roxy Music’s second album, For Your Pleasure. It’s an uplifting song, with multiple solos. It was B-side for the single release “Do the Strand”.


Musicians

  • Andy MacKay: Oboe And Saxophone
  • Bryan Ferry: Voice And Keyboards
  • Brian Eno: Synthesizer And Tapes
  • Paul Thompson: Drums
  • Phil Manzanera: Guitar
  • John Porter (Guest Artist): Bass

Good (economics and accounting); a consumer’s

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

A good or commodity in economics is any object or service that increases utility, directly or indirectly, not to be confused with good in a moral or ethical sense (see Utilitarianism and consequentialist ethical theory). A good that cannot be used by consumers directly, such as an office building or capital equipment, can also be referred to as a good as an indirect source of utility through resale value or as a source of income. A ‘good’ in economic usage does not imply moral acceptance or even legality.

If an object or service is sold for a positive price, then it is a good since the purchaser considers the utility of the object or service more valuable than the money.Some things are useful but not scarce such as air and are referred to as free goods.

In macroeconomics and accounting, a good is contrasted with a service. A good here is defined as a physical (tangible) product capable of being delivered to a purchaser and involves the transfer of ownership from seller to customer, as opposed to an (intangible) service. A more general term that preserves the distinction between goods and services is ‘commodities’. In microeconomics a ‘good’ is often used in this more inclusive sense of a commodity.

Contents


Utility characteristics of goods

A good is an object whose consumption increases the utility of the consumer, for which the quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied at zero price. Goods are usually modeled as having decreasing marginal utility. The first car an individual purchases is very valuable; the fourth is much less useful. Thus, in these and similar goods, the marginal utility of additional units approaches zero as the quantity consumed increases. Assuming that one cannot re-sell it, there is a point at which a consumer would decline to purchase an additional car, even at a price very near zero. This is the consumer’s satiation point.

In some cases, such as the above example of a car, the lower limit of utility as quantity increases is zero. In other goods, the utility of a good can cross zero, changing from positive to negative through time. This means that what initially is a good can become a bad if too much of it is consumed. For example, shots of vodka can have positive utility, but beyond some point, additional units make the consumer less happy, that is, they would not be chosen.

In economics a bad is the opposite of a good. Ultimately, whether an object is a good or a bad depends on each individual consumer, and therefore, it is important to realize that not all goods are good all the time, and not all goods are goods to all people.


Types of goods

Goods can be defined in a variety of ways, depending on a number a characteristics, these are listed in the table below;


See also

  • List of economics topics
  • Economic Problem
  • Freight
  • Cargo
  • Shopping


References

  • Bannock, Graham et al. (1997). Dictionary of Economics, Penguin Books.
  • Milgate, Murray (1987), “goods and commodities,” The , v. 2, pp. 546-48. Includes historical and contemporary uses of the terms in economics.

Completeness (statistics); of ‘expectation

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008

In statistics, completeness is a property of a statistic for which the statistic optimally obtains information about the unknown parameters characterizing the distribution of the underlying data.

It is closely related to statistical sufficiency and often occurs in conjunction with it.

Contents


Mathematical definition

Suppose a random variable X (which may be a sequence (X1, …, Xn) of scalar-valued random variables), has a probability distribution belonging to a known family of probability distributions Pθ parametrized by θ. Let s(X) be any statistic based on X.

Then s(X) is a complete statistic if and only if

E(g(s(X))) = 0 for all θ <math>\Rightarrow</math> g = 0 almost everywhere

and is boundedly complete if the implication holds for all bounded g.


Completeness of the family

It is not guaranteed that for a particular family of probabilities, a complete statistic will always exist. In contrast, a minimal sufficient statistic always exists.

In particular, if a complete statistic exists, then a statistic is complete if and only if it is minimal sufficient. Taking this fact into account, the family Pθ of distributions is called complete if and only if its minimal sufficient statistic is complete.


Heuristic interpretation

A complete statistic is similar to a sufficient statistic in that they both efficiently capture information about the parameter θ. Whereas a sufficient statistic captures as much information as possible from the data about θ, a complete statistic captures no additional information from the data which is not related to θ.


