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  1. Reason, emotion and information processing in the brain
    Published: 2007
    Publisher:  Centre for Economic Policy Research, London

    ZBW - Leibniz-Informationszentrum Wirtschaft, Standort Kiel
    W 32 (6535)
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    RVK Categories: QB 910
    Series: Array ; 6535
    Subjects: Neuroökonomie; Wahrnehmung; Informationsversorgung; Lernen; Entscheidung; Theorie; Decision making; Human information processing; Reason; Emotions
    Scope: 45 S.
  2. Gender, affect and intertemporal consistency
    an experimental approach
    Published: Mar. 2007

    "We conduct experiments in which participants made multiple intertemporal decisions throughout a seven week period. In addition to exploring dynamic consistency and the stability of single period discount rates, our experiments introduce a... more

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    "We conduct experiments in which participants made multiple intertemporal decisions throughout a seven week period. In addition to exploring dynamic consistency and the stability of single period discount rates, our experiments introduce a manipulation to identify the role of positive and negative mood/affect in intertemporal choice. Our results demonstrate that, while individuals' single period discount rates are stable over time, there is evidence of dynamic inconsistency. While we find no differences in the discount rates of men and women, we find gender differences in the character of hyperbolic discounting in which women display greater patience in their "present bias." We also identify a gender-mood interaction: Negative mood in women yields increased impulsiveness while inducing positive affect in women or affect (positive or negative) in men yields little change"--Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit web site

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    hdl: 10419/33785
    Series: Discussion paper series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit ; 2663
    Subjects: Entscheidung; Intertemporale Entscheidung; Emotion; Geschlecht; Experiment; Kanada; Decision making; Attitude (Psychology); Sex differences
    Scope: Online-Ressource, 37 S., Text, graph. Darst.
    Notes:

    Title from PDF file as viewed on 6/20/2007

    Includes bibliographical references

  3. Protocol design and (de-)centralization
    Published: 2007
    Publisher:  Centre for Economic Policy Research, London

    ZBW - Leibniz-Informationszentrum Wirtschaft, Standort Kiel
    W 32 (6357)
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    Language: English
    Media type: Book
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    RVK Categories: QB 910
    Series: Array ; 6357
    Subjects: Entscheidungstheorie; Informationsversorgung; Kommunikation; Vertragstheorie; Agentenbasierte Modellierung; Communication in organizations; Decentralization in management; Decision making
    Scope: 24 S.
  4. Environmental policies and strategic communication in Iran
    the value of public opinion research in decisionmaking
    Published: 2008
    Publisher:  World Bank, Washington, DC

    Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Potsdamer Straße
    1 B 117677
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    ZBW - Leibniz-Informationszentrum Wirtschaft, Standort Kiel
    W 1509 (132)
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    Source: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9780821374214; 9780821374221
    Series: World Bank working paper ; 132
    Subjects: Umweltpolitik; Iran; Environmental policy; Public opinion polls; Decision making
    Scope: III, 25 S.
    Notes:

    Literaturverz. S. 25

  5. Relational delegation
    Published: Jan. 2005
    Publisher:  IZA, Bonn

    We explore the optimal delegation of decision rights by a principal to a better informed but biased agent. In an infinitely repeated game a long lived principal faces a series of short lived agents. Every period they play a cheap talk game ala... more

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    We explore the optimal delegation of decision rights by a principal to a better informed but biased agent. In an infinitely repeated game a long lived principal faces a series of short lived agents. Every period they play a cheap talk game ala Crawford and Sobel (1982) with constant bias, quadratic loss functions and general distributions of the state of the world. We characterize the optimal delegation schemes for all discount rates and show that they resemble organizational arrangements that are commonly observed, including centralization and threshold delegation. For small biases threshold delegation is optimal for almost all distributions. Outsourcing can only be optimal if the principal is sufficiently impatient.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Online
    Series: Discussion paper series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit ; 1454
    Subjects: Kooperative Führung; Prinzipal-Agent-Theorie; Wiederholte Spiele; Decision making; Agency (Law); Delegation of powers
    Scope: Online-Ressource, 44, [2] p., text, ill
  6. Urteilen/Entscheiden
    Published: c 2006
    Publisher:  Wilhelm Fink Verlag, München

    Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Potsdamer Straße
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    2018.04465:1
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    Content information
    Source: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin
    Language: German
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 3770541758; 9783770541751
    RVK Categories: EC 2460 ; EC 2500 ; PI 3040
    Series: Literatur und Recht
    Subjects: Judgment; Judicial process; Judgment in literature; Decision making; Decision making in literature
    Scope: 295 Seiten, 24 cm
  7. Essays on economic decision making
    Published: 31. Januar 2018

    Universitätsbibliothek Braunschweig
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    Volltext (kostenfrei)
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    Subjects: Economics; Economics; Decision making; Verhaltensökonomie; Anreiz; Feldexperiment; Decision making; Economics; Economics
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 182 Seiten), Illustrationen
    Notes:

