enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Duncan Segregation Index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duncan_Segregation_Index

    The Duncan Segregation Index is a measure of occupational segregation based on gender that measures whether there is a larger than expected presence of one gender over another in a given occupation or labor force by identifying the percentage of employed women (or men) who would have to change occupations for the occupational distribution of men and women to be equal.

  3. Index of dissimilarity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Index_of_dissimilarity

    The index score can also be interpreted as the percentage of one of the two groups included in the calculation that would have to move to different geographic areas in order to produce a distribution that matches that of the larger area. The index of dissimilarity can be used as a measure of segregation. A score of zero (0%) reflects a fully ...

  4. Occupational segregation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupational_segregation

    Over the last century in the United States, there has been a surprising stability of segregation-index scores, which measure the level of occupational segregation of the labor market. [10] There were declines in occupational segregation in the 1970s and 1980s, as technologies that made the care work of the home quicker and easier allowed more ...

  5. Ind-completion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ind-completion

    Conversely, any compact object in Ind(C) arises as the image of an object in X. A category C is called compactly generated, if it is equivalent to ⁡ for some small category . The ind-completion of the category FinSet of finite sets is the category of all sets. Similarly, if C is the category of finitely generated groups, ind-C is equivalent ...

  6. Gower's distance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gower's_distance

    For two objects and having descriptors, the similarity is defined as: = = =, where the w i j k {\displaystyle w_{ijk}} are non-negative weights usually set to 1 {\displaystyle 1} [ 2 ] and s i j k {\displaystyle s_{ijk}} is the similarity between the two objects regarding their k {\displaystyle k} -th variable.

  7. Cone (category theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cone_(category_theory)

    Define the diagonal functor Δ : CC J as follows: Δ(N) : J → C is the constant functor to N for all N in C. If F is a diagram of type J in C, the following statements are equivalent: ψ is a cone from N to F; ψ is a natural transformation from Δ(N) to F (N, ψ) is an object in the comma category (Δ ↓ F) The dual statements are also ...

  8. Diagram (category theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diagram_(category_theory)

    The category J is called the index category or the scheme of the diagram D; the functor is sometimes called a J-shaped diagram. [1] The actual objects and morphisms in J are largely irrelevant; only the way in which they are interrelated matters. The diagram D is thought of as indexing a collection of objects and morphisms in C patterned on J.

  9. Model category - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_category

    Every closed model category has a terminal object by completeness and an initial object by cocompleteness, since these objects are the limit and colimit, respectively, of the empty diagram. Given an object X in the model category, if the unique map from the initial object to X is a cofibration, then X is said to be cofibrant .