Examples


Sum of normals

Suppose (X1, X2) are independent, identically distributed random variables, normally distributed with expectation θ and variance 1.
The sum

<math>s((X_1,\ X_2)) = X_1 + X_2\,\!</math>

is a complete statistic. To show this one demonstrates that there is no non-zero function <math>g</math> such that the expectation of

<math>g(s(X_1,\ X_2)) = g(X_1+X_2)\,\!</math>

remains zero regardless of the value of θ.

That fact may be seen as follows. The probability distribution of X1 + X2 is normal with expectation 2θ and variance 2. Its probability density function in <math>x</math> is therefore proportional to

<math>\exp\left(-(x-2\theta)^2/4\right).</math>

The expectation of g above would therefore be a constant times

<math>\int_{-\infty}^\infty g(x)\exp\left(-(x-2\theta)^2/4\right)\,dx.</math>

A bit of algebra reduces this to

<math>k(\theta) \int_{-\infty}^\infty h(x)e^{x\theta}\,dx\,\!</math>

where k(θ) is nowhere zero and

<math>h(x)=g(x)e^{-x^2/4}.\,\!</math>

As a function of θ this is a two-sided Laplace transform of h(X), and cannot be identically zero unless h(x) is zero almost everywhere. The exponential is not zero, so this can only happen if g(x) is zero almost everywhere.


Counterexample 1

Again suppose (X1, X2) are independent, identically distributed random variables, normally distributed with expectation θ and variance 1.

Then

<math>g((X_1,\ X_2)) = X_1 - X_2\,\!</math>

is an unbiased estimator of zero. Therefore the pair (X1, X2) itself is not a complete statistic (though it is a sufficient statistic).


Counterexample 2

Let U follow Uniform[-½,½]. Let X = U + θ, so that the distribution of X is parametrized by the mean θ = E(X).

Then if g(x) = sin(2πx), then E(g(X)) = 0 irrespective of θ. Therefore X itself is not a complete statistic for θ.


Utility


Lehmann-Scheffé theorem

The major importance of completeness is in the application of the Lehmann-Scheffé theorem,
which states that a statistic that is unbiased, complete and sufficient for some parameter θ is the best estimator for θ, i.e., the one that has a smaller expected loss for any convex loss function (in typical practice, a smaller mean squared error) among any estimators with the same expected value.


Basu’s theorem

Completeness is also a prerequisite for the applicability of Basu’s theorem: A statistic which is both complete and sufficient is independent of any ancillary statistic (one independent of the parameters θ).

Non-commercial; profit function

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008

A non-commercial enterprise is work that values other considerations above and beyond that of making a profit. It differs from a non-profit enterprise in that seeking a profit is a part of their business, just not the main part. A typical example is art that is being sold, but where the artist has strict rules about what they will and will not do. These rules significantly decrease profits (sometimes creating losses), but allow the artist to retain his artistic integrity.

What about Restaurant Industries?


See also

  • Non-profit
  • Creative Commons
  • Creative Commons license

Marc Johnson; desires and

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008
For other uses, see Mark Johnson.

Marc Johnson, born in Omaha, Nebraska on 21 October 1953, is an American jazz bassist, composer and bandleader.

Schooled at University of North Texas along with Lyle Mays, Johnson toured with Woody Herman’s Thundering Herd in the late 1970s. After a year, the 25-year old Johnson was hired by Bill Evans in 1978, and remained in Evans’s trio until the pianist’s death in 1980.

Johnson’s first record under his own name for ECM, recorded in 1985, was Bass Desires, with Bill Frisell and John Scofield on guitar, and Peter Erskine on drums. The follow up in 1987, entitled Second Sight, included the ballad “Hymn for Her”, dedicated to the memory of Johnson’s sister, Terese. The Sound Of Summer Running was released in 1998 and featured Bill Frisell, Joey Baron, and Pat Metheny.

Johnson has played extensively with John Abercrombie, Peter Erskine, Eliane Elias (to whom he is married) and Enrico Pieranunzi. His latest (2005) recording for ECM, entitled Shades of Jade, includes Joe Lovano on saxophone. Elias contributed several compositions to the CD, including the ballad, “Apareceu”.


References

Philippe Carles, André Clergeat, and Jean-Louis Comolli, Dictionnaire du jazz, Paris, 1994.


External links

  • European Jazz Network article

Jeokjinpo Battle; can only pursue

Monday, June 2nd, 2008

After the Battle of Happo, further reports of an additional 13 Japanese ships prevented Yi Sun-shin and his fleet from resting long on the morning of May 8th. Admiral Yi once again ordered his fleet to pursue the Japanese in the direction of Chinhae. The Korean forces caught up with the Japanese ships at Jeokjinpo, but the Japanese officers and crew abandoned their ships and fled into the mountains before the Koreans could fire upon them. The Koreans easily sunk the 13 abandoned Japanese warships.

