ter U.S. chief justice puts hold on disclosure of Russia investigation materials By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 11:50:21 -0400 U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts on Friday put a temporary hold on the disclosure to a Democratic-led House of Representatives committee of grand jury material redacted from former Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report on Russian interference in the 2016 election. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled in March that the materials had to be disclosed to the House Judiciary Committee and refused to put that decision on hold. The appeals court said the materials had to be handed over by May 11 if the Supreme Court did not intervene. Full Article
ter A person was struck and killed by a Southwest plane as it landed on the runway at Austin international airport By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 10:53:00 -0400 Austin-Bergstrom International Airport said it was "aware of an individual that was struck and killed on runway 17-R by a landing aircraft." Full Article
ter Additive Multivariate Gaussian Processes for Joint Species Distribution Modeling with Heterogeneous Data By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Thu, 19 Mar 2020 22:02 EDT Jarno Vanhatalo, Marcelo Hartmann, Lari Veneranta. Source: Bayesian Analysis, Volume 15, Number 2, 415--447.Abstract: Species distribution models (SDM) are a key tool in ecology, conservation and management of natural resources. Two key components of the state-of-the-art SDMs are the description for species distribution response along environmental covariates and the spatial random effect that captures deviations from the distribution patterns explained by environmental covariates. Joint species distribution models (JSDMs) additionally include interspecific correlations which have been shown to improve their descriptive and predictive performance compared to single species models. However, current JSDMs are restricted to hierarchical generalized linear modeling framework. Their limitation is that parametric models have trouble in explaining changes in abundance due, for example, highly non-linear physical tolerance limits which is particularly important when predicting species distribution in new areas or under scenarios of environmental change. On the other hand, semi-parametric response functions have been shown to improve the predictive performance of SDMs in these tasks in single species models. Here, we propose JSDMs where the responses to environmental covariates are modeled with additive multivariate Gaussian processes coded as linear models of coregionalization. These allow inference for wide range of functional forms and interspecific correlations between the responses. We propose also an efficient approach for inference with Laplace approximation and parameterization of the interspecific covariance matrices on the Euclidean space. We demonstrate the benefits of our model with two small scale examples and one real world case study. We use cross-validation to compare the proposed model to analogous semi-parametric single species models and parametric single and joint species models in interpolation and extrapolation tasks. The proposed model outperforms the alternative models in all cases. We also show that the proposed model can be seen as an extension of the current state-of-the-art JSDMs to semi-parametric models. Full Article
ter High-Dimensional Posterior Consistency for Hierarchical Non-Local Priors in Regression By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 13 Jan 2020 04:00 EST Xuan Cao, Kshitij Khare, Malay Ghosh. Source: Bayesian Analysis, Volume 15, Number 1, 241--262.Abstract: The choice of tuning parameters in Bayesian variable selection is a critical problem in modern statistics. In particular, for Bayesian linear regression with non-local priors, the scale parameter in the non-local prior density is an important tuning parameter which reflects the dispersion of the non-local prior density around zero, and implicitly determines the size of the regression coefficients that will be shrunk to zero. Current approaches treat the scale parameter as given, and suggest choices based on prior coverage/asymptotic considerations. In this paper, we consider the fully Bayesian approach introduced in (Wu, 2016) with the pMOM non-local prior and an appropriate Inverse-Gamma prior on the tuning parameter to analyze the underlying theoretical property. Under standard regularity assumptions, we establish strong model selection consistency in a high-dimensional setting, where $p$ is allowed to increase at a polynomial rate with $n$ or even at a sub-exponential rate with $n$ . Through simulation studies, we demonstrate that our model selection procedure can outperform other Bayesian methods which treat the scale parameter as given, and commonly used penalized likelihood methods, in a range of simulation settings. Full Article
