Not exact matches
However, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development
studied structural separation (links to PDF)
across various industries
several years ago and didn't find that to be the
case:
Objectives: We propose to develop best - practice guidelines and minimal reporting standards specifically in the context of
several regulatory toxicology
case studies; e.g. (a) chemical grouping and read -
across to supplement ECHA's Read - Across Assessment Framework, (b) discovery of mode of action / molecular key events (within the AOP framework), (c) derivation of Benchmark Doses from concentration - response relationships, and (d) cross-species extrapolation within environmental toxic
across to supplement ECHA's Read -
Across Assessment Framework, (b) discovery of mode of action / molecular key events (within the AOP framework), (c) derivation of Benchmark Doses from concentration - response relationships, and (d) cross-species extrapolation within environmental toxic
Across Assessment Framework, (b) discovery of mode of action / molecular key events (within the AOP framework), (c) derivation of Benchmark Doses from concentration - response relationships, and (d) cross-species extrapolation within environmental toxicology.
Most
studies have been in - depth
case studies of the earliest programs; to date, only one comprehensive
study (of the Teacher Quality Partnership grant) examines characteristics and impact
across several programs nationally.
Key examples include Cawelti and Protheroe's (2001)
study of change in six school districts in four states; Snipes, Dolittle and Herlihy's (2002)
case studies of improvement in four urban school systems and states; Massell and Goertz's (2002) investigation of standards - based reform in 23 school districts
across eight states; McLaughlin and Talbert's (2002) analysis of three urban or metropolitan area California districts; Togneri and Anderson's (2003) investigation of five high poverty districts (four urban, one rural) from five states; and
several single - site
case studies of district success (e.g., Hightower, 2002; Snyder, 2002).
Several months ago I came
across a
study (of admittedly much smaller sample size) that an website selling rpg systems / books did of their sale prices that factored in a much wider range of price points than just those two in their efforts to determine, as Amazon seems to be doing, the pricing sweet spot (for their best interests in both
cases).
By highlighting the mechanisms through which the rebound effect has occurred
across three important, energy - and emissions - intensive industries, these
case studies illustrate the importance of rebound effects and highlight
several factors suggesting that they will be experienced in significant measure in the future, in particular in emerging developing world economies.