821:
If the Beta of a stock is 1.5 then a 10% increase in the market will translate to a 15% increase in the stock price and if the beta of a stock is 0.5 a 10% market increase will translate to a 5% stock price increase and likewise with decreases in the market. This beta is generally found via statistical analysis of the share price history of a stock. Therefore CAPM aims to provide a simple model in order to estimate the required return of an investment which uses the theory of risk premiums. This helps to provide investors with a simple means of determining what return an investment should be relative to its risk.
133:
844:. Higher risk of unemployment is compensated with a higher wage with this being a reason as to why fixed-term contracts generally include a higher wage. CEO's in industries with high volatility are subject to increased risk of dismissal. Dismissed CEO's often undergo a period of unemployment after dismissal and frequently settle for jobs in smaller firms with lower remuneration. Due to this, and assuming there is demand competition within the labor market, they often require a higher remuneration than CEO's in non-volatile industries as a risk premium.
36:
837:
form of wage discrepancies between risky and less risky jobs, with a worker able to determine what amount they are willing to forgo to engage in a less risky job. In this instance the risk premium provides insight into the strength of correlation between risk and the average job type earnings with a larger premium potentially suggesting that there is a greater risk and/ or a lack of workers willing to take the risk.
317:, the riskiness of a stock can be estimated by the magnitude of the standard deviation from the mean. If for example the price of two different stocks were plotted over a year and an average trend line added for each, the stock whose price varies more dramatically about the mean is considered the riskier stock. Investors also analyse many other factors about a company that may influence its risk such as industry
786:
interest rate set by the central bank provides the risk premium. Stakeholders can interpret a large premium as an indication of increased default risk which has flow on effects such as negatively impacting the public’s confidence in the financial system which can ultimately lead to bank runs which is dangerous for an economy.
761:
depending on their level of risk aversion. The formula can be rearranged to find the expected return on an investment given a stated risk premium and risk-free rate. For example, if the investor in the example above required a risk premium of 9% then the expected return on the equity asset would have to be 12%.
836:
Regarding workers, the risk premium increases as the risk of injury increases and manifests in practice with average wages in dangerous jobs being higher for this reason. Another way in which the risk premium can be interpreted from the workers perspective is that risk is valued by the market, in the
937:
If too many contestants are risk averse, the game show may encourage selection of the riskier choice (gambling on one of the doors) by offering a positive risk premium. If the game show offers $ 1,600 behind the good door, increasing to $ 800 the expected value of choosing between doors 1 and 2, the
918:
participant may choose one of two doors, one that hides $ 1,000 and one that hides $ 0. Further, suppose that the host also allows the contestant to take $ 500 instead of choosing a door. The two options (choosing between door 1 and door 2, or taking $ 500) have the same expected value of $ 500, so
820:
of the security. The beta of a security is the measure of a security's volatility relative to the broader market to understand its historical share price movement compared to the market. If the beta of a stock is 1.0 then a 10% increase in the market will translate to a 10% increase in stock price.
651:
Note that the risk-premium depends both on the gamble itself, the agent's utility function, and the wealth-level of the agent. This can be understood intuitively by considering a real gamble. Some people may be quite willing to take the gamble and thus have a low risk-premium, while others are more
297:
The inputs for each of these variables and the ultimate interpretation of the risk premium value differs depending on the application as explained in the following sections. Regardless of the application, the market premium can be volatile as both comprising variables can be impacted independent of
802:
or CAPM. CAPM uses investment risk and expected return to estimate a value for the investment. In
Finance, CAPM is generally used to estimate the required rate of return for an equity. This required rate of return can then be used to estimate a price for the stock which can be done via a number of
785:
Risk premiums are essential to the banking sector and can provide a large amount of information to investors and customers alike. For instance, the risk premium for a savings account is determined by the bank through the interest that they set on their savings accounts for customers. This less the
789:
The risk premium is equally important for a bank’s assets with the risk premium on loans, defined as the loan interest charged to customers less the risk free government bond, needing to be sufficiently large to compensate the institution for the increased default risk associated with providing a
735:
The risk premium is used extensively in finance in areas such as asset pricing, portfolio allocation and risk management. Two fundamental aspects of finance, being equity and debt instruments, require the use and interpretation of associated risk premiums with the inputs for each explained below:
760:
For example, if an investor has a choice between a risk-free treasury bond with a bond yield of 3% and a risky company equity asset, the investor may require a greater return of 8% from the risky company. This would result in a risk premium of 5%. Individual investors set their own risk premium
298:
each other by both cyclical and abrupt changes. This means that the market premium is dynamic in nature and ever-changing. Additionally, a general observation regardless of application is that the risk premium is larger during economic downturns and during periods of increased uncertainty.