Willow River (Kettle River); rises at

Sunday, June 1st, 2008

The Willow River is a short tributary of the Kettle River in eastern Minnesota in the United States. It is one of three rivers by that name in Minnesota. Via the Kettle and St. Croix Rivers, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River.

The Willow River flows for its entire length in northern Pine County. It rises in the Nemadji State Forest in Nickerson Township and flows generally westwardly through Kerrick, Windemere, Norman and Kettle River Townships, past Duquette. In Windemere Township it collects the Little Willow River, which rises at the town of Kerrick and flows through Bruno and Norman Townships. The Willow joins the Kettle River at the town of Willow River.


See also

  • List of Minnesota rivers

Etugen; rather sources of

Sunday, June 1st, 2008

A Mongolian earth goddess. Also known as Itugen. Etugen was believed to be perpetually virginal. Her name originates from Otuken, the holy mountain of the earth goddess of the ancient Turks. Medieval sources sometimes pair Etugen with a male counterpart named Natigai. Although this is probably a mistake based on a mispronunciation of Etugen. In Mongol mythology Etugen is often represented as a young woman riding a grey bull.


Sources

  • Encyclopedia Mythica

Higher Education Act; which provide a higher

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

The Higher Education Act may refer to an Act of either the Congress of the United States or of the Parliament of the United Kingdom.

  • The Higher Education Act of 1965, an Act of the Congress of the United States which was supposed to strengthen the resources of colleges and universities, and to provide financial aid to students. The 2007 extention which has been passed by the Congress, contains provisons giving each public defender and state’s attorney in America a $60,000.00 break on their student loans regardless of their income. On average these attorneys earn $80,000 and many earn over $100,000.00.
  • The Higher Education Act 2004, an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which introduced several changes to the higher education system.

PR (complexity); This function

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

PR is the complexity class of all primitive recursive functions – or, equivalently, the set of all formal languages that can be decided by such a function. This includes addition, multiplication, exponentiation, tetration, etc.

The Ackermann function is an example of a function that is not primitive recursive, showing that PR is strictly contained in R.

PR functions can be explicitly enumerated, whereas functions in R cannot be (since otherwise the halting problem would be decidable). That is, PR is a “syntactic” class whereas R is “semantic.”

On the other hand, we can “enumerate” any recursively enumerable set (see also its complexity class RE) by a primitive-recursive function in the following sense: given an input (M, k), where M is a Turing machine and k is an integer, if M halts within k steps then output M; otherwise output nothing. Then the union of the outputs, over all possible inputs (M, k), is exactly the set of M that halt.

PR strictly contains ELEMENTARY.


See also

  • Primitive recursive function

Seva; imply

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

Seva is a word meaning string in Sanskrit. It may imply the connectedness of all things.

Seva may also refer to:

  • Volunteer work; selfless service; work offered to God (in Hinduism and Sikihism, and Sant Mat)
  • Seva, in Indian cuisine, a snack food made by deep-frying strands of chick pea flour dough flavored with chili powder, salt, and sometimes coriander
  • The Seva Foundation, a non-profit foundation that fights blindness and poverty
  • Seva, Barcelona, a municipality in the comarca of Osona, Catalonia, Spain
  • Sevas Educational Society, an organization in Andhra Pradesh, India, that helps in development of villages.


See also

  • Ceva (disambiguation)

Price guide; than prices.

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

A price guide is a book or online site that attempts to deliver accurate and concise valuation information for a good. Many industries and hobbies rely heavily on independent pricing sources when evaluating an item to sell or to purchase. This is most prevalent in the automobile industry and in the world of collectibles such as baseball cards, coins, comics, or stamps. Not only do vendors rely on these guides when determining at what price they should list an item for sale, but interested parties look at price guides when shopping.

In the past, price guides were created by field experts utilizing dealer prices, auction prices (when applicable), and expert opinion(s). Hobby price guides in the Numismatic and Sports Memorabilia arenas have traditionally been print based. Several companies have been particularly strong in this market. As the internet continues to become more and more powerful, so to are the price guides available. Online price guides utilizing actual prices have sprung up in recent years. These guides thrive on actual sales data and other relationships with major auction venues to provide the user with accurate figures.