    Enthält mehrere Beiträge

    Dissertation, Universität Ulm, 2018

  8. Narrative policy analysis
    theory and practice
    Author: Roe, Emery
    Published: [1994]; © 1994
    Publisher:  Duke University Press, Durham

    Universitätsbibliothek Freiburg
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    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780822381891
    RVK Categories: MD 7200
    Series: ProQuest Ebook Central
    Subjects: Decision making; Discourse analysis, Narrative; Policy sciences
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xv, 199 Seiten)
  9. Ghostwriting and the Ethics of Authenticity
    Published: 2017
    Publisher:  Palgrave Macmillan, New York

    This book presents an ethical framework which evaluates the legitimacy of the practice of ghostwriting. It explores the connection between personal authenticity and the use of ghostwriters in corporate, political, legal, higher education, and... more

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    This book presents an ethical framework which evaluates the legitimacy of the practice of ghostwriting. It explores the connection between personal authenticity and the use of ghostwriters in corporate, political, legal, higher education, and scientific contexts. It then examines the history of ghostwriting as a professional practice and introduces a model for ethical analysis. In this book, the authors shrewdly address crucial ethical questions such as: When is it acceptable for a leader to claim the words of a ghostwriter as their own? When may this be inappropriate or even dangerously misleading? What are the consequences when public awareness of this practice leads to cynicism about the authenticity of leaders and their communications? And when, if ever, is the use of a ghostwriter ethical? This book will be welcomed by scholars and practitioners alike as an original and timely contribution to the literature of business, politics, and communications.div> 1. Authenticity and Ethics in Ghostwriting -- 2. Emergence of a Professional Practice -- 3. Political Communications -- 4. Corporate and Institutional Communications -- 5. Judicial Opinions and the Legal Profession -- 6. Academic Dishonesty -- 7. Scientific Publications -- 8. Book Publishing -- 9. Personal Contexts

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781137313133
    Other identifier:
    Series: Array
    Array
    Subjects: Business; Business and Management; Public relations; Leadership; Operations research; Decision making; Business ethics
    Scope: Online-Ressource (XVI, 181 p. 7 illus. in color, online resource)
  10. Decision making in complex environments
    Published: ©2007
    Publisher:  Ashgate, Aldershot, England

    Part 1: Characteristics of Complex Decision Making -- Part 2: Areas of Application -- Part 3: Complex Decision Making in Civil Applications -- Part 4: Complex Decision Making in Military Applications -- Part 5: Teams and Complex Decision Making --... more

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    Hochschule Aalen, Bibliothek
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    Part 1: Characteristics of Complex Decision Making -- Part 2: Areas of Application -- Part 3: Complex Decision Making in Civil Applications -- Part 4: Complex Decision Making in Military Applications -- Part 5: Teams and Complex Decision Making -- Part 6: Assessment and Measurement -- Part 7: A Final Comment

     

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  11. Political competition
    how to measure party strategy in direct voter communication using social media data?
    Author: Sturm, Silke
    Published: 2019
    Publisher:  University of Hamburg, Chair of International Economics, Hamburg

    Political competition, party strategy and communication in the era of social media are growing issues. Due to the increasing social media presence of parties and voters alike, direct communication is more important for party... more

    Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Hamburg Carl von Ossietzky
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    DS 614
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    Political competition, party strategy and communication in the era of social media are growing issues. Due to the increasing social media presence of parties and voters alike, direct communication is more important for party competition. This paper aims to improve the methodological approach used to analyze political competition and communication. The dataset includes over 30,000 Facebook status messages posted by seven German parties from January 2014 until February 2018. To pic modeling, which is commonly used in other fields, allows for evaluating party communication on a daily basis. The results show the high accuracy of calculating party - relevant issues. To determine the tone of the debate, a sentiment analysis was conduct ed. The prevalence of topics and sentiments over time allows for precise monitoring of the political debate.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    hdl: 10419/191065
    Series: Hamburg discussion papers in international economics ; no. 1
    Subjects: Political competition; Party strategy; Decision making; Social media; Topic models; Sentiment analysis
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (30 Seiten), Illustrationen
  12. Krisis ou la décision génératrice
    épopée, médecine hippocratique, Platon
    Published: 2020
    Publisher:  Presses Universitaires du Septentrion, Villeneuve d'Ascq

    Universitätsbibliothek Freiburg
    GE 2020/6556
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    Bereichsbibliothek Altertumswissenschaften, Abteilung Klassische Philologie
    H 43/356
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    Universität Ulm, Kommunikations- und Informationszentrum, Bibliotheksservices
    WZ 45.2/2020 L
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: French
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9782757431443
    Other identifier:
    9782757431443
    RVK Categories: FE 4801
    Series: Array ; volume 36
    Subjects: Krisis (The Greek word); Judgment; Decision making; Philosophy, Ancient; Medicine, Greek and Roman
    Scope: 317 Seiten, 24 cm
  13. Contribution à la connaissance du proccessus de la décision de financement par le dirigeant dans la petite entreprise non cotée
    Published: [2020]

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: French
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    Subjects: Decision making; Financing; Small business; Manager; Process; Proximity
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 692 Seiten), Illustrationen
    Notes:

