The latest estimates from the 2010/11 Taking Part adult survey produced by DCMS were released on 30 June 2011 according to the arrangements approved by the UK Statistics Authority.
30 June 2011
**
April 2010 to April 2011
**
National and Regional level data for England.
**
Further analysis of the 2010/11 adult dataset and data for child participation will be published on 18 August 2011.
The latest data from the 2010/11 Taking Part survey provides reliable national estimates of adult engagement with sport, libraries, the arts, heritage and museums & galleries. This release also presents analysis on volunteering and digital participation in our sectors and a look at cycling and swimming proficiency in England. The Taking Part survey is a continuous annual survey of adults and children living in private households in England, and carries the National Statistics badge, meaning that it meets the highest standards of statistical quality.
These spreadsheets contain the data and sample sizes for each sector included in the survey:
The previous Taking Part release was published on 31 March 2011 and can be found online.
This release is published in accordance with the Code of Practice for Official Statistics (2009), as produced by the http://www.statisticsauthority.gov.uk/" class="govuk-link">UK Statistics Authority (UKSA). The UKSA has the overall objective of promoting and safeguarding the production and publication of official statistics that serve the public good. It monitors and reports on all official statistics, and promotes good practice in this area.
The document below contains a list of Ministers and Officials who have received privileged early access to this release of Taking Part data. In line with best practice, the list has been kept to a minimum and those given access for briefing purposes had a maximum of 24 hours.
The responsible statistician for this release is Neil Wilson. For any queries please contact the Taking Part team on 020 7211 6968 or takingpart@culture.gsi.gov.uk.
https://dataverse-staging.rdmc.unc.edu/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=hdl:1902.29/CD-10849https://dataverse-staging.rdmc.unc.edu/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=hdl:1902.29/CD-10849
"The Statistical Abstract of the United States, published since 1878, is the standard summary of statistics on the social, political, and economic organization of the United States. It is designed to serve as a convenient volume for statistical reference and as a guide to other statistical publications and sources. The latter function is served by the introductory text to each section, the source note appearing below each table, and Appendix I, which comprises the Guide to Sources of Statisti cs, the Guide to State Statistical Abstracts, and the Guide to Foreign Statistical Abstracts. The Statistical Abstract sections and tables are compiled into one Adobe PDF named StatAbstract2009.pdf. This PDF is bookmarked by section and by table and can be searched using the Acrobat Search feature. The Statistical Abstract on CD-ROM is best viewed using Adobe Acrobat 5, or any subsequent version of Acrobat or Acrobat Reader. The Statistical Abstract tables and the metropolitan areas tables from Appendix II are available as Excel(.xls or .xlw) spreadsheets. In most cases, these spreadsheet files offer the user direct access to more data than are shown either in the publication or Adobe Acrobat. These files usually contain more years of data, more geographic areas, and/or more categories of subjects than those shown in the Acrobat version. The extensive selection of statistics is provided for the United States, with selected data for regions, divisions, states, metropolitan areas, cities, and foreign countries from reports and records of government and private agencies. Software on the disc can be used to perform full-text searches, view official statistics, open tables as Lotus worksheets or Excel workbooks, and link directly to source agencies and organizations for supporting information. Except as indicated, figures are for the United States as presently constituted. Although emphasis in the Statistical Abstract is primarily given to national data, many tables present data for regions and individual states and a smaller number for metropolitan areas and cities.Statistics for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and for island areas of the United States are included in many state tables and are supplemented by information in Section 29. Additional information for states, cities, counties, metropolitan areas, and other small units, as well as more historical data are available in various supplements to the Abstract. Statistics in this edition are generally for the most recent year or period available by summer 2006. Each year over 1,400 tables and charts are reviewed and evaluated; new tables and charts of current interest are added, continuing series are updated, and less timely data are condensed or eliminated. Text notes and appendices are revised as appropriate. This year we have introduced 72 new tables covering a wide range of subject areas. These cover a variety of topics including: learning disability for children, people impacted by the hurricanes in the Gulf Coast area, employees with alternative work arrangements, adult computer and Internet users by selected characteristics, North America cruise industry, women- and minority-owned businesses, and the percentage of the adult population considered to be obese. Some of the annually surveyed topics are population; vital statistics; health and nutrition; education; law enforcement, courts and prison; geography and environment; elections; state and local government; federal government finances and employment; national defense and veterans affairs; social insurance and human services; labor force, employment, and earnings; income, expenditures, and wealth; prices; business enterprise; science and technology; agriculture; natural resources; energy; construction and housing; manufactures; domestic trade and services; transportation; information and communication; banking, finance, and insurance; arts, entertainment, and recreation; accommodation, food services, and other services; foreign commerce and aid; outlying areas; and comparative international statistics." Note to Users: This CD is part of a collection located in the Data Archive of the Odum Institute for Research in Social Science, at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The collection is located in Room 10, Manning Hall. Users may check the CDs out subscribing to the honor system. Items can be checked out for a period of two weeks. Loan forms are located adjacent to the collection.
