Browsing by Author "Aguilar, R."
Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- ItemAssociation of left atrial strain and strain rate assessed by speckle tracking with post coronary artery by-pass grafting atrial fibrillation(OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2010) Gabrielli, L.; Cordova, S.; Mac Nab, P.; Godoy, I.; Verdejo, H.; Villa, F.; Corbalan, R.; Aguilar, R.
- ItemCorrection: the heterogeneous effects of COVID-19 lockdowns on crime across the world(2024-10-26) Trajtenberg, N.; Fossati, S.; Diaz, C.; Nivette, A. E.; Aguilar, R.; Ahven, A.; Andrade, L.; Amram, S.; Ariel, B.; Arosemena Burbano, M. J.; Astolfi, R.; Baier, D.; Bark, H.-M.; Beijers, J. E. H.; Bergman, M.; Borges, D.; Breetzke, G.; Cano, I.; Concha Eastman, I. A.; Curtis-Ham, S.; Davenport, R.; Droppelman, Catalina; Fleitas, D.; Gerell, M.; Jang, K.-H.; Kääriäinen, J.; Lappi-Seppälä, T.; Lim, W.-S.; Loureiro Revilla, R.; Mazerolle, L.; Mendoza, C.; Meško, G.; Pereda, N.; Peres, M. F.; Poblete-Cazenave, R.; Rojido, E.; Rose, S.; Sanchez de Ribera, O.; Svensson, R.; Van der Lippe, T.; Veldkamp, J. A. M.; Vilalta Perdomo, C. J.; Zahnow, R.; Eisner, M. P.Correction to: In this article (Trajtenberg et al., 2024), the author name G. Breetzke was incorrectly written as G. Breeztke.
- ItemDownregulation of the Polycomb-Associated Methyltransferase Ezh2 during Maturation of Hippocampal Neurons Is Mediated by MicroRNAs Let-7 and miR-124(2020) Guajardo, L.; Aguilar, R.; Bustos, F. J.; Nardocci, G.; Gutiérrez Ilabaca, Rodrigo Antonio; van Zundert, B.; Montecino, M.
- ItemThe heterogeneous effects of COVID-19 lockdowns on crime across the world(2024) Trajtenberg, N.; Fossati, S.; Diaz, C.; Nivette, A. E.; Aguilar, R.; Ahven, A.; Andrade, L.; Amram, S.; Ariel, B.; Arosemena Burbano, M. J.; Astolfi, R.; Baier, D.; Bark, H.-M.; Beijers, J. E. H.; Bergman, M.; Borges, D.; Breeztke, G.; Cano, I.; Concha Eastman, I. A.; Curtis-Ham, S.; Davenport, R.; Droppelmann, Catalina; Fleitas, D.; Gerell, M.; Jang, K.-H.; Kääriäinen, J.; Lappi-Seppälä, T.; Lim, W.-S.; Loureiro Revilla, R.; Mazerolle, L.; Mendoza, C.; Meško, G.; Pereda, N.; Peres, M. F.; Poblete-Cazenave, R.; Rojido, E.; Rose, S.; de Ribera, O. S.; Svensson, R.; van der Lippe, T.; Veldkamp, J. A. M.; Vilalta Perdomo, C. J.; Zahnow, R.; Eisner, M. P.There is a vast literature evaluating the empirical association between stay-at-home policies and crime dur‑ ing the COVID-19 pandemic. However, these academic eforts have primarily focused on the efects within specifc cities or regions rather than adopting a cross-national comparative approach. Moreover, this body of literature not only generally lacks causal estimates but also has overlooked possible heterogeneities across diferent lev‑ els of stringency in mobility restrictions. This paper exploits the spatial and temporal variation of government responses to the pandemic in 45 cities across fve continents to identify the causal impact of strict lockdown policies on the number of ofenses reported to local police. We fnd that cities that implemented strict lockdowns expe‑ rienced larger declines in some crime types (robbery, burglary, vehicle theft) but not others (assault, theft, homi‑ cide). This decline in crime rates attributed to more stringent policy responses represents only a small proportion of the efects documented in the literature.