Plectrurus perroteti; mistaken for that of

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

Perrotet’s Shieldtail snake (Plectrurus perroteti) is a harmless snake found mainly in India. It is a small snake, growing to a maximum of 44 cm in length with a pointed head and blunt tail. It has smooth, glossy scales and is brown in colour. It belongs to the snake family Uropeltidae which is restricted to southern India and Sri Lanka.

Like the Common Worm Snake, these snakes are often mistaken for earthworms. It is seen in the Western Ghats and feed on earthworms. It is considered an endangered species and little else is known about this snake.

Projects in the Jungle; allow for long-term projects

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Projects in the Jungle is a glam metal album by heavy metal band Pantera, released in 1984 (see 1984 in music). The title track’s musical style is a foreshadowing of what was to come a few years later, as it features a thrashy guitar riff with more “Groove” like breakdowns.


Track listing

  • All tracks by Pantera.
  1. “All Over Tonight” – 3:36
  2. “Out for Blood” – 3:09
  3. “Blue Light Turnin’ Red” – 1:38
  4. “Like Fire” – 4:01
  5. “In Over My Head” – 3:58
  6. “Projects in the Jungle” – 3:05
  7. “Heavy Metal Rules” – 4:18
  8. “Only a Heartbeat Away” – 4:01
  9. “Killers” – 3:30
  10. “Takin’ My Life” – 4:31


Credits

  • Terry Glaze – Vocals
  • Diamond Darrell (credited as Darrell Abbott) – Guitar
  • Vinnie Paul (credited as Vince Abbott) – Drums
  • Rex Brown (credited as Rexx Rocker) – Bass

Klipper; utility’ must not

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Klipper is a clipboard utility for the KDE interface. It allows users of Unix-like operating systems running the KDE desktop environment to access a history of X Selections, any item of which can be reselected for pasting.


Similar Software

  • Glipper
  • Clipman
  • Desktop Data Manager


See also

  • X Window selection

Compilation; available bundle

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

Compilation may refer to:

  • Compilation (programming), translation of source code into object code by a compiler
  • Compilation, in accountancy, the presentation of information in the form of financial statements that are the representation of management, without expressing any opinion or assurance regarding them
  • Compilation, a record album or CD consisting of thematically related musical tracks
  • Anthology, a collection of short works, most often poetry or short stories
  • Compilation (games), a video game bundle.

Gebrauchsmuster; the utility

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

In German and Austrian patent laws, the Gebrauchsmuster (GBM, GbM or Gbm), also known as German utility model or Austrian utility model, is a patent-like, intellectual property right protecting inventions.

The Gebrauchsmuster is slightly different from the patent. It mainly differs from the patent in that processes and methods cannot be protected by a Gebrauchsmuster, only products can. Furthermore, the term of a Gebrauchsmuster, that is its maximal life time, is 10 years from the date of registration. In contrast, a patent has usually a term of 20 years from the date of filing of the application.

Contents


Germany

The German utility model has some interesting characteristics, when compared to the German patent or to the European patent designating Germany:

  • Prior art considered for examining novelty and inventive step is somewhat more limited:

    • Oral disclosures are not taken into account, only written disclosures are taken into account;
    • Public prior use outside Germany is not taken into account;
    • A six-month grace period before the priority date is provided for written disclosures or prior public use made by applicants or their predecessors in title.
  • They are not substantially examined. Only registration is sufficient to obtain a utility model.

German utility models are however made available to the public directly when they are registered (Eintragungstag), i.e. before the publication date (Bekanntmachung). In contrast, patents are made available to the public 18 months after the filing date, unless the applicant requests early publication.


Austria

The Austrian utility model is similar to the German utility model. The main differences are:

  • A search report is carried out within 6 to 8 months. No additional searching fee is required.
  • The range of protection is broader than the German utility model. There is additional protection for:
    • Logic algorithm for computer software
    • Processes
    • Therapy methods for animals


See also

  • Deutsches Patent- und Markenamt (German Patent and Trade Mark Office)
  • Geschmacksmuster (German industrial design right)
  • Österreichisches Patentamt (Austrian Patent and Trade Mark Office)


External links

  • Utility model, basic principles, in the English section of the Austrian Patent Office web site

Share price; prices.