    Dissertation, Université de Bordeaux, 2020

  14. Essays on Development Economics
    Author: Qian, Yiwei
    Published: 2021

    Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have been widely adopted in the subject of Development Economics to study the causal impact of developmental interventions. In this dissertation, I empirically study the impacts of two developmental interventions... more

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    Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have been widely adopted in the subject of Development Economics to study the causal impact of developmental interventions. In this dissertation, I empirically study the impacts of two developmental interventions on the skill formation during early childhood — a crucial period for the human capital development — using RCTs and theoretically identify the causal impact of developmental interventions under a particular but rather common circumstance in RCTs. The first chapter evaluates the medium-term impact of a six-month early childhood home-visiting program on child outcomes in rural China. Two and a half years after completion of the program, we find persistent intervention effects on child working memory — a key skill of executive functioning which plays a central role in children's development of cognitive and socio-emotional skills. We also find that the program had persistent effects on both parental time investments and preschool enrollment, with children in the treatment group enrolling earlier and in better quality preschools. Our finding of improved parental preschool selection in treatment villages points to an important intervention-induced persistent shift in parental investment behavior which might lead to long-term benefits over the life-cycle. The second chapter examines the role of social interaction in child development using a random experiment of ECD intervention in rural China. The intervention promotes social interactions by providing both infants and caregivers of infants free access to a playground in rural villages. After one year, the intervention improved the language skills of infants, by 0.15 standard deviation (SD) and the parenting awareness of their caregivers, by 0.21 SD. Evidence suggests infants and their parents benefited from the intervention through social interactions: children benefited from the intervention through their own interactions with other similar-age children as well as their caregivers’ interactions with caregivers of other similar-age children; caregivers improved parenting awareness by learning from other experienced caregivers. in the third chapter, we study the causal identifications in cluster randomized controlled trials when there are spillovers across individuals within clusters through social interactions and/or general equilibrium of clusters. Under these circumstances, we show the traditional local average treatment effect (LATE) can no longer identify the average treatment effect of the subpopulation that is treated. Instead, we propose an analogous causal estimator of LATE in clustered randomized experiments with spillovers across individuals within clusters. Under a mild difference-in-differences type assumption, we point-identify the local causal effect for the treated in clustered randomized experiments with spillovers and one-sided noncompliance. Furthermore, we can identify the indirect effect of interventions for the subpopulation that is not treated, which can be used to test whether the spillover effect exists. We illustrate our method in our empirical analysis of a microcredit program in rural Morocco.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9798538117802
    Series: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Subjects: Child development; Parents & parenting; Enrollments; Playgrounds; Memory; Intervention; Eigen values; Cognitive ability; Educational attainment; Teenage pregnancy; Early childhood education; Cognition & reasoning; Skills; Social interaction; Age; Experiments; Decision making; Clinical trials; Children & youth; Caregivers; Noncompliance; Babies; Developmental psychology; Asian studies; Development Economics; Early childhood development; Randomized controlled trials; Social interactions; Spillover
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (139 p.)
    Notes:

    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-03, Section: B. - Advisor: Strauss, John

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), University of Southern California, 2021

  15. Economics of Service Operations: Information, Simplified Controls and Omnichannel Services
    Published: 2021

    In this dissertation we consider how simple operational levers affect a firm's revenue and consumer surplus. In particular, we focus on information disclosure as an useful control for omnichannel services. In the first chapter we consider a... more

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    In this dissertation we consider how simple operational levers affect a firm's revenue and consumer surplus. In particular, we focus on information disclosure as an useful control for omnichannel services. In the first chapter we consider a revenue-maximizing service firm that caters to price and delay-sensitive customers. The firm offers a menu of service grades where each grade is associated with a posted price and expected delay. An optimal menu size could be as large as the number of customer classes. However, in practice, we do observe that firms offer a handful number of service grades. We study the revenue loss when the firm offers a simplified menu with a few service grades. Our analysis utilizes a large system approximations under the assumption that the firm has ample capacity to serve the entire market. We set up an optimization model and make use of Taylor series and asymptotic arguments to obtain the revenue loss. We show that, under a simplified menu, the firm could lose a significant fraction of its revenue in the worst case scenario. This happens when there is significant heterogeneity between the customer classes in terms of their delay sensitivities and their valuation for service. In contrast, noting that customer heterogeneity may typically be less extreme, we show that the firm can in fact provide a simplified menu while providing a guarantee on worst case revenue that can be obtained as a fraction of the optimal. We characterize the worst case optimal menu and provide asymptotic bounds to the worst case revenue loss as the number of customer types grow without bound. Characterization of the firm's worst case revenue loss in terms of a measure of heterogeneity can be used to guide decision making when offering a simplified menu of service grades. In the second chapter we examine the role of information disclosure in omnichannel services. With evolving mobile technologies, an increasing number of firms are running multiple channels to serve customers. Due to the novelty of these systems, questions related to the design of such omnichannel systems and their implications for the firm and customers remain open. In particular, the question of whether or not a firm should disclose queue information to its customers in an omnichannel setting has not been extensively addressed in prior literature. Using a queuing game-theoretic framework, we address some of these open questions of design of omnichannel service system, especially focusing on the issue of congestion information disclosure and its impact on customer channel choice behavior. We benchmark the omnichannel model against a conventional single channel model, and compare these settings in terms of the firm’s throughput and average consumer surplus. We find that from the firm’s perspective there is no silver bullet; no channel arrangement delivers the highest throughput for all system parameters. From the customers’ perspective, we once again find that neither the omnichannel nor the single channel system dominates the other in terms of the average consumer surplus for both type of customers combined. The overall consumer surplus depends on the relative proportion of app users and non-app users in the system. Indeed, it is possible that both segments are worse-off when online ordering is offered. In the third chapter, we extend the omnichannel setting to a competitive environment. Increasingly many firms in the quick service industry are offering digital ordering apps to customers. While the option of app-ordering is attractive to customers, still, not all firms offer an app. Even if we ignore the upfront cost of implementation of an app, it is not clear whether offering an app necessarily leads to an increase in revenue for the firm in a competitive setting. A proper evaluation needs to take into consideration the relative capacity of the firms and the sizes of their customer bases. To this end, we examine what is the best-response for a firm when faced with a competitor who offers an app. We find that it might not always be in the firm's best interest to match its competitor in offering an app.

