Showing posts with label conferences. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conferences. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

12th International Naturalistic Decision Making Conference--June 9-12

12th International Naturalistic Decision Making Conference  (I'm scheduled to speak Wednesday morning...to human factors engineers)

Naturalistic Decision Making (NDM) research emerged in the 1980s and studies how people make decisions in "real-world settings." In particular, it focuses on peoples' level of expertise in diverse professional domains and analyzes how experience allows people to rapidly categorize situations to make effective decisions. And because situations can often include dynamic, uncertain, and rapidly-changing conditions, with the ultimate decision having significant consequences, NDM research seeks to help people understand how to make the best decisions possible.
NDM methods emphasize descriptive studies conducted in field and operational workplace settings. Research findings have been used to improve performance, revise doctrine and process, develop training that is focused on decision requirements, and design information technologies to support decision making and related cognitive functions.
Examples of topics include:
  • Methods to study and support rapid decision making
  • Designing visualizations and user interfaces to improve sense making
  • Assessing cultural competence
  • Designing more effective human-computer planning systems
  • Bringing evidence-based decision making to bear in civilian and government agencies
  • Decision making under stress
  • Aiding police in the detection of imminent terrorist attacks
Applications to areas such as cyber space, intelligence, healthcare, aviation, and sports will be discussed at the conference.
Registration for the conference includes access to all of the presentation sessions at the conference (see Agenda Overview & Program Outline below). It also includes a continental breakfast and boxed lunch each day, along with two conference receptions on 9 & 11 June. Because of limited available seating, only the first 136 to register will receive the added bonus of a conference banquet and speakers. Spouses can attend the banquet for an additional separate fee.
There will be two optional events at this year's conference.
  • 11 June: there will be a Social Recognition Prime Dinner at Seasons 52 restaurant in the Tysons Corner shopping mall attached to the conference hotel. The dinner will include 4-course dinner, wine, and beverages. An option to charge this separately is available on the registration site. Spouses are welcomed.
  • 12 June: three half-day tutorial alternatives.
Distinguished invited speakers:
  • Dr. Alvin Roth, winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 2012, applies economic theory to solutions for "real-world" problems.
  • Dr. Gary A. Klein is a senior scientist at MacroCognition LLC, who pioneered the field of naturalistic decision making.
  • Dr. Judith Orasanu, Principal Investigator/Team Lead for Distributed Team Decision Making, NASA, Systems Safety Research Branch, Ames Research Center, was a founder of the NDM community of interest.
  • Mr. John Willison, Director, Command, Power, & Integration, U.S. Army RDECOM CERDEC. Mr. Willison is responsible for leading the technical program for all Army Battle Command Systems.
  • Dr. David Woods a full professor in Integrated Systems Engineering at the Ohio State University, focuses on the foundations and practice of Cognitive Systems Engineering.
  • Professor Tom Ormerod, Head of Psychology at the University of Sussex, is a cognitive psychologist who has studied naturalistic decision-making for over thirty years.
  • Dr. Marvin Cohen is a principal investigator at Perceptronics Solutions on projects directed toward the understanding and training of critical thinking and leadership.
  • Commander Joseph Cohn, PhD. is the Deputy Director, ASD/R&E Human Performance Training and BioSystems (HPT&B) Directorate.
  • COL Matthew Hepburn, Marine Corps, USA, is the DARPA program manager for the Strategic Social Interaction Modules program (SSIM).
If you have questions or wish to submit a poster, please contact the NDM Committee.

Marketplace Innovation Workshop, Columbia U, June 10 2015

This looks like an exciting conference, I would go if I weren't already committed to be elsewhere...