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

In economics and financial theory, analysts use random walk techniques to model behavior of asset prices, in particular share prices on stock markets, currency exchange rates and commodity prices. This practice has its basis in the presumption that investors act rationally and without bias, and that at any moment they estimate the value of an asset based on future expectations. Under these conditions, all existing information affects the price, which changes only when new information comes out. By definition, new information appears randomly and influences the asset price randomly.

Empirical studies have demonstrated that prices do not completely follow random walks. Low serial correlations (around 0.05) exist in the short term, and slightly stronger correlations over the longer term. Their sign and the strength depend on a variety of factors.

Researchers have found that some of the biggest price deviations from random walks result from seasonal and temporal patterns. In particular, returns in January significantly exceed those in other months (January effect) and on Mondays stock prices go down more than on any other day. Observers have noted these effects in many different markets for more than half a century, but without succeeding in giving a completely satisfactory explanation for their persistence.

Technical analysis uses most of the anomalies to extract information on future price movements from historical data. But some economists, for example Eugene Fama, argue that most of these patterns occur accidentally, rather than as a result of irrational or inefficient behavior of investors: the huge amount of data available to researchers for analysis allegedly causes the fluctuations.

Another school of thought, behavioral finance, attributes non-randomness to investors’ cognitive and emotional biases.

Consumers Distributing; consumers usually

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

Consumers Distributing was a catalogue store in Canada and the United States that operated from 1957 to 1997. At its peak, it operated 217 outlets, including almost 90 stores in Boston, New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. Its US corporate headquarters was 200 Metroplex Drive in Edison, NJ. At least four stores were operated in the United States, one in Stamford, CT, one in East Meadow, New York, Ramsey, NJ and one in Bayside, NY. These stores are now (2007) a Staples, CVS and Eckerd respectively. Other US stores were located in California, but most of the western operations had been divested by 1986 including the Sparks, Nevada warehouse.

The first Consumers Distributing store was opened in 1957 by Jack Stupp in Toronto.

Consumers Distributing aimed to reduce costs for customers by storing goods in an inexpensive warehouse, instead of displaying them in a costly showroom. Customers made their selections from a catalogue, filled out a slip with product identification, and waited for staff to retrieve the items from the warehouse.

The company was taken public in 1969, but later sold to Provigo, a Quebec-based grocery retailer.

Hudson’s Bay Company, which operates Canadian department stores under the Bay and Zellers names, opened the “Shop-Rite” catalogue chain in competition. It was closed in 1982. US competition was Best Products (also known simply as Best) a now defunct chain of American catalog showroom retail stores, formerly headquartered in Richmond, Virginia.

Consumers sought bankruptcy protection in 1996 after an aggressive expansion strategy failed to make the company sustainable. Sales had dropped from $1.8 billion in 1988 to $580 million in 1995. Consumers Distributing was plagued by products being frequently out of stock, and by new warehouse format stores that allowed customers to retrieve products themselves. A similar format store in the United States, Service Merchandise, had also failed at nearly the same time.

Consumers Distributing was plagued more by the perception of things “always being out of stock” due to the catalogue shopping nature of the store. In a store like Wal-Mart, customers seeking a particular product go to the store to shop. With the catalogue concept, the customer selects the item either at home while looking through the company’s catalogue, or by a group of catalogues in the front of every store. Once the customer picks out the merchandise that he or she wants, the customer then goes to the counter where the clerk then goes to retrieve it off the warehouse shelves. It was not uncommon for a customer to wait on line only to be told by a clerk that the merchandise was not in stock. Consumers did not have a computerized inventory until the late 1980s, which meant that the company was not able to track what merchandise was in the stores or what merchandise was wanted by customers.

When a product is out of stock, or unavailable from the manufacturer, this creates an “out of stock” problem for a catalogue store, which it does not create for a store who displays their in-stock items. When a customer goes to Wal-mart, they see that they have 10 different products in stock. At Consumers, the customer chose one item, which may not have been in stock. They did not see that there were 15 other similar items that are in stock.

Consumers initiated several initiatives to dispel this “out of stock” perception including “super stores” that had all of the available, in-stock products on display; and free home delivery or store to store transfer for items that were not in stock. They also implemented a state-of-the-art inventory system that could check the availability of other stores in real time, and also would suggest alternate products at the store which were in stock. Consumers was one of the first to initiate this “real time” stock check and prepayment of products available at other branches and the main warehouse. Unfortunately, these initiatives, including the superstore expansion, costly free delivery, and costly new inventory management software overextended the company. This, and increasing competition from American retailers such as Wal-Mart and Sears led to the company’s bankruptcy in 1996.