     

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    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9798538139415
    Series: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Subjects: Operations research; Scheduling; Optimization; Decision making; Queuing; Approximation; Prices; Performance evaluation; Digital innovation; Information disclosure; Omnichannel services; Pricing in queuing systems; Service operations; Strategic queuing
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (218 p.)
    Notes:

    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-03, Section: B. - Advisor: Bassamboo, Achal;Lariviere, Martin

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), Northwestern University, 2021

  16. Essays on Patient and Firm Behavior in Health Economics
    Author: Hong, Nianyi
    Published: 2021

    The first chapter, co-authored with Allyson B. Root and Benjamin R. Handel, studies how information and behavioral nudges impact patient behavior in end-of-life care. Despite the substantial economic and personal implications of end-of-life health... more

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    The first chapter, co-authored with Allyson B. Root and Benjamin R. Handel, studies how information and behavioral nudges impact patient behavior in end-of-life care. Despite the substantial economic and personal implications of end-of-life health care decisions, many fail to document their wishes or select a representative to make medical decisions on their behalf. Descriptive evidence suggests that this can result in sub-optimal outcomes including dissatisfaction and unnecessary medical spending, but it is not well understood why patients fail to engage in this high-value planning. We conduct an initial and subsequent intervention to facilitate advance directive (AD) completion in the patient population of our partner, Providence St. Joseph Health (PSJH). Using a randomized control trial, we find a significant 5 percentage point increase in AD completion with physical letter reminders tied to future primary care appointments, doubling the completion rate in the patient population from the start of the study. In addition, we find that including the physical AD form with paper letters as a nudge to decrease hassle costs increases AD completion 9 percentage points compared to no intervention. Our evidence also suggests that these interventions are more effective for older individuals, who are also less sensitive to the type of intervention. Back-of-the-envelope calculations suggest that it would cost $38 for every additional AD form completion using paper letters and included AD forms, compared to costless electronic reminders. However, we find no significant effects in AD completion from the initial intervention involving in-person AD drives and electronic videos.In the second chapter, co-authored with Benjamin R. Handel, Lynn M. Hua, and Yuki Ito, we study health plan choice and health plan menu design with 13 years (2008-2020) of health claims and health plan choice data from the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS). We develop a choice model that predicts the number and type of subscribers moving across plans under different plan environments, as a function of (i) plan premiums, (ii) plan cost-sharing, and (iii) plan brand. We find that (i) subscribers overweight premiums relative to out-of-pocket spending by a factor of roughly five to one, in line with other literature, and (ii) subscribers place meaningfully differential values on plan brands. We find that these preferences, especially for plan brand, depend crucially on whether a subscriber's family is sick or healthy. We also find some evidence of risk adjustment blunting adverse selection in our market while it was implemented from 2014-2018, although due to inertia the effects were relatively mild. Finally, we present counterfactual scenarios for future enrollment with and without risk adjustment and inertia.

     

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    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9798535563268
    Series: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Subjects: Health care management; Witnesses; Behavior; Video recordings; Demographics; Intervention; Health care expenditures; Brochures; Blood & organ donations; Advance directives; Terminal illnesses; Life expectancy; Age; Clinics; Planning; Decision making; Preferences; Primary care; Palliative care; Medical screening; Health care policy; Medical records; Unnecessary medical spending
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (108 p.)
    Notes:

    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-03, Section: B. - Advisor: Handel, Benjamin

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), University of California, Berkeley, 2021

  17. Offline and Online Optimization with Applications in Online Advertising
    Published: 2021

    In the last couple of decades, focus on speed and personalization has been a topic of major importance for optimization systems. The internet and big data have made users expect results immediately or with an unperceivable delay. For example, in... more

