... upper end of the target market for microfinance.■ Policy Lending Institutions (agricultural banks and statecommercial bank microfinance)Significant volumes of lending and savings business and usuallya ... feature of Table 4 is that even the poorest fifth of countriescommercial banks will on average be servicing significant numbers of loan and deposit accounts (and even higher amounts of lending and saving ... into informal, often very high cost finance.436 www.agribank-stat.org and www.woccu.org respectively. SAVINGS BANKS AND THE DOUBLE BOTTOM-LINEA profitable and accessible modelof financeA...
... SERVQUAL andModelof Service Quality Gaps: A Framework for Determining and Prioritizing Critical Factors in Delivering Quality Services Dr. Arash Shahin Department of Management, University of ... modelof service quality gaps. SERVQUAL as an effective approach has been studied and its role in the analysis of the difference between customer expectations and perceptions has been highlighted ... Edvardsson et al., 1997; Lings and Brooks, 1998; Reynoso and Moore, 1995; Young and Varble, 1997; Sahney et al., 2004). One of the aims of this study involves the use of SERVQUAL instrument in...
... Centre of Neuroscience, University of Insubria, Busto Arsizio, Italy2 Department of Biotechnology, University of Verona, Italy3 Department of Clinical and Biological Sciences, University of Insubria, ... Proteomics of a PD model FEBS Journal 277 (2010) 4909–4919 ª 2010 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2010 FEBS 4913 Proteomic analysis of dopamine and a-synuclein interplayin a cellular modelof Parkinson’s ... manually excised and destained(1 · 10 min 50 lLofK3[Fe(CN)6]30mm and Na2S2O3100 mm;6· 10 min 100 lL of deionized water; 1 · 20 min100 lLofNH4HCO3200 mm;1· 20 min 100 lL of deion-ized...
... shift of the proton, and DdNis thechange in the chemical shift of the nitrogen [56].Modeling and comparison of the structures of PSsdali [57] was used to superimpose the crystal structures of PSs ... 164° and )169° in the A-chain and B-chain of nPS, respectively. The v1torsion angle forAsp35 changes from ) 75.20° to )171.65° and )89.25°in the A-chain and B-chain of nPS, and in the case of His37, ... shift (p.p.m.) of residues of nPS upon binding to (A)D-pantoate as a function of sequence, and (B)D-pantoate and ATP as a function of sequence.Residues that showed a deviation of more than 0.03...
... means that the ACOL family of models (including the option-value modelof Ausink and Wise) is intrinsically incapable of modeling the value of career flexibility. It cannot model the value that Air ... Retention Modeland the Annualized Cost of Leaving Family of Models 11A Simplified DRM 11Modeling a Five-Year Commitment 12e Annualized Cost of Leaving 2 Model 13CHAPTER FOURResults of the ... Model 3Modeling the Value of Flexibility—An Example 5Relation of the Dynamic Retention Model to the Aviator Continuation Pay Program 5A Retention Model 6Modeling Uncertainty—Taste 7Modeling...
... highervisual and emotional levels towards early visual processing.A comparison of the models proposed hy Leder and colleagues (2004) and Chattetjee (2003) reveals similarities and differences. Both models ... information-processing model of aesthetic judgment of visual works of art. Here we chosetofocus onthe model of aesthetic experience because we were particularly interestedinthehigher-level cognitive and emotional ... aesthetics.Thereisnowgeneralagreementthattheaestheticexperienceistheoutcome of a complex interplay of cognitive and affective processes. Recently, Leder and colleagues introducedaninformation-processing model to account for theinteraction of various component...
... data and use configurations optimized for theirbest reported results. Tables 3 and 4 show taggingaccuracies of all tokens and unknown tokens, re-spectively. Our individual models (Models D and G) ... classification and showed current state -of- the-art results.3Our individual models (generalized and domain-specific) are similar to Gim´enez and M`arquez (2004)in that we use a subset of their ... From several rounds of cross-validation,learning parameters of (c = 0.2, e = 0.1, B = 0.4) and (c = 0.1, e = 0.1, B = 0.9) are found for the gener-alized and domain-specific models, respectively...
... flux of Phser and on CGS and TSactivity. As a consequence it is possible to model the branch-point kinetics if one knows the CGS and TS rate equations,Phser flux rates and the concentrations of ... lMặs)1can becalculated for the ux of Phser.Modelling of the Phser branch-point at steady-stateThe rate equations of CGS and TS published in [12] and [15]required to model the branch-point kinetics ... Jcystathionine and JThrrepresent 11% and 89% of the flux of Phser,respectively. The numerical model using the simplified TSequation (Fig. 2C) or the in vitro model give a value of 20–30% for...
... often double. And most interesting of all are the small bone and ivory figures of men and women which are also found. These usually have little blue beads for eyes, and are of the quaintest and ... Kassites, and the inhabitants of Palestine and Syria, andof some parts of Asia Minor,Armenia, and Kurdistan, all in turn experienced indirectly the influence of Sumerian civilization and continued ... the sake of pomp and glory, and knowing nothing of the decay and decadence which follows in the train of earthly power and grandeur. They deliberately turned their backson the worn-out and discredited...
... include Gilboa and Schmeidler (1989), Epstein and Wang(1994), Anderson, Hansen, and Sargent (2000), Chen and Epstein (2002),Hansen and Sargent (2001), Epstein and Miao (2003), Routledge and Zin(2002), ... times t 6ẳ s, Zt and Zsare independent, and allthree types of random shocks B, N, and Z are assumed to be independent.This specification of aggregate endowment follows from Naik and Lee(1990). ... of random shocks. One is a standarddiffusive component, and the other is pure jump, capturing rare eventswith low frequency and sudden occurrence. While the probability laws of both types of...
... misattribution and judgments of well-being:Informative and directive functions of affective states. Journal of Personality and SocialPsychology, 45, 513– 523.Shiff, R. (1986). Cezanne and the end of Impressionism: ... theliterature to illustrate this.Context and input of the model A work of art is the input for the model. Aesthetic experiences often require apre-classification of an object as art. This pre-classification ... information-processing model of the aesthetic experience (see Fig. 1). The model is based on the above analysis of modern art and describes a number of processing stages that characterise aestheticexperiences and...
... EGFR superfamily of tyrosine kinases [55,56] and APP [24,57]. The growingappreciation of the role of both the nuclear membrane[58,59] and endosomes [60] in the regulation of tran-scription ... not merely by-products of protein turnover.Inhibition of proteasome proteolysis by treatment of cells with MG132 (Fig. 2, lanes 2 and 5) or epoxomi-cin (Fig. 2, lanes 3 and 6) for 8 h allows ... that often mediates proteindimerization, a putative NLS, and the presence of aregion rich in acidic amino acids following the RINGdomain [4]. The presence of a PEST sequence charac-teristic of...