Benjamin Graham said that "you cannot make a quantitative adjustment for unscrupulous management, only avoid it.
The curriculum is built around interdisciplinary problems—knife crime, childhood obesity, palm oil in supply chains, plastic pollution—as well as quantitative and qualitative research skills.
The index considers more than 30 qualitative and quantitative factors spanning five broad categories, weighted as follows: stability (25%), healthcare (20%), culture and environment (25%), education (10%), and infrastructure (20%).
Tones expressed in each song were analyzed using 'automatic quantitative sentiment' which looked at each word or phrase in the song with a set of tones they express.
It made a quantitative evaluation of 33 cities by selecting 19 representatives and quantifiable indicators.
The findings should surprise no one but it's important to have quantitative data about a mental health hazard running rampant in universities across the entire world.
The findings should surprise no one but it's important to have quantitative data about a mental health hazard running rampant in universities across the entire world.
The Fengyun-4 satellite, the first of China's second-generation weather satellites in geostationary orbit to be launched, is also the country's first quantitative remote-sensing satellite in high orbit.
The researchers from the University of Washington say this is the first quantitative evidence of biannual patterns for divorce filing, and suggest that the peaks might be a sign of divorce following a "calendar ritual", where couples want to stay together for the Christmas and summer holidays before making their decision.
These central banks have also substantially expanded their balance sheets through quantitative easing or, in the case of the Bank of Japan, "quantitative and qualitative easing" (which includes lengthening of the maturity of the assets it buys).
Still, his posts are aimed at scientists and others with some quantitative background.
Rowe's new dedicated "quantitative management" arm, has for the past decade managed the $761bn asset manager's Diversified Small-Cap Growth Fund, a $2.
Through one- or two-year programmes, students are taught basic economics, politics and quantitative skills, before taking elective courses on everything from trade to security.
After the financial crisis global interest rates fell and central banks, led by the US Federal Reserve and the Bank of England, resorted to quantitative easing, buying massive amounts of government debt.
Ahead of a recent appearance in Hong Kong, one minder for Ben Bernanke suggested that the former chairman of the Federal Reserve should be asked not about the cost of quantitative easing, but about the impact of the policy instead.
The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) ranked the country first in its latest quality-of-death index, which uses 20 quantitative and qualitative indicators to measure the effectiveness of end-of-life care in 80 countries.
In England it is possible, and common, to abandon the study of any scientific subject at the age of 15, and the knowledge that they can opt out of any quantitative discipline allows young people to avoid applying themselves to these subjects at an earlier age.
As resource-related and environmental constraints grow and costs for labor and other factors of production rise, a model of development that draws on high levels of investment and energy consumption and is heavily driven by quantitative expansion becomes difficult to sustain.
Chinese companies are ditching the renminbi and flocking to the euro to raise new offshore debt, as the imminent launch of quantitative easing in the single currency bloc sends ripples through global markets.
Draghi's plan emulates the Federal Reserve's QE3 program: the third round of quantitative easing, or bond buying, announced in the United States in September 2012 and which most likely helped the acceleration in the American economy over the last two years.