938:
risk premium becomes $ 300 (i.e. $ 800 expected value minus $ 500 guaranteed amount). Contestants requiring a minimum risk compensation of less than $ 300 will choose a door instead of accepting the guaranteed $ 500.
144:
is a measure of excess return that is required by an individual to compensate being subjected to an increased level of risk. It is used widely in finance and economics, the general definition being the expected risky
946:
Schroeder estimated risk premiums ranging from 4.83 to 7.75 percent in securities markets in the United
Kingdom and the European Union under multiple models, with most estimates ranging between 6.3 and 7.2 percent.
748:
the risk premium is the expected return of a company stock, a group of company stocks, or a portfolio of all stock market company stocks, minus the risk-free rate. The return from equity is the sum of the
798:
One of the most important applications of risk premiums is to estimate the value of financial assets. There are a number of models used in finance to determine this with the most widely used being the
1663:
Hagen, Tobias (2003). "Do
Temporary Workers Receive Risk Premiums? Assessing the Wage Effects of Fixed–term Contracts in West Germany by a Matching Estimator Compared with Parametric Approaches".
647:
894:
cultivar of wheat dramatically reduced the necessary risk premium. The total planted area of MR wheats was dramatically expanded, due to this essentially costless tradeoff to the new cultivar.
457:
340:
In expected utility theory, a rational agent has a utility function that maps sure-outcomes to numerical values, and the agent ranks gambles over sure-outcomes by their expected utilities.
234:
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363:
313:. The concept of risk premium can be applied to all these risks and the expected payoff from these risks can be determined if the risk premium can be quantified. In the
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averse. Further, as one's wealth increases, one is usually less perturbed by the gamble, whose stakes diminshes relative to one's wealth, consequently the risk-premium
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The level of risk associated with the risk premium concept does not need to be physical risk but it can also incorporate risk surrounding the job, such as
1592:
Arnould, Richard J.; Nichols, Len M. (1983). "Wage-Risk
Premiums and Workers' Compensation: A Refinement of Estimates of Compensating Wage Differential".
906:
costs - of new crop genes and other agricultural biotechnologies must include the risk premium of those which do not ultimately obtain patent approval.
882:
risks and losses in various ways, mostly by trading off between management methods and pricing that includes risk premiums. For example in the northern
1338:
Hollander, Hylton; Guangling, Liu (2016). "Credit spread variability in the U.S. business cycle: The Great
Moderation versus the Great Recession".
833:
with the larger the risk aversion of an individual or business the larger the risk premium the party will be willing to pay to avoid the risk.
777:, is the difference between a risky bond and the risk free treasury bond with greater risk demanding a greater risk premium as compensation.
1879:
565:
1779:
Finnoff, David; McIntosh, Chris; Shogren, Jason F.; Sims, Charles; Warziniack, Travis (2010). "Invasive
Species and Endogenous Risk".
1820:
Zhu, Zhanwang; Hao, Yuanfeng; Mergoum, Mohamed; Bai, Guihua; Humphreys, Gavin; Cloutier, Sylvie; Xia, Xianchun; He, Zhonghu (2019).
858:
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100:
17:
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Chalamandaris, George; Rompolis, Leonidas S. (2020). "Recovering the market risk premium from higher‐order moment risks".
1781:
72:
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Arnold, Beth E.; Ogielska-Zei, Eva (2002). "Patenting Genes and
Genetic Research Tools: Good or Bad for Innovation?".
