[PDF] Top 20 Volume 40 - Article 25 | Pages 693–724
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Volume 40 - Article 25 | Pages 693–724
... For the experiments presented in this paper, IRADABE was trained with a corpus composed of two data sets: a previous complete data set from the benchmark Italian Twitter corpus released [r] ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 30 | Pages 865–896
... and the vertical line the average minutes provided by active fathers. The dark lines refer to fathers in managerial or professional occupations and the grey lines to all other fathers. The solid lines refer to the year ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 9 | Pages 219–260
... Among the 185 women for whom photographs with and without headscarf were available, the MAE was 5.25 years when the model was trained by using photographs with headscarves o[r] ... See full document
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Volume 9 - Article 2 | Pages 25–40
... An outcome is simulated for all these 24278 women, using a model that includes the cluster average of the outcome variable or a similar measure (not directly observable; see below) and a[r] ... See full document
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Volume 36 - Article 40 | Pages 1185–1208
... Putting our results in perspective, what can be expected for the future? Since younger, higher educated cohorts will continue to replace older cohorts with lower levels of edu- cation, a positive education effect will – ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 40 | Pages 1327–1338
... One final aspect of fertility transition that we examine is the degree of variability across countries in the pace of fertility decline. Casterline (2001: 26) notes that “the pace of Asian and Latin American transitions ... See full document
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Volume 38 - Article 40 | Pages 1189–1240
... I have been able to ratify some of the conclusions drawn by earlier researchers; for example, although the phenomena of the TBB and the BBM mainly occurred after WWII, their origins lie before this date, in the 1930s and ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 47 | Pages 1375–1412
... Unfortunately, we cannot directly tackle the issue by controlling for initial health status with our data, because SHR is only recorded once, i.e., at the time of the IT-SILC interview. However, we indirectly control for ... See full document
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Volume 20 - Article 28 | Pages 693–720
... Unsurprisingly the results were also sensitive to the fertility trajectory assumed. Given that a number of analysts have commented on the possible future of fertility in India, and that official forecasts have often been ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 28 | Pages 799–834
... Figure 1 depicts Kaplan–Meier curves representing the fraction of unmarried individuals among illegitimate children, orphans who experienced parental death before age 16 (full, maternal, and paternal), and non-orphans. ... See full document
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Volume 39 - Article 40 | Pages 1065–1080
... Rates of poverty, as officially defined, are consistently highest among first-generation non-US citizen children, followed by second-generation children with two foreign-born parents (Fi[r] ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 48 | Pages 1413–1440
... An additional descriptive analysis that included data on only the 207 couples who had given birth to a first and a second child since the collection of the prospective panel data started[r] ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 49 | Pages 1441–1454
... In 1982 the September local peak visible in all patterns in Figure 4, measured by the ratio of the number of births in September to the average birth rate in August and October, was the [r] ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 19 | Pages 503–532
... For that purpose, we introduced a new statistical approach of a secondary population projection to predict cancer incidence and cancer mortality of all tumor sites accounting f[r] ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 54 | Pages 1603–1644
... Table A-5: Mortality hazard ratios (ages 18–64) for first- and second-generation immigrant subgroups by region of origin, France, 1999–2010; native- born individuals with ‘one parent Fr[r] ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 29 | Pages 835–864
... (currently 40) countries with high-quality data produced by a collaboration between the Department of Demography at the University of California, Berkeley, and the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 31 | Pages 897–932
... this article we analyze how changes in the experience of job insecurity are associated with subjective parental well-being, using 17 waves of the Swiss Household Panel (SHP) (N = 3,717 men and 3,450 women, ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 10 | Pages 261–278
... In our sample, a sibling’s twinning at second birth on average increases their probability of having a third child by about 57% (reflecting that about 43% of parents with two children wo[r] ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 6 | Pages 121–154
... One recent UK study using repeated cross-sectional analysis found significant race/ethnic inequalities in verbal development in Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, Black African, and Black C[r] ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 7 | Pages 155–184
... The reasons for moving taken into consideration in this study are (a) moving for homeownership, as buying a home is typically associated with high expenses; (b) moving for marriage, as f[r] ... See full document
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