The Taking Part survey has run since 2005 and is the key evidence source for DCMS. It is a continuous face to face household survey of adults aged 16 and over in England and children aged 5 to 15 years old.
As detailed in the last statistical release and on our consultation pages in March 2013, the responsibility for reporting Official Statistics on adult sport participation now falls entirely with Sport England. Sport participation data are reported on by Sport England in the Active People Survey.
19th March 2015
January 2014 to December 2014
National and regional level data for England.
A release of rolling annual estimates for adults is scheduled for June 2015.
The latest data from the 2014/15 Taking Part survey provides reliable national estimates of adult engagement with archives, arts, heritage, libraries and museums & galleries.
The report also looks at some of the other measures in the survey that provide estimates of volunteering and charitable giving and civic engagement.
The Taking Part survey is a continuous annual survey of adults and children living in private households in England, and carries the National Statistics badge, meaning that it meets the highest standards of statistical quality.
These spread sheets contain the data and sample sizes to support the material in this release.
The meta-data describe the Taking Part data and provides terms and definitions. This document provides a stand-alone copy of the meta-data which are also included as annexes in the statistical report.
The previous adult quarterly Taking Part release was published on 9th December 2014 and the previous child Taking Part release was published on 18th September 2014. Both releases also provide spread sheets containing the data and sample sizes for each sector included in the survey. A series of short reports relating to the 2013/14 annual adult data were also released on 17th March 2015.
The document above contains a list of ministers and officials who have received privileged early access to this release of Taking Part data. In line with best practice, the list has been kept to a minimum and those given access for briefing purposes had a maximum of 24 hours.
This release is published in accordance with the Code of Practice for Official Statistics (2009), as produced by the UK Statistics Authority. The Authority has the overall objective of promoting and safeguarding the production and publication of official statistics that serve the public good. It monitors and reports on all official statistics, and promotes good practice in this area.
The latest figures in this release are based on data that was first published on 19th March 2015. Details on the pre-release access arrangements for this dataset are available in the accompanying material for the previous release.
The responsible statistician for this release is Jodie Hargreaves. For enquiries on this release, contact Jodie Hargreaves on 020 7211 6327 or Maddy May 020 7211 2281.
For any queries contact them or the Taking Part team at takingpart@culture.gsi.gov.uk.
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Demonstration of basic applications of instrumental variable estimation (IVE), with applications of the Durbin-Wu-Hausman (DWH) test as an augmented regression.
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This worksheet allows you to see how IRT estimates the ML estimate of theta. Plus in the a and b for an item, as well as the response to each item (correct/incorrect).
The Taking Part Survey has run since 2005 and is the key evidence source for DCMS. It is a continuous face to face household survey of adults aged 16 and over in England and children aged 5 to 15 years old.
The Taking Part Survey provides reliable national estimates of engagement with the arts, heritage, museums and libraries. It carries the National Statistics badge, meaning that it meets the highest standards of statistical quality.
