MonographDOI
Quantile Regression: Name Index
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The article was published on 2005-01-01. It has received 2686 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Quantile regression & Methodology of econometrics.read more
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A simple approach to quantile regression for panel data
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide sufficient conditions that point identify a quantile regression model with fixed effects and propose a simple transformation of the data that gets rid of the fixed effects under the assumption that these effects are location shifters.
Journal ArticleDOI
Rare species support vulnerable functions in high-diversity ecosystems
David Mouillot,David Mouillot,David R. Bellwood,Christopher Baraloto,Christopher Baraloto,Jérôme Chave,René Galzin,Mireille Harmelin-Vivien,Michel Kulbicki,Sébastien Lavergne,Sandra Lavorel,Nicolas Mouquet,C. E. Timothy Paine,Julien Renaud,Wilfried Thuiller +14 more
TL;DR: The most unusual, and thus irreplaceable, functions performed by species in three different species-rich ecosystems are fulfilled by only the rare species in these ecosystems.
Journal ArticleDOI
What limits fire? An examination of drivers of burnt area in Southern Africa
TL;DR: In this article, a random forest regression tree procedure was used to determine the relative importance of each factor in explaining the burned area fraction and to address hypotheses concerned with human and climatic influences on the drivers of burnt area.
Journal ArticleDOI
Observational evidence for soil-moisture impact on hot extremes in southeastern Europe
Martin Hirschi,Sonia I. Seneviratne,Vesselin Alexandrov,Fredrik Boberg,C. Boroneant,Ole Bøssing Christensen,Herbert Formayer,Boris Orlowsky,Petr Stepanek +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, an analysis of observational indices from central and southeastern Europe confirms that summer hot extremes are linked to soil-moisture deficits in southeastern Europe but does not detect a similar effect in central Europe.
Journal ArticleDOI
The World Health Organization Fetal Growth Charts: A Multinational Longitudinal Study of Ultrasound Biometric Measurements and Estimated Fetal Weight
Torvid Kiserud,Torvid Kiserud,Gilda Piaggio,Guillermo Carroli,Mariana Widmer,José Ferreira de Carvalho,Lisa Neerup Jensen,Daniel Giordano,José Guilherme Cecatti,Hany Abdel Aleem,Sameera A. Talegawkar,Alexandra Benachi,Anke Diemert,Antoinette Tshefu Kitoto,Jadsada Thinkhamrop,Pisake Lumbiganon,Ann Tabor,Alka Kriplani,Rogelio Gonzalez Perez,Kurt Hecher,Mark A. Hanson,A Metin Gülmezoglu,Lawrence D. Platt +22 more
TL;DR: There was asymmetric distribution of growth of EFW: a slightly wider distribution among the lower percentiles during early weeks shifted to a notably expanded distribution of the higher percentiles in late pregnancy.