ter Determinantal Point Process Mixtures Via Spectral Density Approach By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 13 Jan 2020 04:00 EST Ilaria Bianchini, Alessandra Guglielmi, Fernando A. Quintana. Source: Bayesian Analysis, Volume 15, Number 1, 187--214.Abstract: We consider mixture models where location parameters are a priori encouraged to be well separated. We explore a class of determinantal point process (DPP) mixture models, which provide the desired notion of separation or repulsion. Instead of using the rather restrictive case where analytical results are partially available, we adopt a spectral representation from which approximations to the DPP density functions can be readily computed. For the sake of concreteness the presentation focuses on a power exponential spectral density, but the proposed approach is in fact quite general. We later extend our model to incorporate covariate information in the likelihood and also in the assignment to mixture components, yielding a trade-off between repulsiveness of locations in the mixtures and attraction among subjects with similar covariates. We develop full Bayesian inference, and explore model properties and posterior behavior using several simulation scenarios and data illustrations. Supplementary materials for this article are available online (Bianchini et al., 2019). Full Article
ter Post-Processing Posteriors Over Precision Matrices to Produce Sparse Graph Estimates By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Thu, 19 Dec 2019 22:10 EST Amir Bashir, Carlos M. Carvalho, P. Richard Hahn, M. Beatrix Jones. Source: Bayesian Analysis, Volume 14, Number 4, 1075--1090.Abstract: A variety of computationally efficient Bayesian models for the covariance matrix of a multivariate Gaussian distribution are available. However, all produce a relatively dense estimate of the precision matrix, and are therefore unsatisfactory when one wishes to use the precision matrix to consider the conditional independence structure of the data. This paper considers the posterior predictive distribution of model fit for these covariance models. We then undertake post-processing of the Bayes point estimate for the precision matrix to produce a sparse model whose expected fit lies within the upper 95% of the posterior predictive distribution of fit. The impact of the method for selecting the zero elements of the precision matrix is evaluated. Good results were obtained using models that encouraged a sparse posterior (G-Wishart, Bayesian adaptive graphical lasso) and selection using credible intervals. We also find that this approach is easily extended to the problem of finding a sparse set of elements that differ across a set of precision matrices, a natural summary when a common set of variables is observed under multiple conditions. We illustrate our findings with moderate dimensional data examples from finance and metabolomics. Full Article
ter Fast Model-Fitting of Bayesian Variable Selection Regression Using the Iterative Complex Factorization Algorithm By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 13 Mar 2019 22:00 EDT Quan Zhou, Yongtao Guan. Source: Bayesian Analysis, Volume 14, Number 2, 573--594.Abstract: Bayesian variable selection regression (BVSR) is able to jointly analyze genome-wide genetic datasets, but the slow computation via Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) hampered its wide-spread usage. Here we present a novel iterative method to solve a special class of linear systems, which can increase the speed of the BVSR model-fitting tenfold. The iterative method hinges on the complex factorization of the sum of two matrices and the solution path resides in the complex domain (instead of the real domain). Compared to the Gauss-Seidel method, the complex factorization converges almost instantaneously and its error is several magnitude smaller than that of the Gauss-Seidel method. More importantly, the error is always within the pre-specified precision while the Gauss-Seidel method is not. For large problems with thousands of covariates, the complex factorization is 10–100 times faster than either the Gauss-Seidel method or the direct method via the Cholesky decomposition. In BVSR, one needs to repetitively solve large penalized regression systems whose design matrices only change slightly between adjacent MCMC steps. This slight change in design matrix enables the adaptation of the iterative complex factorization method. The computational innovation will facilitate the wide-spread use of BVSR in reanalyzing genome-wide association datasets. Full Article