Florence Henderson once represented Consumers Distributing in television commercials based on the theme “Consumers, we wrote the book, on-savings!”


Former locations

  • Antioch, CA
  • Berkeley, CA
  • Clayton, CA
  • Dublin, CA
  • San Pablo, CA
  • Mountain View, CA - Mayfield Mall
  • Pleasant Hill, CA
  • Walnut Creek, CA
  • Stamford, CT
  • NJ
  • Bayside, NY
  • East Meadow, NY
  • Boston
  • Ramsey, NJ
  • Toronto
  • London, ON
  • North Bay, ON
  • St. Thomas, ON
  • Brooklyn, NY
  • Oceanside, NY


See also

  • List of Canadian department stores
  • Service Merchandise - a defunct American company with similar business model

2-sided; utility <math>v

Monday, May 19th, 2008

In topology, a compact codimension one submanifold <math>F</math> of a manifold <math>M</math> is said to be 2-sided in <math>M</math> when there is an embedding

<math>h\colon F\times [-1,1]\to M</math>

with <math>h(x,0)=x</math> for each <math>x\in F</math> and

<math>h(F\times [-1,1])\cap \partial M=h(\partial F\times [-1,1])</math>.

This means, for example that a curve in a surface is 2-sided if it has a regular neighborhood which is a cartesian product of the curve times an interval.

A curve which is not 2-sided is called 1-sided.

Hessian matrix; maximization

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

In mathematics, the Hessian matrix is the square matrix of second-order partial derivatives of a function. Given the real-valued function

<math>f(x_1, x_2, \dots, x_n),\,\!</math>

if all second partial derivatives of f exist, then the Hessian matrix of f is the matrix

<math>H(f)_{ij}(x) = D_i D_j f(x)\,\!</math>

where x = (x1, x2, …, xn) and Di is the differentiation operator with respect to the ith argument:

<math>H(f) = \begin{bmatrix}

\frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_1^2} & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_1\,\partial x_2} & \cdots & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_1\,\partial x_n} \\ \\
\frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_2\,\partial x_1} & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_2^2} & \cdots & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_2\,\partial x_n} \\ \\
\vdots & \vdots & \ddots & \vdots \\ \\
\frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_n\,\partial x_1} & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_n\,\partial x_2} & \cdots & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_n^2}
\end{bmatrix}</math>

(some workers define the Hessian as the determinant of the above matrix). The term “Hessian” was coined by James Joseph Sylvester, named for German mathematician Ludwig Otto Hesse, who had used the term “functional determinants”.

Hessian matrices are used in large-scale optimization problems within Newton-type methods. However, the full Hessian matrix can be difficult to compute in practice; in such situations, quasi-Newton algorithms have been developed that use approximations to the Hessian. The most well-known quasi-Newton algorithm is the BFGS algorithm.

Contents


Mixed derivatives and symmetry of the Hessian

The mixed derivatives of f are the entries off the main diagonal in the Hessian. Assuming that they are continuous, the order of differentiation does not matter (Clairaut’s theorem). For example,

<math>\frac {\partial}{\partial x} \left( \frac { \partial f }{ \partial y} \right) =
      \frac {\partial}{\partial y} \left( \frac { \partial f }{ \partial x} \right)</math>

This can also be written (in reverse order) as:

<math>f_{xy} = f_{yx} \,</math>

In a formal statement: if the second derivatives of f are all continuous in a region D, then the Hessian of f is a symmetric matrix throughout D; see symmetry of second derivatives.


Critical points and discriminant

If the gradient of f (i.e. its derivative in the vector sense) is zero at some point x, then f has a critical point (or stationary point) at x. The determinant of the Hessian at x is then called the discriminant. If this determinant is zero then x is called a degenerate critical point of f, this is also called a non-Morse critical point of f. Otherwise it is non-degenerate, this is called a Morse critical point of f.


Second derivative test

The following test can be applied at a non-degenerate critical point x. If the Hessian is positive definite at x, then f attains a local minimum at x. If the Hessian is negative definite at x, then f attains a local maximum at x. If the Hessian has both positive and negative eigenvalues then x is a saddle point for f (this is true even if x is degenerate). Otherwise the test is inconclusive.