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    In the last couple of decades, focus on speed and personalization has been a topic of major importance for optimization systems. The internet and big data have made users expect results immediately or with an unperceivable delay. For example, in online advertising a user is shown an ad a few milliseconds after entering a website, app, or other media. This new online environment has force optimization systems to evolve from operating in an offline fashion, i.e., assuming all the information is available a priori, to an online one. In an online setting, information arrives sequentially, and systems need to make decisions as information arrives. This thesis is composed of three main chapters. The first studies an online advertising problem that serves as a motivation for the thesis as a whole. Though motivated by the leading online advertising problem, the second and third chapters make broad contributions to optimization theory and machine learning, respectively.In the first chapter of this thesis, we develop an optimization model and corresponding algorithm to manage a demand-side platform (DSP), whereby the DSP acquires valuable ad space for its advertiser clients in a real-time bidding environment. In particular, we focus on how a DSP should bid in real-time auctions to acquire valuable ad space to allocate between its advertiser's clients. We propose a highly flexible model for the DSP to maximize its profit while maintaining acceptable budget spending levels for its advertisers' clients. We prove that a dual formulation attains a zero-duality gap under practical settings for DSPs. Using a primal-dual scheme, we derive a bidding and allocation policy that DSPs can apply in practice.In the second chapter of this thesis, we propose a joint online optimization and learning algorithm through dual mirror descent. Part of the motivation for this topic comes from developing an online solution/policy to solve the DSP problem mentioned above. An online policy in the sense that it gets updated using simple steps after each user arrival. We achieved this goal for DSPs who buy ad space in real-time bidding environments which use second-price auction mechanisms. No complicated optimization problem needs to be solved in advance. The contribution of this chapter of the thesis extends broadly beyond its original motivation on online advertising, making contributions in the online optimization field. In particular, we propose a new algorithm that mixes an online dual mirror descent scheme with a generic parameter learning process and a novel offline benchmark for this setup. Bounds on regret and worst possible constraints violation are studied. In the third chapter of this thesis, we propose training neural networks jointly using subgradient-descent, Frank-Wolfe, and Frank-Wolfe variants called in-face directions. An important motivation for this chapter is how to add structure to neural networks in a principled manner. In particular, if we can promote sparsity in some layers of a neural network, we can make the overall inference step faster/cheaper. The latter is a major concern in production systems in online advertising in which the inference step of a neural network may be called billions of times per day.

     

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    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9798535551944
    Series: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Subjects: Operations research; Web sites; Distance learning; Decision making; Neural networks; Web studies; Convex optimization; Frank-Wolfe; Learning; Online advertising; Online optimization; Primal-dual
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (153 p.)
    Notes:

    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-03, Section: B. - Advisor: Grigas, Paul

    Dissertation (D.Eng.), University of California, Berkeley, 2021

  18. Entrepreneurial Strategies in Institutional Changes: Tackling the Conflicts Between New and Old Rules
    Author: Wu, You
    Published: 2021

    Prior literature emphasizes that aligning with regulatory, normative, and cognitive institutional arrangements aids organizational formation, resource gathering, and performance. However, during institutional changes, the old and the new rules often... more

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    Prior literature emphasizes that aligning with regulatory, normative, and cognitive institutional arrangements aids organizational formation, resource gathering, and performance. However, during institutional changes, the old and the new rules often coexist and interact, resulting in conflicting institutional arrangements. These conflicts create strategic dilemmas for entrepreneurs, but we don't have a systematic understanding of entrepreneurial strategies to tackle the conflicts. To address this gap, my dissertation focuses on three aspects: (1) adapting to the transition from old rules to new rules, (2) leveraging the new rules to replace the old rules, and (3) combining the new rules and the old rules. I examine these aspects in three empirical settings respectively: marketization, digitization, and tokenization. My first paper analyzes how entrepreneurs change growth strategies during China's institutional change from a government-dominated to a more market-based economy. My second paper draws on institutional intermediary and network tie formation literature to examine entrepreneurial fundraising strategies on online platforms rather than offline. My third paper draws on optimal distinctiveness theory to explore how blockchain entrepreneurs combine new and old elements in framing to balance differentiation and legitimation. Empirically, I use machine learning models to create measures from big data and econometric models to identify causal relationships. Overall, my dissertation contributes to institutional theory by examining entrepreneurial agency in tackling institutional pressure and contributes to strategy literature by analyzing the institutional effects on entrepreneurial strategies.