ter Analysis of the Maximal a Posteriori Partition in the Gaussian Dirichlet Process Mixture Model By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 13 Mar 2019 22:00 EDT Łukasz Rajkowski. Source: Bayesian Analysis, Volume 14, Number 2, 477--494.Abstract: Mixture models are a natural choice in many applications, but it can be difficult to place an a priori upper bound on the number of components. To circumvent this, investigators are turning increasingly to Dirichlet process mixture models (DPMMs). It is therefore important to develop an understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of this approach. This work considers the MAP (maximum a posteriori) clustering for the Gaussian DPMM (where the cluster means have Gaussian distribution and, for each cluster, the observations within the cluster have Gaussian distribution). Some desirable properties of the MAP partition are proved: ‘almost disjointness’ of the convex hulls of clusters (they may have at most one point in common) and (with natural assumptions) the comparability of sizes of those clusters that intersect any fixed ball with the number of observations (as the latter goes to infinity). Consequently, the number of such clusters remains bounded. Furthermore, if the data arises from independent identically distributed sampling from a given distribution with bounded support then the asymptotic MAP partition of the observation space maximises a function which has a straightforward expression, which depends only on the within-group covariance parameter. As the operator norm of this covariance parameter decreases, the number of clusters in the MAP partition becomes arbitrarily large, which may lead to the overestimation of the number of mixture components. Full Article
ter A Conversation with Peter Diggle By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Fri, 11 Oct 2019 04:03 EDT Peter M. Atkinson, Jorge Mateu. Source: Statistical Science, Volume 34, Number 3, 504--521.Abstract: Peter John Diggle was born on February 24, 1950, in Lancashire, England. Peter went to school in Scotland, and it was at the end of his school years that he found that he was good at maths and actually enjoyed it. Peter went to Edinburgh to do a maths degree, but transferred halfway through to Liverpool where he completed his degree. Peter studied for a year at Oxford and was then appointed in 1974 as a lecturer in statistics at the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne where he gained his PhD, and was promoted to Reader in 1983. A sabbatical at the Swedish Royal College of Forestry gave him his first exposure to real scientific data and problems, prompting a move to CSIRO, Australia. After five years with CSIRO where he was Senior, then Principal, then Chief Research Scientist and Chief of the Division of Mathematics and Statistics, he returned to the UK in 1988, to a Chair at Lancaster University. Since 2011 Peter has held appointments at Lancaster and Liverpool, together with honorary appointments at Johns Hopkins, Columbia and Yale. At Lancaster, Peter was the founder and Director of the Medical Statistics Unit (1995–2001), University Dean for Research (1998–2001), EPSRC Senior Fellow (2004–2008), Associate Dean for Research at the School of Health and Medicine (2007–2011), Distinguished University Professor, and leader of the CHICAS Research Group (2007–2017). A Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society since 1974, he was a Member of Council (1983–1985), Joint Editor of JRSSB (1984–1987), Honorary Secretary (1990–1996), awarded the Guy Medal in Silver (1997) and the Barnett Award (2018), Associate Editor of Applied Statistics (1998–2000), Chair of the Research Section Committee (1998–2000), and President (2014–2016). Away from work, Peter enjoys music, playing folk-blues guitar and tenor recorder, and listening to jazz. His running days are behind him, but he can just about hold his own in mixed-doubles badminton with his family. His boyhoood hero was Stirling Moss, and he retains an enthusiasm for classic cars, not least his 1988 Porsche 924S. His favorite authors are George Orwell, Primo Levi and Nigel Slater. This interview was done prior to the fourth Spatial Statistics conference held in Lancaster, July 2017 where a session was dedicated to Peter celebrating his contributions to statistics. Full Article
ter Assessing the Causal Effect of Binary Interventions from Observational Panel Data with Few Treated Units By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Fri, 11 Oct 2019 04:03 EDT Pantelis Samartsidis, Shaun R. Seaman, Anne M. Presanis, Matthew Hickman, Daniela De Angelis. Source: Statistical Science, Volume 34, Number 3, 486--503.Abstract: Researchers are often challenged with assessing the impact of an intervention on an outcome of interest in situations where the intervention is nonrandomised, the intervention is only applied to one or few units, the intervention is binary, and outcome measurements are available at multiple time points. In this paper, we review existing methods for causal inference in these situations. We detail the assumptions underlying each method, emphasize connections between the different approaches and provide guidelines regarding their practical implementation. Several open problems are identified thus highlighting the need for future research. Full Article
