13th Trento Summer School
Intensive course in Market Design: Theory and Pragmatics
Co-Directors:
Dan Friedman, Economics Department, Santa Cruz University
CA
David Parkes, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Harvard University
Guest lecturers: Tuomas Sandholm, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University, Peter Cramton, Economics Department, University of Maryland, Paul J. Healy, Economics Department, Ohio State University, S. N. Muthu Muthukrishnan, Computer Science Department, Rutgers University, Estelle Cantillon, ECARES, Université Libre de Bruxelles
For the last
several centuries, markets have spread spontaneously and have organized an
increasing share of human activity. Globalization and information technologies
accelerated the process in the early 21st century and, at the same time, opened
unprecedented new opportunities for deliberate design.
Market design has much to learn from success stories like Amazon and eBay, online advertising, labour markets for medical interns and residents, wireless spectrum auction design, expressive auctions for sourcing, and mobile phone banking in the developing world. Market designers can also learn from disasters such as the California energy market of May 2000 through September 2001 and the credit-default swap market freeze in September 2008.
Market design is a multi-disciplinary problem with relevant expertise coming from economic theory, computer science, and operations research. Advances are made with the right combination of theory and pragmatics, with theoretical ideals balanced against requirements for computational and informational efficiency, as well as simplicity and robustness.
Market design has much to learn from success stories like Amazon and eBay, online advertising, labour markets for medical interns and residents, wireless spectrum auction design, expressive auctions for sourcing, and mobile phone banking in the developing world. Market designers can also learn from disasters such as the California energy market of May 2000 through September 2001 and the credit-default swap market freeze in September 2008.
Market design is a multi-disciplinary problem with relevant expertise coming from economic theory, computer science, and operations research. Advances are made with the right combination of theory and pragmatics, with theoretical ideals balanced against requirements for computational and informational efficiency, as well as simplicity and robustness.
The 2012 Trento
Summer School faculty will bring together experts from many fields:
- artificial intelligence and multi-agent systems
- experimental economics
- mechanism design theory
- prediction markets
- theoretical computer science
They will provide
an integrated series of lectures on topics such as
- two-sided platforms
- matching markets
- double auction markets
- virtual economies
- combinatorial auctions
Students participating in this Summer School will gain an up-to-date overview of the relevant theory, current evidence on what sorts of market formats work well under various conditions, and pragmatic issues that arise when theoretical paradigms meet real-world challenges.
In addition to overview lectures in the mornings, the school will feature intensive seminar-style discussions in the afternoons of participants’ research.
The Trento Summer Schools are intended for advanced graduate students and post-doctoral scholars in economics, computer science and operations research. People interested in participating in the Summer School are encouraged to apply by submitting a curriculum vitae, a two-page essay describing their interest in Market Design, a course transcript from their PhD program, including advanced examinations passed, two letters of recommendation, and statements about their current or projected research, along with relevant research papers, if any.
Applications are
due by Saturday, 17 march 2012. Persons interested in participating in the
Summer School should follow the application
procedure.
Admissions
decisions will be announced by 10 April 2012. All applicants will be informed by
e-mail about the results.
The sessions will
be held at Hotel Villa Madruzzo, Trento, Italy. All participants are required to
stay for the entire duration of the event. Food and accommodation will be
covered by the School (except for meals during the weekend) and participants
will have to cover travel expenses.
Please direct
logistical questions to the Summer School secretary (ccschool@economia.unitn.it).
This is the
13th of a series of intensive courses to be offered by the Cognitive
and Experimental Economics Laboratory (CEEL) with the financial support of John
S. Latsis Public Benefit Foundation, an Athens-based Foundation supporting
public benefit activities in Greece and abroad: www.latsis-foundation.org.
Previous courses were
offered in Computable Economics (2000, Director K. Vela Velupillai),
Experimental Economics (2001, Director Daniel Friedman), Adaptive Economic
Processes (2002, Director Peter Howitt), Behavioral Economics (2003, Directors
Daniel Friedman and David Laibson), Institutional Economics (2004, Director
Richard N. Langlois), Evolutionary Economic Dynamics (2005,Directors Ken Binmore
and Larry Samuelson), Agent-Based Computational Economics (2006, Directors Leigh
Tesfatsion and Robert Axtell), Agent-Based Finance (2007, Directors Cars Hommes
and Thomas Lux), Financial Instability and Crises (2008, Directors Domenico
Delli Gatti and Mauro Gallegati), Networks and Innovation (2009, Directors John
Padgett, Lee Fleming and Massimo Riccaboni), Macroeconomics and Financial Crises
(2010, Directors Peter Howitt, Daniel Heymann and Axel Leijonhufvud) and
Evolution of Social Preferences (2011, Directors Dan Friedman and Luigi Mittone)
Program
Directors: Axel Leijonhufvud, UCLA and University of Trento and
Enrico Zaninotto, University of Trento
Co-Directors
of the School:
Guest
Lecturers:Dan Friedman, Economics Department, Santa Cruz University CA David Parkes, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University Tuomas Sandholm, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University, Peter Cramton, Economics Department, University of Maryland, Paul J. Healy, Economics Department, Ohio State University, S. N. Muthu Muthukrishnan, Computer Science Department, Rutgers University, Estelle Cantillon, ECARES, Université Libre de Bruxelles Laboratory Director: Luigi Mittone, University of Trento
Lab Technical
Assistant: Marco Tecilla, University of Trento
Summer School
Secretary: ccschool@economia.unitn.it
The course is offered by the Cognitive and Experimental
Economics Laboratory CEEL of the University of Trento with the financial support
of John S. Latsis Public Benefit Foundation, an Athens-based Foundation
supporting public benefit activities in Greece and abroad: www.latsis-foundation.org.
|
Great initiative. Market Design in Barcelona has been going on strong for some time too. Very nice new idea's and seems like holographic design is going to be the way for the future. I'm currently here now, found myself a nice stay through Barcelona Holiday Apartments, for any interested ones to come and see how it's done here.
ReplyDelete