     

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    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9798505571491
    Series: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Subjects: Conformity; Legitimacy; Decision making
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (193 p.)
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    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-04, Section: A. - Advisor: Eesley, Charles; Eisenhardt, Kathleen M; Katila, Riitta

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), Stanford University, 2021

  19. Essays on the Economics of Suspense, Surprise, Superstars, and Soda
    Published: 2021

    Economists have always been interested in understanding and estimating demand for different goods. Demand is affected by a number of factors, but one that is very important is information. In this work, I estimate the impacts of both instrumental and... more

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    Economists have always been interested in understanding and estimating demand for different goods. Demand is affected by a number of factors, but one that is very important is information. In this work, I estimate the impacts of both instrumental and non-instrumental information on demand for important and commonly consumed products. Instrumental information is information received by an agent that leads to a contingent action. For instance, receiving information about the negative health effects of consuming sugar sweetened-beverages may affect an agent's decision about how many sugar-sweetened beverages they consume. On the other hand, non-instrumental information is information consumed for the sake of entertainment and attention-capture. For example, information disseminated through the news or a novel may not lead to any direct actions, but is enjoyable and welfare improving nonetheless. My dissertation aims to explore the economic implications of demand in response to information.Chapter one, titled Entertainment Utility from Skill and Thrill, uses revealed preference methods to estimate demand for non-instrumental information in entertainment. I do this by examining the "thrill" associated with the trajectory of an event, which includes both suspense and surprise, and the "skill" of performers in an event. I apply the theory presented in Ely et al. (2015) to conduct an empirical analysis that examines the effect of thrill on consumer attention. I extend the Ely et al. (2015) framework by examining spectator preferences for characteristics of the performers themselves, which I call "skill." I use game-specific, high-temporal frequency television ratings data from the National Basketball Association (NBA) to measure spectator responses to skill and thrill. First, I find that a doubling of skill present in a game leads to an approximately 11% increase in initial viewer turnout, while the expected thrill of a game has no statistically significant impact. Next, I show that thrill during a game increases viewership by 7–30%, while a doubling of skill on the court during a specific portion of a game leads to a 1.9–2.4% increase in viewership, depending on specification. Interestingly, I find a negative interactive effect between suspense and skill, suggesting that heightened suspense leads to differentially higher viewership with lower skill on the court. The findings suggest that skill of information-conveying agents primarily impacts viewership on the extensive margin (across games), while thrill is highly time-dependent and primarily impacts viewership on the intensive margin (within games). These findings have important implications for entertainment media companies, including leagues and television broadcasters, and advertisers.Chapter two, titled The Economic Value of Popularity: Evidence from Superstars in the National Basketball Association, estimates spectator willingness-to-pay for superstars in the National Basketball Association. Using microdata from an online secondary ticket marketplace and exogenous player absence announcements, I find 4–16% ($7–$42) reductions in prices when superstars are announced to miss games. Additionally, LeBron James and Stephen Curry exhibit even larger impacts in away game absences—21% ($75/ticket) for LeBron and 18% ($55/ticket) for Curry. The results suggest popularity is a more significant determinant of WTP than ability, and in line with existing superstar literature, popularity predicts price impacts convexly. This paper provides a novel methodology to estimate superstar value, generating implications for the entertainment industry.Chapter three, titled Soda Wars: The Effect of a Soda Tax Election on University Beverage Sales, examines how soda sales changed due to the campaign attention and election outcome of a local excise tax on sugar-sweetened beverages (SSB), commonly referred to as a soda tax. Using panel data of beverage sales from university retailers in Berkeley, California, we estimate that soda purchases relative to control beverages significantly dropped immediately after the election, months before the tax was implemented in the city of Berkeley or on campus. Supplemental scanner data from off-campus drug stores reveal this result is not unique to the university setting. The findings suggest soda tax media coverage and election outcomes can have larger effects on purchasing behavior than the tax itself.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9798535551418
    Series: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Subjects: Research; Decision making; Tournaments & championships; Election results; Probability; Prices; Literature reviews; Ratings & rankings; Professional basketball; Seminars; Political advertising; Applied microeconomics; Consumer attention; Entertainment; Information; Sugar-sweetened beverages; Willingness to pay
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (140 p.)
    Notes:

    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-03, Section: A. - Advisor: Zilberman, David;Sallee, James

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), University of California, Berkeley, 2021

  20. Essays in Venture Capital, Reputation and Learning
    Published: 2021

    In chapter 1, I study the experimentation dynamics of a decision maker (DM) in a two-armed bandit setup ([5]), where the agent holds ambiguous beliefs regarding the distribution of the return process of one arm and is certain about the other one. The... more

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    In chapter 1, I study the experimentation dynamics of a decision maker (DM) in a two-armed bandit setup ([5]), where the agent holds ambiguous beliefs regarding the distribution of the return process of one arm and is certain about the other one. The DM entertains Multiplier preferences a la [27], thus I frame the decision making environment as a two player differential game against nature in continuous time. I characterize the DM’s value function and her optimal experimentation strategy that turns out to follow a cut-off rule with respect to her belief process. The belief threshold for exploring the ambiguous arm is found in closed form and is shown to be increasing with respect to the ambiguity aversion index. I then study the effect of provision of an unambiguous information source about the ambiguous arm. Interestingly, I show that the exploration threshold rises unambiguously as a result of this new information source, thereby leading to more conservatism. This analysis also sheds light on the efficient time to reach for an expert opinion. The results of this chapter has been recently published in [61].In chapter 2, I introduce a dynamic model of random search where ex ante heterogeneous venture capitalists (investors) with unknown abilities match with a variety of startups (projects). There is incomplete yet symmetric information about investors’ types, whereas the projects’ types are publicly observable to all investors. In the unique stationary equilibrium, the matching sets, value functions and steady state distributions are endogenously determined. Interpreting the market posterior belief about the venture capitalists’ ability as their reputation, I study the outcomes of the economy when the success or failure of the projects create feedback effects: innovation spillovers and reputational externalities. When there are positive spillovers from successful early stage projects to late stage business opportunities, I show increased levels of search frictions could save the market from breakdown caused by the neglect of spillover effect. When the reputational externality is at play, namely when the deal flow of each investor is inversely impacted by the distribution of other investors’ reputation, I show the proportion of the high ability inactive investors is inefficiently high, and the projects suffer from early termination.