Note that for positive semidefinite and negative semidefinite Hessians the test is inconclusive. However, more can be said from the point of view of Morse theory.

In view of what has just been said, the second derivative test for functions of one and two variables is simple. In one variable, the Hessian contains just one second derivative; if it is positive then x is a local minimum, if it is negative then x is a local maximum; if it is zero then the test is inconclusive. In two variables, the discriminant can be used, because the determinant is the product of the eigenvalues. If it is positive then the eigenvalues are both positive, or both negative. If it is negative then the two eigenvalues have different signs. If it is zero, then the second derivative test is inconclusive.


Bordered Hessian

A bordered Hessian is used for the second-derivative test in certain constrained optimization problems. Given the function as before:

<math>f(x_1, x_2, \dots, x_n),</math>

but adding a constraint function such that:

<math>g(x_1, x_2, \dots, x_n) = c,</math>

the bordered Hessian appears as

<math>H(f,g) = \begin{bmatrix}

0 & \frac{\partial g}{\partial x_1} & \frac{\partial g}{\partial x_2} & \cdots & \frac{\partial g}{\partial x_n} \\ \\
\frac{\partial g}{\partial x_1} & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_1^2} & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_1\,\partial x_2} & \cdots & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_1\,\partial x_n} \\ \\
\frac{\partial g}{\partial x_2} & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_2\,\partial x_1} & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial^2 x_2} & \cdots & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_2\,\partial x_n} \\ \\
\vdots & \vdots & \vdots & \ddots & \vdots \\ \\
\frac{\partial g}{\partial x_n} & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_n\,\partial x_1} & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_n\,\partial x_2} & \cdots & \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x_n^2}
\end{bmatrix}.</math>

If there are, say, m constraints then the zero in the north-west corner is an m × m block of zeroes, and there are m border rows at the top and m border columns at the left.

The above rules of positive definite and negative definite can not apply here since a bordered Hessian can not be definite: we have z’Hz = 0 if vector z has a non-zero as its first element, followed by zeroes.

The second derivative test consists here of sign restrictions of the determinants of a certain set of n-m submatrices of the bordered HessianMagnus, J.R. and H. Neudecker: “Matrix Differential Calculus with Applications in Statistics and Econometrics”, page 136. Wiley, 1988. Intuitively, think of the m constraints as reducing the problem to one with n-m free variables. (For example, the maximization of <math>f(x_1,x_2,x_3)</math> subject to the constraint <math>x_1+x_2+x_3=1</math> can be reduced to the maximization of <math>f(x_1,x_2,1-x_1-x_2)</math> without constraint.)


Vector-valued functions

If f is instead vector-valued, i.e.

<math>f = (f_1, f_2, \dots, f_n),</math>

then the array of second partial derivatives is not a matrix, but a tensor of rank 3.


See also

  • Jacobian


Notes


				

ITEA Project AURORA; projects

Saturday, May 17th, 2008


AURORA is a project proposed by the ITEA (Information Technology for European Advancements) following their programme’s sixth Call for Projects (EUREKA Cluster).

This research project aims to deal with multimodality, messaging service, universal storage, multimodal authentication, presence management and VoIP architecture.


External links

  • Official Aurora Website
  • ITEA 2 Website

Normal good; an amount

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

In economics, normal goods are any goods for which demand increases when income increases, i.e. with a positive income elasticity of demand. The term does not necessarily refer to the quality of the good.

Depending on the indifference curves, the amount of a good bought can either increase, decrease, or stay the same when income increases. In the diagram below, good Y is a normal good since the amount purchased increases from Y1 to Y2 as the budget constraint shifts from BC1 to the higher income BC2. Good X is an inferior good since the amount bought decreases from X1 to X2 as income increases.


See also

  • Consumer theory
  • Inferior good
  • Superior good

Sexual pleasure; pleasure remains always qualitatively

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Sexual pleasure is pleasure derived from any kind of sexual activity. Though orgasm is generally known, sexual pleasure includes erotic pleasure during foreplay, and pleasure due to fetish or BDSM.


Biology

Sexual activities increases flow of adrenalin[1].


See also

  • Sexual arousal
  • Orgasm
  • Sexual intercourse


References

UGI Corporation; not. Expectation utilities

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008
UGI redirects here. For the radiographic procedure, see Upper GI series

UGI Corporation is a public utility holding company with a variety of assets based in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania.