30 August 2018
April 2017 to March 2018
National and Regional level data for England
A series of “Taking Part, Focus on…” reports will be published in autumn 2018. Each ‘short story’ in this series will look at a specific topic in more detail, providing more in-depth analysis of the 2017/18 Taking Part data.
The Taking Part Survey provides reliable national estimates of adult engagement with the arts, heritage, museums, archives and libraries, and of barriers to engagement with these sectors. The latest data cover the period April 2017 to March 2018.
The report also looks at some of the other statistics from the Taking Part Survey, including digital engagement with culture, volunteering and charitable giving, First World War Commemorations and TV.
These spreadsheets contain the data and sample sizes to support the material in this release.
The previous adult biannual Taking Part release was published on 6 December 2017 and the previous adult Taking Part annual release was published on 28th September 2017. Both releases also provide spreadsheets containing the data and sample sizes for each sector included in the survey. A series of short story reports was published on 27 April 2018.
The document above contains a list of ministers and officials who have received privileged early access to this release of Taking Part data. In line with best practice, the list has been kept to a minimum and those given access for briefing purposes had a maximum of 24 hours. Details on the pre-release access arrangements for this dataset are available in the accompanying material.
This release is published in accordance with the Code of Practice for Statistics (2018), as produced by the UK Statistics Authority. The Authority has the overall objective of promoting and safeguarding the production and publication of official statistics that serve the public good. It monitors and reports on all official statistics, and promotes good practice in this area.
The responsible statistician for this release is Alex Björkegren. For enquiries on this release, contact Alex Björkegren on 020 7211 6776 or Maria Willoughby on 020 7211 6771.
For any further queries contact them or the Taking Part team at takingpart@culture.gov.uk.
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In March 2003, banks and selected Registered Financial Corporations (RFCs) began reporting their international assets, liabilities and country exposures to APRA in ARF/RRF 231 International Exposures. This return is the basis of the data provided by Australia to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) for its International Banking Statistics (IBS) data collection. APRA ceased the RFC data collection after September 2010.
The IBS data are based on the methodology described in the BIS Guide on International Financial Statistics (see http://www.bis.org/statistics/intfinstatsguide.pdf; Part II International banking statistics). Data reported for Australia, and other countries, on the BIS website are expressed in United States dollars (USD).
Data are recorded on an end-quarter basis.
There are two sets of IBS data: locational data, which are used to gauge the role of banks and financial centres in the intermediation of international capital flows; and consolidated data, which can be used to monitor the country risk exposure of national banking systems. Only consolidated data are reported in this statistical table.
Data are shown for a range of countries and regions. Similar data for a selected group of countries are also available in statistical table B13.1.
Country and regional groupings are based on the classification used in the IBS.
Data presented in this statistical table are immediate risk claims (expressed by the BIS as claims on an immediate borrower basis), which cover exposures on an immediate counterparty location basis. Ultimate risk claims are presented in complementary statistical tables B13.2 and B13.2.1, which cover immediate exposures adjusted (via guarantees and other risk transfers) to reflect the location of the ultimate counterparty/risk.
International claims represent cross-border claims in all currencies and foreign offices’ local claims in non-local currencies (which would include, for example, USD claims on New Zealand residents by the New Zealand subsidiary of an Australian-owned bank).
This statistical table contains seven data worksheets. Six present data for countries within each specified region, while the 'Summary' worksheet shows total international claims of the globally consolidated operations of Australian-owned banks for each region, international organisations and unallocated. In each of these worksheets, the data in the last column measures total international claims for the region. Total international claims for each country add to total international claims for the region. However, in some quarters, this cannot be directly verified because data for individual countries and regions have blank entries in order to avoid disclosing confidential bank exposures.
