The Opposite Effects of High Estimate Uncertainty on Jurors' Judgments and on Attorneys' Settlement Negotiations in Auditor Negligence Litigation

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey Scott Pickerd ◽  
M. David Piercey
2011 ◽  
pp. 287-306
Author(s):  
Nenad Ristovic

The reception of the classical book heritage in the Biography of Despot Stefan Lazarevic of Constantine the Philosopher (of Kostenec) is noticed through the conspicuous reminiscences on classical antiquity, but it is also manifested through the use of artistic procedures of classical literature and the author?s high estimate of the accomplishment of pre-Christian Greek thought. In the first two types of classicism Constantine surpasses other medieval Serbian writers, while in the third he is unique among them, so his relying on classical tradition in this work is the result both of literary conventions caused by the choice of the genre of secular biography and of his belonging to the most liberal section of medieval Christian intellectuals.


Author(s):  
Sidharth Sinha

An estimate of the fair rate of return on capital is a critical input into tariff regulation. A too high estimate will lead to high tariffs for consumers; a too low estimate will not provide adequate incentives for investment. The Airport Economic Regulatory Authority of India has issued a consultation paper for finalizing the norms and procedure for estimating the fair rate of return. It now needs to reconcile the differing view and approaches of different stakeholders.


Author(s):  
Russell B. Korobkin ◽  
Joseph W. Doherty

2010 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bertrand Chopard ◽  
Thomas Cortade ◽  
Eric Langlais

2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan Close ◽  
Ken Watford ◽  
Taylor Glenn ◽  
Paul Gader ◽  
Joseph Wilson

2014 ◽  
Vol 53 (7) ◽  
pp. 074101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo Rodrigues Muniz ◽  
Ricardo de Araújo Kalid ◽  
Shirley P. N. Cani ◽  
Robson da Silva Magalhães

Author(s):  
Eric W Zitzewitz

Abstract This paper examines the negotiated settlements of 20 market timing and late trading cases, comparing the restitution obtained for shareholders with an estimate of shareholder dilution. This restitution ratio varies from 0.04 to 5, or from 0.1 to 10 if penalties are included. While some of this variation is explained by differences in the defendants' conduct, controlling for this, settlement negotiations that involved New York as well as the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) resulted in restitution ratios that were higher by a factor of 5-10. An analysis that uses the firms' headquarters location and customers' state of residence as instruments for New York's involvement suggests that this difference is causal, and not the result of New York involving itself in cases likely to lead to large settlements. Given the much larger staff and institutional expertise of the SEC, it is likely that these differences in outcomes are due to differences in effective aggressiveness, not prosecutorial resources. Differences in aggressiveness are consistent with popular conceptions of the regulators' career concerns, as well as with theories of industry focus and regulatory capture.


2008 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 2259-2268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Carson ◽  
D. E. Harrison

Abstract There is great interest in World Ocean temperature trends, yet the historical global ocean database has very uneven coverage in space and time. Previous work on 50-yr upper ocean temperature trends from the NOAA ocean data archive is extended here. Trends at depths from 50 to 1000 m are examined, based on observations gridded over larger regions than in the earlier study. Despite the use of larger grid boxes, most of the ocean does not have significant 50-yr trends at the 90% confidence level (CL). In fact only 30% of the ocean at 50 m has 90% CL trends, and the percentage decreases significantly with increasing depth. As noted in the previous study, there is much spatial structure in 50-yr trends, with areas of strong warming and strong cooling. These trend results are compared with trends calculated from data interpolated to standard levels and from a highly horizontally interpolated version of the dataset that has been used in previous heat content trend studies. The regional trend results can differ substantially, even in the areas with statistically significant trends. Trends based on the more interpolated analyses show more warming. Together with major temporal and spatial sampling limitations, the previously described strong interdecadal and spatial variability of trends makes it very difficult to formally estimate uncertainty in World Ocean averages, but these results suggest that upper ocean heat content integrals and integral trends may be substantially more uncertain than has yet been acknowledged. Further exploration of uncertainties is needed.


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