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The risk premium concept is equally applicable in managerial economics. The risk premium is largely correlated with
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In this model, we use the implied risk premium (market return less risk-free rate) and multiply this with the
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68:
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Reichenstein, William; Rich, Steven P. (1993). "The market risk premium and long-term stock returns".
1984:
Ruben D. Cohen (2002) “The
Relationship Between the Equity Risk Premium, Duration and Dividend Yield
1368:
Lall, Martin; Prasad, Ved; Berkman, Henk (2013). "New
Zealand finance companies and risk premiums".
1822:"Breeding wheat for resistance to Fusarium head blight in the Global North: China, USA, and Canada"
1557:
Olson, Craig A. (1981). "An
Analysis of Wage Differentials Received by Workers on Dangerous Jobs".
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Ruben D. Cohen “The Long-run Behaviour of the S&P Composite Price Index and its Risk Premium
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Stapleton, Richard C.; Qi, Zeng (2018). "Downside Risk Aversion and the Downside Risk Premium".
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no risk premium is being offered for choosing the doors rather than the guaranteed $ 500.
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contestant will derive utility from the uncertainty and will therefore choose a door.
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Example of a linear Risk vs Return function and corresponding risk premium
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1209:; Hoisington, David M. (2003). "Estimating the stock/bond risk premium".
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1455:. Donaldson, John B. (3rd ed.). Oxford, : Elsevier/Academic Press.
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contestant will choose no door and accept the guaranteed $ 500, while a
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1928:"The Implied Equity Risk Premium - An Evaluation of Empirical Methods"
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Hussman Funds – Estimating the Long-Term Return on Stocks – June 1998
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1030:"Time-Varying Risk Premium in Large Cross-Sectional Equity Data Sets"
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Earnings Quality and the Equity Risk Premium: A Benchmark Model
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Gagliardini, Patrick; Ossola, Elisa; Scaillet, Olivier (2016).
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quarantine and/or management is a risk premium in some models.
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1281:"Assessing Risk Aversion From the Investor's Point of View"
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Empirical estimates of risk premium from securities markets
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Estimates of costs of research and development - including
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1629:"Career choice and the risk premium in the labor market"
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810:(The Beta of the Security) * (The Market Risk Premium)
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1405:"The finance–growth nexus: Does risk premium matter?"
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Graham, John R.; Harvey, Campbell R. (October 2015).
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is a constant problem. Then in 2000 the release of a
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and the risk free rate can be a treasury bond yield.
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1738:"Management Turnover Across the Corporate Hierarchy"
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642:{\displaystyle u(w+\mathbb {E} -\pi )=\mathbb {E} .}
1489:"Explaining The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)"
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60:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
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452:{\displaystyle u:\mathbb {R} \to \mathbb {R} }
1161:"Risk Aversion in the Small and in the Large"
1880:Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics
1736:Fee, C. Edward; Hadlock, Charles J. (2002).
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343:Let the set of possible wealth-levels be
267:is the risky expected rate of return and
120:Learn how and when to remove this message
1279:Díaz, Antonio; Esparcia, Carlos (2019).
926:is indifferent between these choices. A
229:{\displaystyle Risk\ premium=E(r)-r_{f}}
153:, as demonstrated by the formula below.
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1970:Fundamental Risk versus Systematic Risk
389:of the gamble is just its expectation:
14:
2005:
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423:Let the agent have a utility function
385:is a real-valued random variable. The
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420:. This is independent of any agent.
58:adding citations to reliable sources
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1926:David Schroeder (16 October 2007).
1782:Annual Review of Resource Economics
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1103:"The Equity Risk Premium in 2015"
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988:Minimum acceptable rate of return
898:Of investment in genetic research
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769:The risk premium associated with
480:{\displaystyle w\in \mathbb {R} }
1594:The Journal of Political Economy
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910:Example of observed risk premium
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1449:Danthine, Jean-Pierre. (2015).
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1211:Journal of Portfolio Management
45:needs additional citations for
1559:The Journal of Human Resources
1352:10.1016/j.jbankfin.2016.02.008
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562:, defined as the solution to
413:{\displaystyle \mathbb {E} }
358:{\displaystyle \mathbb {R} }
329:, and other market threats.