ter Two-Sample Instrumental Variable Analyses Using Heterogeneous Samples By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Thu, 18 Jul 2019 22:01 EDT Qingyuan Zhao, Jingshu Wang, Wes Spiller, Jack Bowden, Dylan S. Small. Source: Statistical Science, Volume 34, Number 2, 317--333.Abstract: Instrumental variable analysis is a widely used method to estimate causal effects in the presence of unmeasured confounding. When the instruments, exposure and outcome are not measured in the same sample, Angrist and Krueger ( J. Amer. Statist. Assoc. 87 (1992) 328–336) suggested to use two-sample instrumental variable (TSIV) estimators that use sample moments from an instrument-exposure sample and an instrument-outcome sample. However, this method is biased if the two samples are from heterogeneous populations so that the distributions of the instruments are different. In linear structural equation models, we derive a new class of TSIV estimators that are robust to heterogeneous samples under the key assumption that the structural relations in the two samples are the same. The widely used two-sample two-stage least squares estimator belongs to this class. It is generally not asymptotically efficient, although we find that it performs similarly to the optimal TSIV estimator in most practical situations. We then attempt to relax the linearity assumption. We find that, unlike one-sample analyses, the TSIV estimator is not robust to misspecified exposure model. Additionally, to nonparametrically identify the magnitude of the causal effect, the noise in the exposure must have the same distributions in the two samples. However, this assumption is in general untestable because the exposure is not observed in one sample. Nonetheless, we may still identify the sign of the causal effect in the absence of homogeneity of the noise. Full Article
ter The Importance of Being Clustered: Uncluttering the Trends of Statistics from 1970 to 2015 By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Thu, 18 Jul 2019 22:01 EDT Laura Anderlucci, Angela Montanari, Cinzia Viroli. Source: Statistical Science, Volume 34, Number 2, 280--300.Abstract: In this paper, we retrace the recent history of statistics by analyzing all the papers published in five prestigious statistical journals since 1970, namely: The Annals of Statistics , Biometrika , Journal of the American Statistical Association , Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series B and Statistical Science . The aim is to construct a kind of “taxonomy” of the statistical papers by organizing and clustering them in main themes. In this sense being identified in a cluster means being important enough to be uncluttered in the vast and interconnected world of the statistical research. Since the main statistical research topics naturally born, evolve or die during time, we will also develop a dynamic clustering strategy, where a group in a time period is allowed to migrate or to merge into different groups in the following one. Results show that statistics is a very dynamic and evolving science, stimulated by the rise of new research questions and types of data. Full Article
ter Comment: Empirical Bayes Interval Estimation By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Thu, 18 Jul 2019 22:01 EDT Wenhua Jiang. Source: Statistical Science, Volume 34, Number 2, 219--223.Abstract: This is a contribution to the discussion of the enlightening paper by Professor Efron. We focus on empirical Bayes interval estimation. We discuss the oracle interval estimation rules, the empirical Bayes estimation of the oracle rule and the computation. Some numerical results are reported. Full Article
ter Heteromodal Cortical Areas Encode Sensory-Motor Features of Word Meaning By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2016-09-21T09:33:18-07:00 The capacity to process information in conceptual form is a fundamental aspect of human cognition, yet little is known about how this type of information is encoded in the brain. Although the role of sensory and motor cortical areas has been a focus of recent debate, neuroimaging studies of concept representation consistently implicate a network of heteromodal areas that seem to support concept retrieval in general rather than knowledge related to any particular sensory-motor content. We used predictive machine learning on fMRI data to investigate the hypothesis that cortical areas in this "general semantic network" (GSN) encode multimodal information derived from basic sensory-motor processes, possibly functioning as convergence–divergence zones for distributed concept representation. An encoding model based on five conceptual attributes directly related to sensory-motor experience (sound, color, shape, manipulability, and visual motion) was used