     

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    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9798535565279
    Series: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Subjects: Finance; Information science; Venture capital; Reputational externality; Decision making; Ambiguity; Spillover
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (117 p.)
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    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-03, Section: A. - Advisor: Anderson, Robert M

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), University of California, Berkeley, 2021

  21. Essays on Behavioral Economics and Economic History
    Published: 2021

    How do local wealth shocks impact economic activity? For over two centuries, Spain has conducted a national lottery which often results in the random allocation of up to $800 million in cash to the citizens of one town. This is the only case in the... more

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    How do local wealth shocks impact economic activity? For over two centuries, Spain has conducted a national lottery which often results in the random allocation of up to $800 million in cash to the citizens of one town. This is the only case in the world where individuals living in the same location randomly receive pure wealth shocks of this scale. Leveraging data on town-level lottery ticket expenditures, we compare winning towns to non-winning towns with the same probability of winning. We nd that for towns that won in recent decades, consumption of cars and housing increases while employment, business growth, and migration to the town all decrease. Anecdotal evidence suggests many winners use their earnings to pay o their home mortgages immediately, suggesting strong debt aversion. In chapter 2, we propose that holding debt causes worse financial decisions using two novel experimental designs where we randomly assign debt. Our first set of findings show that debt causes behavioral biases detrimental to subjects financial payoffs. However, subjects strategies are not random but instead debt-biased, consistent with a model of debt aversion. Furthermore, we show in additional treatments how these debt-biased behaviors can also deter subjects from borrowing and miss arbitrage opportunities. In chapter 3, I use a regression discontinuity framework to examine the long-run effects of conservative education on womens family and labor decisions. In 1939, the Spanish dictatorship created the Social service, a compulsory 6-month training program aimed at relegating women to the roles of mothers and housewives. I exploit the discontinuity induced by the sudden abolition of the Social Service, in addition to variation in the age of enrollment, to examine the consequences of attending the program. Using historical enrollment records and the universe of birth certificates, I nd the Social Service was successful in instilling the regimes ideology. Women exposed to the class get married and have kids at younger ages, consistent with the desire to form a family sooner. In addition, they are more likely to declare being housewives when their first child is born.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9798544204541
    Series: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Subjects: Sex roles; Social services; Decision making; Indoctrination; History; Behavioral psychology; Psychology
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (145 p.)
    Notes:

    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-05, Section: B. - Advisor: Abramitzky, Ran; Niederle, Muriel

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), Stanford University, 2021

  22. When Neural and Behavioral Forecasting Works: the Critical Role of Matching
    Published: 2021

    Over the last decade, decision neuroscientists have documented several stylized examples of neuroforecasting -- the idea that neuroimaging data collected from a small sample of subjects can be used to estimate how populations will behave. Frequently,... more

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    Over the last decade, decision neuroscientists have documented several stylized examples of neuroforecasting -- the idea that neuroimaging data collected from a small sample of subjects can be used to estimate how populations will behave. Frequently, these studies demonstrate significant neural forecasts even when forecasting is not possible with choice. Additionally, only three brain regions have been demonstrated to forecast: the Nucleus Accumbens (NAcc), Medial PreFrontal Cortex (MPFC), and the Anterior Insula (AIns). However, these studies vary on which brain regions forecast the market outcome of interest. To date, two concepts have been proposed that may help explain discrepant neuroforecasting results. According to a "partial scaling" account, the generalizability of a choice component depends on how basic or integrative the process in question is. Acording to a "market matching" account, choice components that are closely matched to the market outcome of interest will provide better forecasts. This dissertation comprises three studies that aim to test generalizability and matching in forecasting. Chapters 2 and 3 demonstrate that components that generalize well do not always outperform components that are well matched to the market outcome of interest. Chapter 4 demonstrates that when market matching is achieved by matching demographic features between the sample and the population, less generalizable components forecast better. Chapter 5 discusses implications of this research for theory and practice.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9798544204527
    Series: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Subjects: Affect (Psychology); Eye movements; Population; Behavior; Search engines; Motivation; Internet; Forecasting; Video recordings; Brain research; Politics; Magnetic resonance imaging; Decision making; Public health; Neurosciences; Medical imaging; Political advertising; Political science; Psychology; Experiments
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (114 p.)
    Notes:

    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-03, Section: B. - Advisor: Knutson, Brian

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), Stanford University, 2021