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1633:Review of Economic Dynamics
993:Expected utility hypothesis
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800:Capital Asset Pricing Model
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680:{\displaystyle \pi (w,Z)}
555:{\displaystyle \pi (w,Z)}
294:is the risk-free return.
1847:10.1016/j.cj.2019.06.003
1403:Adusei, Michael (2019).
1370:Accounting & Finance
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861:of whether to invest in
1742:SSRN Electronic Journal
1699:SSRN Electronic Journal
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1285:Frontiers in Psychology
1258:10.3905/jpm.1993.409461
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260:{\displaystyle E(r)}
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18:Certainty equivalent
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707:increases, holding
687:often decreases as
1932:KREDIT und KAPITAL
1616:– via JSTOR.
1526:10.1111/jori.12241
1382:10.1111/acfi.12039
1080:10.1111/eufm.12287
1050:– via JSTOR.
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520:{\displaystyle w}
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1198:
1157:Pratt, John W.
1148:
1131:Kenton, Will.
1120:
1093:
1074:(1): 147–186.
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1005:
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869:In agriculture
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846:
826:
823:
814:
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811:
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751:dividend yield
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1207:Hunt, Lacy H.
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973:Risk aversion
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939:
935:
933:
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893:
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884:United States
881:
880:crop pathogen
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860:
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834:
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831:risk aversion
822:
819:
809:
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805:
804:
801:
791:
787:
778:
776:
775:credit spread
772:
762:
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752:
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728:
714:
694:
671:
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388:
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65:Find sources:
59:
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43:This article
41:
37:
32:
31:
19:
1989:
1935:
1931:
1921:
1884:
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1840:): 730–738.
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1535:11343/283439
1517:
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1507:
1496:. Retrieved
1493:Investopedia
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1217:(2): 28–34.
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1168:
1165:Econometrica
1164:
1151:
1140:. Retrieved
1137:Investopedia
1136:
1106:
1096:
1071:
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1037:
1034:Econometrica
1033:
1023:
978:Risk neutral
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842:job security
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90:
83:
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64:
52:Please help
47:verification
44:
2013:Market risk
1891:: 415–432.
983:Risk-loving
958:Equity risk
932:risk-loving
928:risk-averse
365:. A gamble
2007:Categories
1997:(download)
1986:(download)
1952:Q106644168
1793:: 77–100.
1498:2020-11-01
1471:1152994506
1142:2021-04-28
1015:References
914:Suppose a
727:constant.
323:cash flows
319:volatility
110:March 2011
80:newspapers
1944:0023-4591
1905:1527-8204
1864:199629483
1856:2214-5141
1807:1941-1340
1766:219722544
1758:1556-5068
1723:219335510
1715:1556-5068
1544:158503442
1431:158303642
1390:154699020
1346:: 37–52.
1307:1664-1078
1266:154215909
1252:(4): 63.
1231:153742349
1185:0012-9682
1088:224941219
916:game show
660:π
599:π
596:−
535:π
470:∈
442:→
214:−
149:less the
2018:Wagering
1948:Wikidata
1913:12142363
1838:Elsevier
1639:: 1–18.
1614:21755839
1325:31312157
1291:: 1490.
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963:Interest
951:See also
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1193:1913738
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744:In the
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1665:Labour
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790:loan.
309:, and
238:Where
175:
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1860:S2CID
1832:(6).
1789:(1).
1762:S2CID
1719:S2CID
1610:S2CID
1575:JSTOR
1540:S2CID
1427:S2CID
1386:S2CID
1262:S2CID
1227:S2CID
1189:JSTOR
1084:S2CID
771:bonds
101:JSTOR
87:books
1940:ISSN
1909:PMID
1901:ISSN
1852:ISSN
1803:ISSN
1754:ISSN
1711:ISSN
1467:OCLC
1457:ISBN
1321:PMID
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1181:ISSN
1111:SSRN
1107:SSRN
968:Risk
857:The
818:beta
753:and
327:debt
73:news
1988:,”
1893:doi
1842:doi
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1746:doi
1703:doi
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1641:doi
1602:doi
1567:doi
1530:hdl
1522:doi
1417:doi
1378:doi
1348:doi
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