"Marketplace Innovation" Workshop

Conference Organized by Ramesh Johari, Costis Maglaras, and Gabriel Weintraub

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 from 9:00 AM to 3:00 PM (EDT)




Workshop on “Marketplace Innovation”

June 10, 2015

Columbia University

In conjunction with the 2015 Informs Revenue Management Conference

Organized by Ramesh Johari, Costis Maglaras, and Gabriel Weintraub

Markets are an ancient institution for matching the supply for a good or service with its demand. Physical markets were typically slow to evolve, with simple institutions governing trade, and trading partners generally facing a daunting challenge in finding the "right" partner.  The information technology revolution, however, has generated a sea of change in how markets function: now, markets are typically complex platforms, with a range of mechanisms involved in facilitating matches among participants.  Recent trends point to an unprecedented level of control over the design, implementation, and operation of markets: more than ever before, we are able to engineer the platforms governing transactions among market participants. As a consequence, market operators or platforms can control a host of variables such as pricing, liquidity, visibility, information revelation, terms of trade, and transaction fees. On its part, given these variables, market participants often face complex problems when optimizing their own decisions. In the supply side such decisions may include the assortment of products to offer and their price structure, while in the demand side they may include how much to bid for different goods and what feedback to offer about past purchasing experiences. The decisions made by the platform and the market participants interact, sometimes in intricate and subtle ways, to determine market outcomes.

In this workshop we seek work that improves our understanding of these markets, both from the perspective of the market operator and the market participants. With respect to the former we are particularly interested in work that derives useful insights on how to design these markets, taking into account their operational details and engineering and technological constraints. With respect to the market participants, we seek for work that introduces novel approaches to optimize their decisions and improves our understanding of their interactions within the market. We look for a mix of approaches including modeling, theoretical, and empirical, using a wide range of tools drawn from operations management, game theory, auctions and mechanism design, optimization stochastic modeling, revenue management, econometrics, or statistics.

The list of markets to be studied includes but it is not restricted to:

--Online marketplaces, such as eBay, Etsy, etc.

--Internet advertising, including sponsored search and display ad exchanges.

--Sharing economy markets, such as Uber/Lyft, AirBnb, etc.

--Online labor markets, such as Amazon mTurk, oDesk, Elance, etc.

--Procurement markets, such as technology-enabled government procurement

--Health care exchanges

--Financial exchanges

The talks are by invitation only and the list of confirmed speakers is:

  • Gad Allon (Kellogg)
  • Itai Ashlagi (MIT)
  • Eric Budish (Chicago Booth)
  • Gerard Cachon (Wharton)
  • Anindya Ghose (NYU)
  • Karan Girotra (INSEAD)
  • Steve Graves (MIT)
  • Nicole Immorlica (Microsoft)
  • Hamid Nazerzadeh (USC)
  • Christian Terwiesch (Wharton)
  • Rakesh  Vohra (Penn)
  • Assaf Zeevi (Columbia)
The program is here

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Jerusalem Conference on Education and Economics, April 29

I'm on my way to Israel, to participate in a conference on Education and Economics.

The webpage, in Hebrew, is here: כנס ירושלים לחינוך וכלכלה, 29.4  (Jerusalem Conference on Education and Economics, April 29)

I will participate late in the day, in a conversation with the mayor of Jerusalem, followed by the President.

19:00: Nobel laureate in economics for 2012, Professor Alvin Roth , a conversation with the Mayor of Jerusalem, Nir Barkat , education and implementation of economic theories in the public sector.

19:30: Address by President Reuven (Ruby) Rivlin
************

I gather that this last session may be carried on Channel 2, although I expect that my conversation with the mayor will be conducted in English. (I also expect that it will focus on school choice.)
*****
Update: here's the coverage from the Jerusalem Post
Dovrat worries Education portfolio has become a booby prize




Thursday, April 23, 2015

American Society of Transplantation conference on Resolving the Organ Shortage

Here's an early announcement of a conference scheduled for February 2016, organized by the American Society of Transplantation, which reflects some of the intense discussion going on in the transplant community about how to alleviate the shortage of transplantable organs.



(As background, recall these three recent posts:

Friday, April 3, 2015

There's no consensus on incentives for kidney donation, but maybe there is on removing disincentives


Two major transplantation societies cautiously consider incentives for organ donation

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Dynamic games in this summer's Jerusalem School of Economic Theory, June 24-July 3 2015

...with some experimenters on the faculty too...

26th Jerusalem School in Economic Theory

Dynamic Games

Event date: Jun 24 - Jul 3, 2015 

Organizers:
    Eric Maskin, Director (Harvard University)
    Elchanan Ben-Porath, Codirector (The Hebrew University)
    Drew Fudenberg (Harvard University)

    In many economic, social, and political settings, participants interact strategically not just once but over time.