  23. Learning on the Job Search: How Application Experiences Shape Labor Market Outcomes
    Published: 2021

    Looking for work can be a very fraught experience, filled with immense stress and pressure. The sociological literature, however, has tended to view job searches as simple matching processes, connecting potential employees to employers. In my... more

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    Looking for work can be a very fraught experience, filled with immense stress and pressure. The sociological literature, however, has tended to view job searches as simple matching processes, connecting potential employees to employers. In my dissertation, I argue for further interrogation of the job search itself from the perspective of job seekers. In doing so, I highlight the ways in which experiences on the job search come to shape individuals' conceptions about work and about themselves in unequal ways as well as important meaning- and decision-making processes that occur over the course of job search.Drawing on longitudinal interviews with 63 men and women seeking internships and full-time employment in computer science, I find that the actors, processes, and procedures of the job search teach heavily gendered conceptualizations of the field and disproportionately alienate women who were more likely to question their passion for the field and express intentions to leave within five to ten years than their men counterparts. I further show how the processes, actors, and experiences that make up a job search contribute to individual perceptions of competition in the labor market, frequently increasing feelings of pressure and precarity beyond the economic realities of supply and demand. While the impact of this increased pressure was broad, increasing worries and concerns about being competitive enough even among the most privileged job seekers, job seekers with less access to status either through their education institutions or their family class background were more likely to find these experiences played into existing concerns about their belonging in the field. Finally, I additionally examine how job seekers aim to evaluate companies on factors like their diversity and societal impact in the course of a job search, but that doing so is often challenging and ambiguous. Because of this, job seekers frequently considered and applied to companies that they did not feel acted in socially responsible ways and had to manage the tension of seeking employment at firms that do not meet their stated goals. Together, these findings aim to illuminate not just the outcomes but the experience of seeking work in order to begin to unpack the black box of the job search. In doing so, they underscore the unequal and consequential challenges and opportunities that this presents, with important implications for workforce diversity and inclusion as well as the ways in which companies are able to manage potentially negative assessments of their broader social impact.

     

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    Language: English
    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9798538199204
    Series: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Subjects: Internships; Students; Multiculturalism & pluralism; Decision making; Learning
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (175 p.)
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    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-03, Section: A. - Advisor: Grusky, David;Correll, Shelley;Pedulla, David

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), Stanford University, 2021

  24. Essays in Online Platform Operations
    Published: 2021

    This dissertation studies problems of managing the operations in online platforms, especially when the behavior of agents on the platform is leveraged by users/platform managers to make better decisions. We study three distinct online platforms with... more

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    This dissertation studies problems of managing the operations in online platforms, especially when the behavior of agents on the platform is leveraged by users/platform managers to make better decisions. We study three distinct online platforms with unique challenges: in online crowdfunding platforms, how should a creator of campaigns take advantage of the heterogeneity in backers (independent backers vs. herding backers) to maximize the expected revenue; in online spot labor platforms, how employers decide whom to hire, and how experiential learning could help the platform create better matches; in online social media platforms, how people are affected by misinformation. We use both mathematical modeling and data-analytic tools to tackle these problems: we propose optimal pledge levels and campaign durations for campaign creators; we uncover the role of experiential learning in hiring decisions, and design platform's policies to exploit the informational advantage of employers; we find that consumers tend to co-consume mainstream information and unverified information, but substitution is not necessarily required for consumers to get hurt from unverified information. We hope this dissertation sheds lights on the management of different types of online platforms.

     

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    Media type: Dissertation
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9798535593548
    Series: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Subjects: Business administration; Web studies; Computer science; Information technology; Information science; Online platform; Information management; Decision making; Misinformation; Information consumption; Design optimization
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (189 p.)
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    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-03, Section: B. - Advisor: Veeraraghavan, Senthil;Moon, Ken

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), University of Pennsylvania, 2021

  25. Human vs. machine: disposition effect among algorithmic and human day traders
    Published: [2022]
    Publisher:  Norges Bank, Oslo

    This paper studies whether and why algorithmic traders exhibit one of the most broadlydocumented behavioral puzzles - the disposition effect. We use trade data from the NASDAQ Copenhagen Stock Exchange merged with the weather data. We find that on... more

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    This paper studies whether and why algorithmic traders exhibit one of the most broadlydocumented behavioral puzzles - the disposition effect. We use trade data from the NASDAQ Copenhagen Stock Exchange merged with the weather data. We find that on average, the disposition effect for human traders is substantial and increases significantly on colder days, while for similarly-trading algorithms, it is insignificant and insensitive to the weather. This provides causal evidence of the link between human psychology and the disposition effect and suggests that algorithms can reduce psychology-related human errors. Considering the ongoing AI adoption, this may have broad implications.

     

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    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9788283792355
    Other identifier:
    hdl: 11250/2997502
    hdl: 10419/264948
    Series: Working paper / Norges Bank ; 2022, 6
    Subjects: Disposition effect; Algorithmic trading; High-frequency trading; Decision making; Financial markets; Rationality
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 53 Seiten), Illustrationen