In the 'Summary' worksheet, the positions by region and international organisation, and unallocated are summed to produce a ‘Total’ figure that represents reporting entities’ total international exposures.
https://dataverse-staging.rdmc.unc.edu/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=hdl:1902.29/CD-0175https://dataverse-staging.rdmc.unc.edu/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=hdl:1902.29/CD-0175
"The Statistical Abstract is the nation's best known and most popular single source of statistics on the social, political, and economic organization of the country. The print version has been published since 1878, and a compact disc version has been available since 1993. Both are designed to serve as a convenient, easy-to-use statistical reference source and guide to statistical publications and sources. The extensive selection of statistics is provided for the United States, with selected d ata for regions, divisions, states, metropolitan areas, cities, and foreign countries from reports and records of government and private agencies. Software on the disc can be used to perform full-text searches, view official statistics, open tables as Lotus worksheets or Excel workbooks, and link directly to source agencies and organizations for supporting information. The disc contains over 1,500 tables from over 250 different governmental, private, and international organizations. Some of the topics are population; vital statistics; health and nutrition; education; law enforcement, courts and prison; geography and environment; elections; state and local government; federal government finances and employment; national defense and veterans affairs; social insurance and human services; labor force, employment, and earnings; income, expenditures, and wealth; prices; business enterprise; science and technology; agriculture; natural resources; energy; construction and housing; manufactures; domestic trade and services; transportation; information and communication; banking, finance, and insurance; arts, entertainment, and recreation; accommodation, food services, and other services; foreign commerce and aid; outlying areas; and comparative international statistics. Significant changes in the 2002 data include new data from the 2000 census and new tables that include data covering resident population's migration status, educational attainment, disability status, ancestry, place of birth, and language spoken at home as well as househol d income, poverty, and selected housing characteristics from the sample portion of the 2000 census. New tables cover topics such as unmarried households, state children's health insurance programs, limitation of activity level caused by chronic conditions, characteristics of homeschooled children, firearm-use offenders, home- based work and flexible work by workers, computer use in the workplace, employee benefits, and computer and Internet use." Note to Users: This CD is part of a collection located in the Data Archive of the Odum Institute for Research in Social Science, at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The collection is located in Room 10, Manning Hall. Users may check the CDs out subscribing to the honor system. Items can be checked out for a period of two weeks. Loan forms are located adjacent to the collection.
The Taking Part survey has run since 2005 and is the key evidence source for DCMS. It is a continuous face to face household survey of adults aged 16 and over in England and children aged 5 to 15 years old.
As detailed in the last statistical release and on our consultation pages in March 2013, the responsibility for reporting Official Statistics on adult sport participation now falls entirely with Sport England. Sport participation data are reported on by Sport England in the Active People Survey.
Amendment on 27 January 2016: This publication has been updated in January 2016 to correct data in the Taking Part 2015/16 Quarter 2 statistical release published on 17 December 2015. The only changes relate to figures presented in Figure 7.1. No other figures in the statistical release (or associated data tables) have been affected.
17th December 2015
October 2014 to September 2015
National and regional level data for England.
A series of “Taking Part, Focus on…” reports will be published in April 2016. Each ‘short story’ in this series will look at a specific topic in more detail, providing more in-depth analysis of the 2014/15 Taking Part data.
The latest data from October 2014 to September 2015. Taking Part survey provides reliable national estimates of adult engagement with the arts, heritage, museums, archives and libraries.
The report also looks at some of the other measures in the survey that provide estimates of volunteering and charitable giving and digital engagement.
The Taking Part survey is a continuous annual survey of adults and children living in private households in England, and carries the National Statistics badge, meaning that it meets the highest standards of statistical quality.
These spreadsheets contain the data and sample sizes to support the material in this release.
Metadata The meta-data describe the Taking Part data and provides terms and definitions. This document provides a stand-alone copy of the meta-data which are also included as annexes in the statistical report.
The previous adult quarterly Taking Part release was published on 25th June 2015 and the previous child Taking Part annual release was published on 23rd July 2015. Both releases also provide spreadsheets containing the data and sample sizes for each sector included in the survey. A series of short reports relating to the 2014/15 annual adult data was also released on 12th November 2015.
