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The triplet state of acridine orange dissolved in methanol/water matrix was investigated by ESR. In absence of oxygen a strong temperature dependence of the spectra was observed. At low temperature (100 °K) the zero-field splitting parameters calculated from the triplet spectrum are: X/hc = 0.0050 cm-1, Y/hc= 0.0342 cm-1, Z/hc=0.0387 cm-1 , at higher temperature (140 °K) : X*(hc=0.0056 cm-1, Y*/hc=0.0206 cm-1, Z*/hc = 0.0262 cm-1 . It was assumed that the low temperature spectrum is caused by isolated molecules in the triplet state while the high temperature spectrum must be attributed to the triplet exciton state of the acridine orange dimer. From the theory of the ESR triplet exciton spectra it can be shown that in the dimer state of acridine orange the molecular planes form an angle of 50° or 130°. However, it cannot be excluded that the dimer configuration differs in the ground or excited singlet state from the triplet state.
Essays in behavioral economics - evidence on self-selection into jobs, social networks and leniency
(2013)
Die Dissertation mit dem Titel „Essays in Behavioral Economics – Evidence on Self-Selection into Jobs, Social Networks and Leniency“ besteht aus einer Sammlung von vier wissenschaftlichen Abhandlungen. Alle Arbeiten verbindet die Analyse von theoretischen Konzepten und Erkenntnissen der Verhaltensökonomie unter Verwendung der experimentellen Methode. Die erste wissenschaftliche Abhandlung trägt den Titel „Sorting of Motivated Agents - Empirical Evidence on Self-Selection into the German Police“ und untersucht Selbstselektion bestimmter Individuen in den Polizeiberuf. Die experimentelle Studie untersucht die Frage, ob Polizeibewerber sich hinsichtlich ihrer Präferenzen in Bezug auf ihr Normdurchsetzungsverhalten in den Polizeiberuf selektieren. Die zweite Abhandlung greift diese Erkenntnisse auf und untersucht Polizeianwärter in ihrer Berufsausbildung ebenfalls hinsichtlich ihrer Normdurchsetzungsbereitschaft. Die Arbeit trägt den Titel „Selection and formation of motivated agents -- empirical evidence from the German Police”. In der dritten wissenschaftlichen Abhandlung werden geschlechterspezifische Unterschiede bei der Wahl von Partnern und dem Aufbau des sozialen Netzwerkes untersucht. Diese trägt den Titel „Selectivity and opportunism: two dimensions of gender differences in trust games and network formation“ und wurde zusammen mit Guido Friebel, Marie Lalanne, Paul Seabright und Peter Schwardmann verfasst. Die vierte Abhandlung geht einer aktuellen Fragestellung der Industrieökonomie nach und trägt den Titel „Antitrust, auditing and leniency programs: evidence from the laboratory“, verfasst mit Mehdi Feizi and Ali Mazyaki. In ihrer Gesamtheit liefert meine Dissertation Antworten auf personalpolitische, soziale und industrieökonomische Fragestellungen.
Essays in Criminology
(2011)
Crime in Africa is fast growing like African cities, African poverty, African indebtedness, African brain-drain and African dependence; everything in Africa appears to be growing very fast; population too has been fast growing except that it is being reduced by violence as we have witnessed in Rwanda, Burundi and Somalia and AIDS pandemic that is first spreading in Africa, claiming thousands of lives every year. This book is a collection of essays and papers not based on empirical research on crime in East Africa but general observations arising out of the author's experience as a criminologist in East Africa.
This dissertation consists of three chapters. The first two chapters investigate the real effects of inflation and the third chapter the role of child care for fertility and female female labor supply. Chapter 1 introduces a generalized panel threshold model to analyze the relation between inflation and economic growth for a sample of developing countries. It is demonstrated that allowing for regime intercepts can be crucial for obtaining unbiased estimates of both, inflation thresholds and its marginal effects on growth in the various regimes. The empirical results confirm that the omitted variable bias of standard panel threshold models can be statistically and economically significant. Chapter 2, which is joined work with Dieter Nautz, investigates the impact of inflation on relative price variability (RPV) as a further important channel of the real effects of inflation. With a view to the recent debate on the Fed's implicit lower and upper bounds of its inflation objective, the econometric model introduced in Chapter 1 is used to explore the inflation-RPV linkage in U.S. cities. Chapter 3 investigates the relationship between fertility, female labor supply and child care in the context of a life cycle model for Germany. A particular emphasis is placed on the differences between West and East Germany. Counterfactual policy experiments mimicking recent policy reforms on maternal leave and the provision of subsidized child care are conducted with a structurally estimated version of the model.
This thesis consist of three chapters of which each investigates a topic from financial and monetary economics. In the first chapter a novel method to analyze the monetary policy of central banks is presented. In the second chapter (joint work with Professor Michael Binder, Goethe-University Frankfurt) the effects of conditional loan programs of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on participating countries' output growth are investigated. In the third chapter (joint work with Professor Jan Pieter Krahnen, Goethe-University Frankfurt) a network model of interconnected bank balance sheets which gives rise to systemic risk is developed and used to analyze the implications of a bank levy related to banks' contribution to systemic risk. All three chapters give important insights to the policy design of macroeconomic institutions such as central banks, the IMF, and agencies charged with macroprudential supervision.
CHAPTER A: THE INVESTMENT BEHAVIOR OF PRIVATE EQUITY FUND MANAGERS I The Bright and Dark Side of Staging: Investment Performance and the Varying Motivations of Private Equity Firms II The Liquidation Dilemma of Money Losing Investments – The Impact of Investment Experience and Window Dressing of Private Equity and Venture Capital Funds CHAPTER B: THE ASSESSMENT OF RISK AND RETURN OF PRIVATE EQUITY I Venture Capital Performance Projection: A Simulation Approach II Modeling Default Risk of Private Equity Funds – A Market-based Framework
This thesis consists of four chapters. Each chapter covers a topic in international macroeconomics and monetary policy. The first chapter investigates the impact of unexpected monetary policy shocks on exchange rates in a multi-country econometric model. The second chapter examines the linkage between macroeconomic fundamentals and exchange rates through the monetary policy expectation channel. The third chapter focuses on the international transmission of bank and corporate distress. The last chapter unfolds the interest rate channel of monetary policy transmission in-an emerging economy-China, where regulations and market forces co-exist in this transmission.