    When raising its import tariffs today, for example, a country will try to anticipate the reactions of its trading partners tomorrow. And an oligopolistic firm can learn from its rivals’ past pricing behavior so as to gauge what prices they are likely to set now.

    The Summer School will emphasize theoretical aspects of dynamic games, but will also include work on experiments.

    List of speakers:
    Robert Aumann (The Hebrew University)
    Martin Cripps (University College London)
    Guillaume Fréchette (New York University)
    Drew Fudenberg (Harvard University)
    Sergiu Hart (The Hebrew University)
    Johannes Hörner (Yale University)
    Navin Kartik (Columbia University)
    George Mailath (University of Pennsylvania)
    Eric Maskin (Harvard University)
    Abraham Neyman (The Hebrew University)
    Larry Samuelson (Yale University)
    Alistair Wilson (University of Pittsburgh)

Sunday, February 8, 2015

Conference on Auctions, Market Mechanisms and Their Applications (AMMA 2015)

Scott Kominers writes:

"Lirong Xia and I are co-organizing a new iteration of the Conference on Auctions, Market Mechanisms and Their Applications (AMMA 2015).


Any chance you could share this call for papers with your students, and maybe blogvertize it?"


The Third Conference on Auctions, Market Mechanisms and Their Applications

August 8–9, 2015
Chicago, Illinois, United States

The Third Conference on Auctions, Market Mechanisms and Their Applications (AMMA 2015) 

 


AMMA focuses on the economic, algorithmic, technical, and practical issues that arise in developing and deploying market mechanisms. This includes, but is not limited to, theoretical and empirical examination of questions like:
  • Is a market the right mechanism for the problem? What are the externalities involved? What are the issues with central planning?
  • How should novel markets be organized? What is the "right" micro-structure for a given setting?
  • What is the best way to provide incentives? Is (real) money necessary?
  • How do markets function in artificial economies (cf. bank runs in Second Life and similar games)?
  • What protocols maximize the social value of market intermediaries?
  • Is there a need for new mechanisms for specific applications?
In addition to more traditional academic papers, we are especially interested in papers presenting experiences from the real world (case studies and new applications). Below are some potential areas, but the list is illustrative rather than exhaustive -- we welcome papers in all areas of market design. Sample areas include:
  • Content delivery networks
  • Resource allocation in networks and distributed computing
  • Online auctions and exchanges
  • Markets and incentives in crowdsourcing
  • Entrepreneurial market design
  • Prediction markets
  • Airport landing slot allocation
  • Road congestion pricing
  • School choice matching
  • Organ exchange
  • Social networks
  • Financial market design
  • Combinatorial auctions and exchanges

Papers can be submitted via EasyChair, at https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=amma2015.

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Information theory and applications

I'll be speaking today in San Diego at a conference on Information theory and applications

 Here's the program.

I'll give a lunchtime talk on "Market Design," in which I'll introduce some of the big themes of market design, with the focus on creating marketplaces in which a lot of private information that is distributed among many participants can be aggregated to help arrive at efficient outcomes.

That will be followed by a session on Matching Based Market Design, organized by Vijay Vazirani,:

Chair: Aranyak Mehta, Google Research
2:15 “Recent developments in kidney exchange,” Alvin Roth
2:35 “Online Matching and Ad Allocation,” Aranyak Mehta
 2:55 “Simple Auctions with Simple Strategies,” Nikhil Devanur*, Jamie Morgenstern, Vasilis Syrgkanis, Matt Weinberg
3:15 “School choice,” Atila Abdulkadiroglu

Monday, February 2, 2015

World Congress of the Econometric Society : 17th to 21st August 2015 in Montreal

11th World Congress of the Econometric Society : 17th to 21st August 2015
Montréal, Canada

There's lots of market design among the featured lectures so far:

Econometric Society: 
https://www.econometricsociety.org/
Paper submission (Deadline for submissions: February 15, 2015):
https://editorialexpress.com/

Scientific Program Committee

  • Bo Honoré (Princeton University)
  • Ariel Pakes (Harvard University)
  • Monika Piazzesi (Stanford University)
  • Larry Samuelson (Yale University)

Local Organizing Committee:

  • Jean-Marie Dufour, Chair (McGill University)
  • Marine Carrasco (Université de Montréal)
  • Rui Castro (Université de Montréal)
  • Russell Davidson (McGill University)
  • Georges Dionne (HEC Montréal)
  • Prosper Dovonon (Concordia University)
  • Alain Guay (Université du Québec Montréal)
  • Lynda Khalaf (Carleton University and CIREQ)
  • Ngo van Long (McGill University)
  • Marc Henry (Pensylvania State University and Université de Montréal)

Named Lectures:

  • Predidential : Robert Porter (Nothwestern University)
        "Empirical Analysis in Auction Design" (Chair: Robert Wilson)
  • Cowles Lecture: Elie Tamer (Nothwestern University)
        "Sensitivity Analysis in Econometric Models"
        (Chair: Donald W. K. Andrews)
  • Frisch Lecture: Alvin E. Roth (Stanford University)
        "Kidney Exchange: New Developments and Frontiers" (Chair: Robert Wilson)
  • Walras/Bowley Lecture - Per Krusell (Stockhom University):
        "Climate Change Around the World"
  • Fisher-Schultz Lecture: Darrell Duffie (Stanford University)
        "The Design and Efficiency of Over-the-Counter Financial Markets" (Chair: John Geanakoplos)

Invited Talks:

  • 1. Industrial Organization
  • Matthew Gentzkow (University of Chicago):
    “Competition and Persuasion”
    Michael D. Whinston (Massachusetts Institute of Technology):
    “Recent Advances in the Empirics of Vertical Contracting”

    Discussant: John Asker (University of California, Los Angeles)

  • 2. Macroeonometrics
  • Ulrich Mueller (Princeton University)
    "Ultra Low-Frequency Econometrics"
    Harald Uhlig (University of Chicago):
    “Shocks and Sharpe Ratios: Recent Advances in Empirical Macroeconomics”

    Discussant: Frank Schorfheide (University of Pennsylvania)

  • 3. Agency problems
  • Johannes Horner (Yale University):
    “Learning and Experimentation”
    Igal Hendel (Northwestern University):
    “Dynamic Contracting in Insurance”

    Discussant: Bernard Salanié (Columbia University)

  • 4. Big Data
  • Serena Ng (Columbia University)
    "Opportunities and Challenges: lessons from analyzing terabytes of data"
    Jesse Shapiro (University of Chicago)
    "Social Science with Big Data"

    Discussant: Christian Hansen (Chicago Booth)

  • 5. Matching
  • Fuhito Kohjima (Stanford University):
    “Recent Developments in Matching Theory and their Practical Applications”
    Parag Pathak (Massachusetts Institute of Technology):
    “Designing School Assignment Mechanisms”

    Discussant: Federico Echenique (California Institute of Technology)

  • 6. Partially Identified Models
  • Azeem Shaikh (University of Chicago)
    "Practical and theoretical advances in inference for partially identified models"
    Kate Ho (Columbia University)
    "Partial Identification in Applied Research: Benefits and Challenges"

    Discussant: Jack Porter (University of Wisconsin-Madison)

Friday, January 30, 2015

Barcelona in June: experimental macro-economics and matching and market design (different events:)

Rosemarie Nagel writes to announce the

6th LeeX International Workshop co-organized with
Barcelona GSE Summer Forum on Theoretical and Experimental Macroeconomics, June 9/10, 2014.  Keynote speakers are: Roger Guesnerie (Collège de France), Pradeep Dubey (Stony Brook University).
The conference organizers are: John Duffy, University of California Irvine, Frank Heinemann, Technical University of Berlin, Rosemarie Nagel, ICREA and Universitat Pompeu Fabra, BGSE, and Shyam Sunder (Yale University). Deadline January 31, 2015 