The document above contains a list of ministers and officials who have received privileged early access to this release of Taking Part data. In line with best practice, the list has been kept to a minimum and those given access for briefing purposes had a maximum of 24 hours.
This release is published in accordance with the Code of Practice for Official Statistics (2009), as produced by the UK Statistics Authority. The Authority has the overall objective of promoting and safeguarding the production and publication of official statistics that serve the public good. It monitors and reports on all official statistics, and promotes good practice in this area.
The latest figures in this release are based on data that was first published on 17th December 2015. Details on the pre-release access arrangements for this dataset are available in the accompanying material for the previous release.
The responsible statistician for this release is Helen Miller-Bakewell. For enquiries on this release, contact Helen Miller-Bakewell on 020 7211 6355 or Mary Gregory 020 7211 2377.
For any queries contact them or the Taking Part team at takingpart@culture.gov.uk
Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
License information was derived automatically
In March 2003, banks and selected Registered Financial Corporations (RFCs) began reporting their international assets, liabilities and country exposures to APRA in ARF/RRF 231 International …Show full descriptionIn March 2003, banks and selected Registered Financial Corporations (RFCs) began reporting their international assets, liabilities and country exposures to APRA in ARF/RRF 231 International Exposures. This return is the basis of the data provided by Australia to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) for its International Banking Statistics (IBS) data collection. APRA ceased the RFC data collection after September 2010. The IBS data are based on the methodology described in the BIS Guide on International Financial Statistics (see http://www.bis.org/statistics/intfinstatsguide.pdf; Part II International banking statistics). Data reported for Australia, and other countries, on the BIS website are expressed in United States dollars. Data are recorded on an end-quarter basis. There are two sets of IBS data: locational data, which are used to gauge the role of banks and financial centres in the intermediation of international capital flows; and consolidated data, which can be used to monitor the country risk exposure of national banking systems. Only locational data are reported in this statistical table. Data are shown for a range of countries and regions. Similar data for a selected group of countries are also available in B12.2. Country and regional groupings are based on the classification used in the IBS. Some liabilities are reported at market value, but contractual or nominal values are used where market values are not appropriate. This statistical table contains seven data worksheets. Six present data for countries within each specified region, while the 'Summary' worksheet shows total international liabilities of Australian-located banks (and RFCs between March 2003 and September 2010) for each region, and Australia. In each of these worksheets, the data in the last column measures total international liabilities for the region. Total international liabilities for each country add to total international liabilities for the region. However, in some quarters, this cannot be directly verified because data for individual countries and regions have blank entries in order to avoid disclosing confidential bank exposures. In the 'Summary' worksheet, the positions by region are summed to produce a ‘Total non-residents’ figure that represents reporting entities’ total positions with offshore counterparties in all currencies. The positions shown for 'Australia' are positions with residents in foreign currency.
Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
License information was derived automatically
In March 2003, banks and selected Registered Financial Corporations (RFCs) began reporting their international assets, liabilities and country exposures to APRA in ARF/RRF 231 International Exposures. This return is the basis of the data provided by Australia to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) for its International Banking Statistics (IBS) data collection. APRA ceased the RFC data collection after September 2010.\r \r The IBS data are based on the methodology described in the BIS Guide on International Financial Statistics (see http://www.bis.org/statistics/intfinstatsguide.pdf; Part II International banking statistics). Data reported for Australia, and other countries, on the BIS website are expressed in United States dollars.\r \r Data are recorded on an end-quarter basis.\r \r There are two sets of IBS data: locational data, which are used to gauge the role of banks and financial centres in the intermediation of international capital flows; and consolidated data, which can be used to monitor the country risk exposure of national banking systems. Only locational data are reported in this statistical table and all assets are reported at market value. \r \r Data are shown for a range of countries and regions. Similar data for a selected group of countries are also available in B12.1.\r \r Country and regional groupings are based on the classification used in the IBS.\r \r This statistical table contains seven data worksheets. Six present data for countries within each specified region, while the 'Summary' worksheet shows total international assets of Australian-located banks (and RFCs between March 2003 and September 2010) for each region, and Australia. In each of these worksheets, the data in the last column measures total international assets for the region. Total international assets for each country add to total international assets for the region. However, in some quarters, this cannot be directly verified because data for individual countries and regions have blank entries in order to avoid disclosing confidential bank exposures.\r \r In the 'Summary' worksheet, the positions by region are summed to produce a ‘Total non-residents’ figure that represents reporting entities’ total positions with offshore counterparties in all currencies. The positions shown for 'Australia' are positions with residents in foreign currency.\r
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Worksheet “Data” includes raw data and summary counts/proportions collected from the five principle sources described in the article. Worksheet “Stat Analysis” provides an example of the data analysis preformed on one of the data sources from “Data”. (XLS)
This file consists of the four original sheets included in the District Profile Report download, as described on the About FY19 Report tab, an additional five sheets created for GIS use and documentation, and an About File tab.The original four sheets are as follows:1. The “District Profile Report” provides a list of statistics for a given school district under seven groupings listed above (A-G). There are six columns of data in this worksheet. The first three columns provide statistics for each data element for the selected district, similar districts average and statewide average. There are three additional columns that enable the user to look at the statistics of three other school districts for comparison. By clicking in the cell below the Comparison Districts 1, 2 and 3 labels, the user can choose three additional school districts to review simultaneously.2. The worksheet labeled “District Data” provides a downloadable file of school district data.3. The worksheet labeled “Similar Districts Data” provides a downloadable file of similar districts averages.4. The worksheet labeled “Statewide Data” provides statewide averages for every statistic in the report.The five new sheets are as follows:1. FY19_Data_Dictionary - contains the abbreviated column names for GIS use and their definitions as found on the original download page. (The link is on the About FY19 Report sheet)2. FY19_Join - contains the District Data formatted for use in a GIS in the following way: the attribute/column titles were abbreviated for use in GIS, column C - UNSDLEA19 was added to facilitate joining to the Census School District geography file, column D - COUNTY was added for geographical filtering purposes, column E - COUNTY_GEOID was added for geographical filtering purposes. All columns from F to BM remain in the same order as the original dataset3. About FY19 Report - contains the report description as found on the original download page. The link to that original download page is also on this sheet.4. Mismatches - contains the school districts where the Census UNSDLEA cannot be derived from the Ohio IRN for quality control purposes5. No Data - contains the school districts that are not in the Profile Report but are in the Census geography data, for a quality control check when performing a join
Excel file containing diurnal ensemble statistics of 2-m temperature, 2-m mixing ratio and 10-m wind speed. This Excel file contains figures for Figure 2 in the paper and worksheets containing all statistics for the 14 members of the ensemble and a base simulation. This dataset is associated with the following publication: Gilliam , R., C. Hogrefe , J. Godowitch, S. Napelenok , R. Mathur , and S.T. Rao. Impact of inherent meteorology uncertainty on air quality model predictions. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES. American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, USA, 120(23): 12,259–12,280, (2015).
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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This data file contains one worksheet containing raw data and descriptive statistics regarding static mechanical parameters obtained from force-distance curves of the spider silk fibres using SPIP software, and are described in its manual. The column descriptions for the raw data worksheet are as follows: COLUMN A – Sample Label COLUMN B – Maximum Load Force (Max Ld) COLUMN C – Maximum Pulling Force (Max Pull) COLUMN D – Snap In (Snap In) COLUMN E – Detachment Separation (Detach Sep) COLUMN F – Young’s Modulus (Youngs Mod) COLUMN G – Zero Indentation (Zero Ind) Column H – Dissipated Energy (Energy)
The Taking Part survey has run since 2005 and is the key evidence source for DCMS. It is a continuous face to face household survey of adults aged 16 and over in England and children aged 5 to 15 years old.
