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Table 1: Estimation results of the price stickiness parameters Monetary policy shock

in Openness, imperfect exchange rate pass-through and monetary policy
by Frank Smets, Raf Wouters
"... In PAGE 29: ...24 Twelve quarters of the impulse response functions are used in the estimation. Table1 reports the results under the benchmark calibration of the other parameters discussed above. The implied impulse response functions are shown in Figures 1 and 2 (dashed lines), together with the empirical estimates.... In PAGE 29: ... In contrast, the response of the domestic price gap is much slower, but more persistent reflecting the persistent fall in output. Second, Table1 shows that there seems to be considerable evidence of Calvo-stickiness in both domestic and import prices. More surprisingly, the degree of stickiness in import prices is in most cases very similar to that of domestic prices.... ..."

Table 2: Estimates for the version of the sticky strike model in equation (10) where volatility depends on strike price and time to maturity.

in Volatility Surface: Theory, Rules of Thumb, and Empirical Evidence
by Toby Daglish, John Hull, Wulin Suo
"... In PAGE 13: ...Table2 , the model is supported by the data, but has an R2 of only 27%. We now move on to test the sticky delta rule.... ..."

Table 5: List price changes For each interval in weeks of the duration of the house, this table give the number of houses and the percentage of houses that experience a change in list price during the time of listing.

in murder on house prices in Amsterdam
by Pieter A. Gautier, Arjen Siegmann, Aico Van Vuuren, Aico Van Vuuren 2007
"... In PAGE 13: ... This is counterfactual since 70 percent of the listed houses never had a single price change. Table5 gives more details and indicates that there is a strong relationship between the duration that a house is listed and the likelihood that the price is changed. This suggests that list prices are sticky, and that the disturbance term in (1), on which model (2) is based, is not independent over time.... ..."

Table 5 Sticky word pairs.

in Class-Based n-gram Models of Natural Language
by Peter F. Brown, Peter V. deSouza, Robert L. Mercer, Vincent J. Della Pietra, Jenifer C. Lai 1992
Cited by 408

Table 5: Sticky word pairs

in Class-Based N-Gram Models of Natural Language
by Peter F. Brown, Vincent J. Della Pietra, Peter V. deSouza, Jenifer C. Lai, Robert L. Mercer 1992
"... In PAGE 13: ... We say that the pair w1w2 is sticky if the mutual information for the pair is substantially greater than zero. In Table5 , we list the 20 stickiest pairs of words found in a 59,537,595-word sample of text from the Canadian parliament. The mutual information for each pair is given in bits, which corresponds to using 2 as the base of the logarithm in equation 18.... ..."
Cited by 20

Table 5: Sticky word pairs

in Class-based n-gram models of natural language
by Robert L. Mercer 1992
"... In PAGE 13: ... Wesay that the pair w 1 w 2 is sticky if the mutual information for the pair is substantially greater than zero. In Table5 , we list the 20 stickiest pairs of words found in a 59,537,595-word sample of text from the Canadian parliament. The mutual information for eachpairisgiven in bits, which corresponds to using 2 as the base of the logarithm in equation 18.... ..."
Cited by 20

Table 2: The model in relative changes

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 4: ... This assumption seems plausible, since, without accommodation, a sticky price of the clean good would cause involuntary unemployment in the short run. Table2 presents those log-linearized functions that are required to derive the reduced forms. A tilde denotes a relative change, except where indicated otherwise.... ..."

Table 1. Sticky Keys recommendations.

in A Model of Keyboard Configuration Requirements
by Shari Trewin, Helen Pain

Table 7: Stickiness and popularity of Web sites

in AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF WEB SITE STICKINESS ABSTRACT
by Mario Christ, Ramayya Krishnan, Daniel Nagin, Oliver Günther, Mario Christ, Ramayya Krishnan, Daniel Nagin, Oliver Günther
"... In PAGE 8: ... We focused on the popular sites because the smaller the number of users a Web site attracts, the sparser the data in such a table becomes. Table7 depicts the summary lines of all tables similar to table 6 for the other popular Web sites in the HomeNet sample. Note that the smaller the stickiness, the higher the difference between overall popularity as reported in Table 5 and average popularity over time.... ..."

Table 9: Sticky-ladder ratings

in Re-using Digital Narrative Content in Interactive Games
by Annika Wolff, Paul Mulholland, Zdenek Zdrahal, Richard Joiner
"... In PAGE 27: ...4.1 Results of Study 4 There were no significant differences in the enjoyment ratings given on the sticky ladder in any of the three conditions (see Table9 ), the ratings were consistently high. This is most probably due to the same game-type, of the easiest difficulty level, being used in all three conditions (previous studies suggested that game difficulty affected the enjoyment ratings given).... ..."
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