to predict brain activation patterns associated with individual lexical concepts in a semantic decision task. When the analysis was restricted to voxels in the GSN, the model was able to identify the activation patterns corresponding to individual concrete concepts significantly above chance. In contrast, a model based on five perceptual attributes of the word form performed at chance level. This pattern was reversed when the analysis was restricted to areas involved in the perceptual analysis of written word forms. These results indicate that heteromodal areas involved in semantic processing encode information about the relative importance of different sensory-motor attributes of concepts, possibly by storing particular combinations of sensory and motor features. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The present study used a predictive encoding model of word semantics to decode conceptual information from neural activity in heteromodal cortical areas. The model is based on five sensory-motor attributes of word meaning (color, shape, sound, visual motion, and manipulability) and encodes the relative importance of each attribute to the meaning of a word. This is the first demonstration that heteromodal areas involved in semantic processing can discriminate between different concepts based on sensory-motor information alone. This finding indicates that the brain represents concepts as multimodal combinations of sensory and motor representations. Full Article
ter Cleanair posters to create a smoke-free environment / designed by Biman Mullick ; published by Cleanair. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: London (33 Stillness Road, London SE23 ING) : Cleanair, [198-?] Full Article
ter The 2019 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show Is Canceled After Facing Backlash for Lack of Body Diversity By www.health.com Published On :: Fri, 22 Nov 2019 13:30:29 -0500 The reaction on social media has been fierce. Full Article
ter This is the Only Jacket I’ll Be Living in This Winter By www.health.com Published On :: Thu, 12 Dec 2019 10:53:34 -0500 Canada Goose has long been a leader in the outdoor gear space. Full Article
ter Of Course Katie Holmes Found This Year’s Coziest Winter Boot By www.health.com Published On :: Thu, 12 Dec 2019 12:51:00 -0500 Keep your feet happy this winter. Full Article
ter Jennifer Lopez Just Stepped Out in These Glittery Leggings (Again)—and We Found Them on Sale By www.health.com Published On :: Thu, 12 Dec 2019 16:14:56 -0500 They’re already going out of stock. Full Article
ter Readiness Potential and Neuronal Determinism: New Insights on Libet Experiment By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2018-01-24 Karim FifelJan 24, 2018; 38:784-786Journal Club Full Article
ter Advances in Enteric Neurobiology: The "Brain" in the Gut in Health and Disease By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2018-10-31 Subhash KulkarniOct 31, 2018; 38:9346-9354Symposium and Mini-Symposium Full Article
ter The Pain of Sleep Loss: A Brain Characterization in Humans By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2019-03-20 Adam J. KrauseMar 20, 2019; 39:2291-2300BehavioralSystemsCognitive Full Article
ter Synaptic Specificity and Application of Anterograde Transsynaptic AAV for Probing Neural Circuitry By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2020-04-15 Brian ZinggApr 15, 2020; 40:3250-3267Systems/Circuits Full Article
ter Nurture versus Nature: Long-Term Impact of Forced Right-Handedness on Structure of Pericentral Cortex and Basal Ganglia By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2010-03-03 Stefan KlöppelMar 3, 2010; 30:3271-3275BRIEF COMMUNICATION Full Article
ter Where Is the Anterior Temporal Lobe and What Does It Do? By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2013-03-06 Michael F. BonnerMar 6, 2013; 33:4213-4215Journal Club Full Article
ter White Matter Microstructure in Transsexuals and Controls Investigated by Diffusion Tensor Imaging By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2014-11-12 Georg S. KranzNov 12, 2014; 34:15466-15475Systems/Circuits Full Article
ter Grey Matter Volume Differences Associated with Extremely Low Levels of Cannabis Use in Adolescence By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2019-03-06 Catherine OrrMar 6, 2019; 39:1817-1827BehavioralSystemsCognitive Full Article
ter Social Laughter Triggers Endogenous Opioid Release in Humans By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2017-06-21 Sandra ManninenJun 21, 2017; 37:6125-6131BehavioralSystemsCognitive Full Article
ter Interactions of Top-Down and Bottom-Up Mechanisms in Human Visual Cortex By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2011-01-12 Stephanie McMainsJan 12, 2011; 31:587-597BehavioralSystemsCognitive Full Article