As detailed in the last statistical release and on our consultation pages in March 2013, the responsibility for reporting Official Statistics on adult sport participation now falls entirely with Sport England. Sport participation data are reported on by Sport England in the Active People Survey.
21 July 2016
April 2015 to March 2016
National and Regional level data for England
A series of “Taking Part, Focus on…” reports will be published in October 2016. Each ‘short story’ in this series will look at a specific topic in more detail, providing more in-depth analysis of the 2015/16 Taking Part data.
The Taking Part survey provides reliable national estimates of adult engagement with the arts, heritage, museums, archives and libraries. Latest data are from April 2015 to March 2016.
The report also looks at some of the other measures in the survey that provide estimates of volunteering and charitable giving and digital engagement.
The Taking Part survey is a continuous annual survey of adults and children living in private households in England, and carries the National Statistics badge, meaning that it meets the highest standards of statistical quality.
These spreadsheets contain the data and sample sizes to support the material in this release.
The previous adult biannual Taking Part release was published on 17th December 2015 and the previous child Taking Part annual release was published on 23rd July 2015. Both releases also provide spreadsheets containing the data and sample sizes for each sector included in the survey. A series of short story reports was also released on 28th April 2016.
The document above contains a list of ministers and officials who have received privileged early access to this release of Taking Part data. In line with best practice, the list has been kept to a minimum and those given access for briefing purposes had a maximum of 24 hours.
This release is published in accordance with the Code of Practice for Official Statistics (2009), as produced by the UK Statistics Authority. The Authority has the overall objective of promoting and safeguarding the production and publication of official statistics that serve the public good. It monitors and reports on all official statistics, and promotes good practice in this area.
The latest figures in this release are based on data that was first published on 21st July 2016. Details on the pre-release access arrangements for this dataset are available in the accompanying material for the previous release.
The responsible statistician for this release is Helen Miller-Bakewell. For enquiries on this release, contact Helen Miller-Bakewell on 020 7211 6355 or Mary Gregory 020 7211 2377.
For any queries contact them or the Taking Part team at takingpart@culture.gov.uk
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This is a supplementary data sets for a manuscript submitted to JGR: Solid Earth entitled "A Fractal Reference Model Based on 3D Process-Based Digital Core for Evaluating the Complexity of Rock Pore Structure". This data sets present the digital core construction and fractal dimension calculation in detail, including process-based modeling program, CT digital core data, fractal dimension calculation program and analysis statistics worksheet.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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This is an archive of the raw data and analysis source code for the paper "Fldgen v1.0: An Emulator with Internal Variability and Space-Time Correlation for Earth System Models". The archive contains:
The source code in this archive is written in R and requires the R runtime environment. It also uses the fldgen package, version 1.0.0, which is available at https://github.com/JGCRI/fldgen
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
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These datatasets relate to the computational study presented in the paper "The Berth Allocation Problem with Channel Restrictions", authored by Paul Corry and Christian Bierwirth. They consist of all the randomly generated problem instances along with the computational results presented in the paper.
Results across all problem instances assume ship separation parameters of [delta_1, delta_2, delta_3] = [0.25, 0, 0.5].
Excel Workbook Organisation:
The data is organised into separate Excel files for each table in the paper, as indicated by the file description. Within each file, each row of data presented (aggregating 10 replications) in the corrsponding table is captured in two worksheets, one with the problem instance data, and the other with generated solution data obtained from several solution methods (described in the paper). For example, row 3 of Tab. 2, will have data for 10 problem instances on worksheet T2R3, and corresponding solution data on T2R3X.
Problem Instance Data Format:
On each problem instance worksheet (e.g. T2R3), each row of data corresponds to a different problem instance, and there are 10 replications on each worksheet.
The first column provides a replication identifier which is referenced on the corresponding solution worksheet (e.g. T2R3X).