Under the UGI Utilities, Inc. company, UGI serves 428,000 natural gas and 60,000 electricity customers in eastern Pennsylvania, including the recently acquired UGI Penn Natural Gas (formerly PG Energy). UGI Utilities operates in the urban areas in and around Harrisburg, Lancaster, Reading, Allentown, Bethlehem, Easton, Hazleton, Wilkes Barre, Scranton and Williamsport.

UGI’s propane holdings include control of AmeriGas Partners, L.P. , the largest propane marketer in the United States. UGI also owns Antargaz and Flaga in Europe.

UGI also markets a variety of energy products through their UGI Energy Services company, based in Wyomissing, PA.


External links

  • UGI Corporation website
  • UGI Utilities website
  • AmeriGas website

Price system; prices because an

Monday, May 5th, 2008

The term Price system is used to describe any Economic system whatsoever that effects its distribution of goods and services by means of goods and services having prices and employing any form of debt tokens, or money. Except for possible remote and primitive communities, all modern societies use price systems to allocate resources. However, price systems are not used for all resource allocation decisions today. Allocation of resources within governments, or corporations and households is sometimes commonly undertaken without reliance on a price system.


Fixed price versus free price systems

A

Price system may be either a fixed price system where prices are set by a government or it may be a free price system where prices are left to float freely as determined by unregulated supply and demand. Or it may be a combination of both with a mixed price system.


History

Fundamentally, price systems have been around as long there has been trade or money. From its beginnings the free price system has evolved into the system of global capitalism that is present in the early 21st century. The Soviet Union and other Communist nations were controlled price systems.


See also

  • Free price system
  • Economic history
  • History of economics
  • Technocratic views of the Price system

Computer mathematics; first computing

Monday, May 5th, 2008

Computer mathematics could refer to:

  • Scientific computing - constructing numerical solutions and using computers to analyse and solve scientific and engineering problems
  • Theoretical computer science - collection of topics of computer science that focuses on the more abstract and mathematical aspects of computing

Coup en passant; indirect

Monday, May 5th, 2008

Coup en passant is a type of coup in contract bridge where trump trick(s) are “stolen” by trying to ruff a card after the player who has the master trump(s).

Just as the trump coup resembles a direct finesse, except that trumps are not the suit led, so the coup en passant similarly resembles an indirect finesse:

In this example, spades are trump, and declarer (South) takes two tricks by playing hearts first. Then, with clubs led from the dummy, declarer ruffs if and only if East does not. South’s diamond loser will go under East’s ace of spades on one of the last two tricks, and South’s king will take the other trick.

Here both players have the same number of trumps, but the hand would play the same way if either or both had a small trump in place of the small diamond. The important thing is that declarer must have few enough trumps that dummy can be entered at the critical time.
Coup en passant can be performed even with several high trumps in the opponent’s hand. In the example, South would lose all remaining tricks if the lead were in East’s hand. However, if a heart is played from dummy, and East ruffs, South will discard the losing diamond (what is, in effect, a Loser on loser play). If East discards, South will ruff, “stealing” a trick.


See also

  • Trump promotion


External links

  • BridgeGuys Glossary

False consensus effect; and beliefs;

Sunday, May 4th, 2008

The false consensus effect refers to the tendency for people to overestimate the degree to which others agree with them. People readily guess their own opinions, beliefs and predilections to be more prevalent in the general public than they really are.

This bias is commonly present in a group setting where one thinks the collective opinion of their own group matches that of the larger population. Since the members of a group reach a consensus and rarely encounter those who dispute it, they tend to believe that everybody thinks the same way.

One of the most notable examples is the possibly apocryphal quip by The New Yorker film critic Pauline Kael, who reportedly said she couldn’t believe Nixon had won since no one she knew had voted for him.

There is no single cause for this cognitive bias; the availability heuristic and self-serving bias have been suggested as at least partial underlying factors.


See also

  • Attributional bias
  • Overconfidence effect
    • Lake Wobegon effect
    • List of cognitive biases


References

  • Ross L., Greene D. & House, P. (1977). The false consensus effect: an egocentric bias in social perception and attribution processes. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 13, 279-301.
  • Fields, James M., and Howard Schuman, (1976-77) “Public Beliefs about the Beliefs of the Public,” Public Opinion Quarterly, 40: 427-448.


External links

  • Changing minds: the false consensus effect