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Institution

Williams College

EducationWilliamstown, Massachusetts, United States
About: Williams College is a education organization based out in Williamstown, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Politics. The organization has 2257 authors who have published 5015 publications receiving 213160 citations. The organization is also known as: Williams.


Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
13 Jan 1988
TL;DR: This paper shows that compile-time lifetime analysis can be applied to programs written in languages with static type systems and dynamically allocated objects, to provide earlier storage binding time for objects, while maintaining all the advantages of dynamic allocation.
Abstract: The choice of binding time disciplines has major consequences for both the run-time efficiency of programs and the convenience of the language expressing algorithms. Late storage binding time, dynamic allocation, provides the flexibility necessary to implement the complex data structures common in today's object oriented style of programming. In this paper we show that compile-time lifetime analysis can be applied to programs written in languages with static type systems and dynamically allocated objects, to provide earlier storage binding time for objects, while maintaining all the advantages of dynamic allocation.

111 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors argue that people engage in active monitoring of strangers' divergent perspectives because they know they must, but that they rely more on their own perspective when they communicate with a friend.

111 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: This article showed that the usual approach underestimates labor income in small firms, and several adjustments for calculating labor shares were identified and compared, yielding labor shares for most countries in the range of.65-80.
Abstract: Many widely used economic models implicitly assume that income shares should be identical across time and space. Although time-series data from industrial countries appear consistent with this notion, cross-section data generally appear to contradict the assumption. A commonly used calculation suggests that labor shares of national income vary from about .05 to about .80 in international cross-section data. This paper suggests that the usual approach underestimates labor income in small firms. Several adjustments for calculating labor shares are identified and compared. They all yield labor shares for most countries in the range of .65-.80.

111 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This research empirically demonstrates that genetic diversity, predominantly determined during the prehistoric "out of Africa" migration of humans, is an underlying cause of various existing manifestations of ethnolinguistic heterogeneity.
Abstract: Despite the importance attributed to the effects of diversity on the stability and prosperity of nations, the origins of the uneven distribution of ethnic and cultural fragmentation across countries have been underexplored. Building on the role of deeply-rooted biogeographical forces in comparative development, this research empirically demonstrates that genetic diversity, predominantly determined during the prehistoric "out of Africa" migration of humans, is an underlying cause of various existing manifestations of ethnolinguistic heterogeneity. Further exploration of this uncharted territory may revolutionize the understanding of the effects of deeply-rooted factors on economic development and the composition of human capital across the globe.

111 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The historical and contemporary contributions of eight maritime vectors to the establishment of nonindigenous species in California are analyzed, finding vessel biofouling looms larger than ballast water as a major vector and a management opportunity, but aquaculture risk appears reduced from historic levels.
Abstract: Invasive species remain a major environmental problem in the world's oceans. Managing the vectors of introduction is the most effective means of mitigating this problem, but current risk assessments and management strategies are largely focused on species, not on vectors and certainly not on multiple simultaneous vectors. To highlight the issue that multiple vectors contribute to invasions, we analyzed the historical and contemporary contributions of eight maritime vectors to the establishment of nonindigenous species in California, where most species were associated with two to six vectors. Vessel biofouling looms larger than ballast water as a major vector and a management opportunity, but aquaculture risk appears reduced from historic levels. Standardized data on species abundances in each vector are lacking for a robust cross-vector assessment, which could be obtained in a proof-of-concept “vector blitz.” Management must shift away from one or two target vectors to coordination across multiple vectors.

111 citations


Authors

Showing all 2291 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Alfred Kröner10137431665
Gabriel B. Brammer9133430335
William M. Tierney8442324235
Larry L. Jacoby7716625631
David P. DiVincenzo7128240038
James T. Carlton7019721690
Robert K. Merton6719074002
Allen Taylor6322216589
John A. Smolin6315024657
Qing Wang6254817215
Neal I. Lindeman6221731462
Michael I. Norton6027317597
Charles H. Bennett6011767435
Brian D. Fields5725063673
Hans C. Oettgen5712410056
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202313
202271
2021209
2020237
2019216
2018190