Following this, there are n*(2c+1) columns (n = number of ships, c = number of channel segmenets) with headers p(i)_(j).(k)., where i references the operation (channel transit/berth visit) id, j references the ship id, and k references the index of the operation within the ship. All indexing starts at 0. These columns define the transit or dwell times on each segment. A value of -1 indicates a segment on which a berth allocation must be applied, and hence the dwell time is unkown.
There are then a further n columns with headers r(j), defining the release times of each ship.
For ChSP problems, there are a final n colums with headers b(j), defining the berth to be visited by each ship. ChSP problems with fixed berth sequencing enforced have an additional n columns with headers toa(j), indicating the order in which ship j sits within its berth sequence. For BAP-CR problems, these columnns are not present, but replaced by n*m columns (m = number of berths) with headers p(j).(b) defining the berth processing time of ship j if allocated to berth b.
Solution Data Format:
Each row of data corresponds to a different solution.
Column A references the replication identifier (from the corresponding instance worksheet) that the soluion refers to.
Column B defines the algorithm that was used to generate the solution.
Column C shows the objective function value (total waiting and excess handling time) obtained.
Column D shows the CPU time consumed in generating the solution, rounded to the nearest second.
Column E shows the optimality gap as a proportion. A value of -1 or an empty value indicates that optimality gap is unknown.
From column F onwards, there are are n*(2c+1) columns with the previously described p(i)_(j).(k). headers. The values in these columns define the entry times at each segment.
For BAP-CR problems only, following this there are a further 2n columns. For each ship j, there will be columns titled b(j) and p.b(j) defining the berth that was allocated to ship j, and the processing time on that berth respectively.
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Each worksheet contains 6-8 tabs. The first tab has the identification of the monitoring station with its geographic coordinates. The second tab is the raw data with a count of the number of observations for each parameter monitored in the last line. In the third tab the data is filtered, the zero removed and the water quality parameters with less than 31 observations omitted. The fourth tab presents only the final numerical worksheet for statistical treatment. The fifth tab the numeric data is discretized. In this tab, the tertile, maximum, minimum and frequency of the data in each tertile per variable can be seen. In addition to the discretization equations. The sixth and seventh tabs exist only at monitoring stations that measure ammonium nitrogen. This tab presents the process of discretization of ammonium nitrogen. The last tab of all worksheets presents the discretized intervals of each water quality variable in the format required by the CBA software. The values on the last tab must be transformed into a "tra" file, the type of file required by the CBA software to generate association rules. One of the ways is to save the tab as a "txt" file and rename it as "tra" in the Windows Command Prompt.
The latest estimates from the 2010/11 Taking Part adult survey produced by DCMS were released on 30 June 2011 according to the arrangements approved by the UK Statistics Authority.
30 June 2011
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April 2010 to April 2011
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National and Regional level data for England.
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Further analysis of the 2010/11 adult dataset and data for child participation will be published on 18 August 2011.
The latest data from the 2010/11 Taking Part survey provides reliable national estimates of adult engagement with sport, libraries, the arts, heritage and museums & galleries. This release also presents analysis on volunteering and digital participation in our sectors and a look at cycling and swimming proficiency in England. The Taking Part survey is a continuous annual survey of adults and children living in private households in England, and carries the National Statistics badge, meaning that it meets the highest standards of statistical quality.
These spreadsheets contain the data and sample sizes for each sector included in the survey:
The previous Taking Part release was published on 31 March 2011 and can be found online.
This release is published in accordance with the Code of Practice for Official Statistics (2009), as produced by the http://www.statisticsauthority.gov.uk/" class="govuk-link">UK Statistics Authority (UKSA). The UKSA has the overall objective of promoting and safeguarding the production and publication of official statistics that serve the public good. It monitors and reports on all official statistics, and promotes good practice in this area.
The document below contains a list of Ministers and Officials who have received privileged early access to this release of Taking Part data. In line with best practice, the list has been kept to a minimum and those given access for briefing purposes had a maximum of 24 hours.
The responsible statistician for this release is Neil Wilson. For any queries please contact the Taking Part team on 020 7211 6968 or takingpart@culture.gsi.gov.uk.