ter Increased Neural Activity in Mesostriatal Regions after Prefrontal Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation and L-DOPA Administration By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2019-07-03 Benjamin MeyerJul 3, 2019; 39:5326-5335Systems/Circuits Full Article
ter Oscillatory Coupling of Hippocampal Pyramidal Cells and Interneurons in the Behaving Rat By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 1999-01-01 Jozsef CsicsvariJan 1, 1999; 19:274-287Articles Full Article
ter Gamma Oscillation by Synaptic Inhibition in a Hippocampal Interneuronal Network Model By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 1996-10-15 Xiao-Jing WangOct 15, 1996; 16:6402-6413Articles Full Article
ter Three-dimensional structure of dendritic spines and synapses in rat hippocampus (CA1) at postnatal day 15 and adult ages: implications for the maturation of synaptic physiology and long-term potentiation [published erratum appears in J Neurosci 1992 Aug;1 By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 1992-07-01 KM HarrisJul 1, 1992; 12:2685-2705Articles Full Article
ter Dendritic spines of CA 1 pyramidal cells in the rat hippocampus: serial electron microscopy with reference to their biophysical characteristics By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 1989-08-01 KM HarrisAug 1, 1989; 9:2982-2997Articles Full Article
ter Interaction between the C terminus of NMDA receptor subunits and multiple members of the PSD-95 family of membrane-associated guanylate kinases By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 1996-04-01 M NiethammerApr 1, 1996; 16:2157-2163Articles Full Article
ter Pax6, Tbr2, and Tbr1 Are Expressed Sequentially by Radial Glia, Intermediate Progenitor Cells, and Postmitotic Neurons in Developing Neocortex By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2005-01-05 Chris EnglundJan 5, 2005; 25:247-251BRIEF COMMUNICATION Full Article
ter Theory for the development of neuron selectivity: orientation specificity and binocular interaction in visual cortex By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 1982-01-01 EL BienenstockJan 1, 1982; 2:32-48Articles Full Article
ter Response of Neurons in the Lateral Intraparietal Area during a Combined Visual Discrimination Reaction Time Task By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2002-11-01 Jamie D. RoitmanNov 1, 2002; 22:9475-9489Behavioral Full Article
ter Afterschool Program Instructors By www.eastgwillimbury.ca Published On :: Sat, 13 Jul 2019 06:36:11 GMT Full Article
ter La costruzione di una crescita resiliente passa per la cooperazione internazionale By www.bis.org Published On :: 2017-06-25T10:30:00Z Italian translation of the BIS Press Release on the presentation of the Annual Report (25 June 2017) Full Article
ter Requisitos de divulgación para el Tercer Pilar - Macro actualizado By www.bis.org Published On :: 2018-12-11T10:43:00Z Spanish translation of "Pillar 3 disclosure requirements - updated framework", December 2018 Full Article
ter El Informe Trimestral del BPI analiza la caída y posterior rebote de los mercados By www.bis.org Published On :: 2019-03-05T17:00:00Z Spanish translation of the BIS press release about the BIS Quarterly Review, March 2019 Full Article
ter STATEMENTS 0029 TO MY GOOD AND LOYAL SUBJECTS AND 0063 AFTER RECENT SURGERY ON MY SCALP.html U By www.yhchang.com Published On :: Full Article
ter statements 0029 to my good and loyal subjects and 0063 after recent surgery on my scalp By www.yhchang.com Published On :: Full Article
ter Wintrust Financial Corporation Announces Fourth Quarter and Year-to-Date 2019 Earnings Release Schedule By www.snl.com Published On :: Tue, 24 Dec 2019 00:11:00 GMT To view more press releases, please visit http://www.snl.com/irweblinkx/news.aspx?iid=1024452. Full Article
ter Wintrust Financial Corporation Reports Record Full-Year 2019 Net Income of $355.7 million and Fourth Quarter 2019 Net Income of $86.0 million, up 8% from the Fourth Quarter 2018 By www.snl.com Published On :: Tue, 21 Jan 2020 22:15:00 GMT To view more press releases, please visit http://www.snl.com/irweblinkx/news.aspx?iid=1024452. Full Article
ter Wintrust Financial Corporation Announces Cash Dividends, Increasing Quarterly Common Stock Dividend Rate 12% By www.snl.com Published On :: Thu, 23 Jan 2020 22:32:00 GMT To view more press releases, please visit http://www.snl.com/irweblinkx/news.aspx?iid=1024452. Full Article
ter Wintrust Financial Corporation Working Tirelessly To Support Strong Community Interest in the Paycheck Protection Program By www.snl.com Published On :: Fri, 10 Apr 2020 20:42:00 GMT To view more press releases, please visit http://www.snl.com/irweblinkx/news.aspx?iid=1024452. Full Article
ter Wintrust Financial Corporation Announces First Quarter 2020 Earnings Release Schedule By www.snl.com Published On :: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 22:51:00 GMT To view more press releases, please visit http://www.snl.com/irweblinkx/news.aspx?iid=1024452. Full Article