 and
logo_leex_2logo_gse                                                          logo_upf_p                                     
Macroeconomic theories have traditionally been tested using non-experimental "field" data. However, modern, micro-founded macroeconomic models can also be tested in the laboratory, and researchers have begun to pursue such experimental tests. This June, graduate students specializing in macroeconomics or experimental economics, as well as junior faculty members and researchers of macroeconomic are invited to attend the third LeeX summer school devoted to experimental macroeconomics research.  This year's program will focus on laboratory studies that are relevant to current global financial crisis.
The intensive 5 days summer school will be held from June 8 to 14, 2015 at Universitat Pompeu Fabra (UPF) in Barcelona. Students will be taught experimental methods and exposed to a number of macroeconomic applications that have been tested experimentally. Students will be asked to participate in experiments and to develop their own experimental macroeconomic projects. Faculty will assist with and critique these projects. The different links on the top of this page will give you access to details regarding the particulars of the summer school in experimental macroeconomics.
We invite summer school students to present their ongoing research during the summer school. Such presentations may take the form of presentations during the summer school or a poster session during the associated conference workshop, depending on the number of students seeking to present their work. Such presentations will be at the discretion of the summer school organizers. Students can submit research proposals as part of their summer school application, though this is not a requirement for participation in the summer school.  Indeed, one purpose of the summer school is to think of macroeconomic topics and models that can be implemented in the laboratory in a way that advances our knowledge of behavior.
Summer school students are also invited to attend the 2 day 6th LeeX International Workshop co-organized with Barcelona GSE Summer Forum on Theoretical and Experimental Macroeconomics  from June 10-11, 2015 that will also take place at UPF.
The deadline for applications is Friday, April 10 2015.  
Summer school in experimental macroeconomics faculty:
Lecturers
Summer school organizers
  • John Duffy (University of Pittsburgh)
  • Frank Heinemann (Technische Universität Berlin)
  • Rosemarie Nagel (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)
  • Shyam Sunder (Yale university)

***********************************

While you're there, don't miss

Workshop: Matching in Practice

Dates: June 8-9, 2015

This workshop will bring together the growing community of researchers in Europe working on the various aspects of assignment and matching in education and related labor markets, with a view to actively foster the interactions between the different strands of approaches used by these researchers (theory, experiments, analysis of field data, policy/market design) and aggregate expertise about the actual functioning of these markets in Europe.

Keynote Speaker

Christopher Avery (Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University)

Workshop Organizer

Antonio Miralles (UAB and Barcelona GSE)

Scientific Committee

  • Dorothea Kübler (Berlin Social Science Center)​
  • Antonio Miralles (UAB and Barcelona GSE)
  • Joana Pais (Lisbon School of Economics and Management)

Speaker Schedule

Summer Forum workshop schedules for 2015 will be posted as they become available.
The workshop “Matching in Practice” is supported by the Severo Ochoa Research Program (SEV2011-0075).

Saturday, January 17, 2015

The Conference of the Society for Economic Design: Istanbul Bilgi University on July 1-4, 2015


The Conference of the Society for Economic Design 2015 will take place at Istanbul Bilgi University on July 1-4, 2015. The plenary speakers are Eric Maskin (Leo Hurwich Lecture), Stephen Morris (Murat Sertel Lecture), Charles Plott (SED Lecture) and Rakesh Vohra (Paul Kleindorfer Lecture)

Organizing the sessions not by methodology but by topic, the conference aims to implement a platform for theorists and experimentalists to benefit more from each other. Deadline for submissions is February 15, 2015. Please see the details at http://sed2015.bilgi.edu.tr

To follow the tradition, there will be a doctoral school adjunct to the conference on June 30-July 1, 2015. This year's school is organized by Bilgi Economics Lab of Istanbul on experimental economics with special emphasis on the role of experiments for economic design. The lecturers are Gary Bolton, Jordi Brandts, Seda Ertac, Ayca Ebru Giritligil and Emin Karagozlu. For details, please see http://sed2015.bilgi.edu.tr/site_media/docs/SED2015-Grad-School-Jan-2015.pdf or the attached.

Saturday, January 3, 2015

Market design at the AEA meetings in Boston

Here are some market-design-related sessions that caught my eye on first glance through the big program. (Three of them are at the same time:)

Jan 03, 2015 8:00 am, Hynes Convention Center, Room 209 
American Economic Association
Empirical Market Design (D4)
PresidingRAMESH JOHARI (Stanford University)
Quality Externalities and the Limits of Reputation in Two-Sided Markets
CHRIS NOSKO (University of Chicago)
STEVEN TADELIS (University of California-Berkeley)
[View Abstract]
At What Quality and What Price? Inducing Separating Equilibria as a Market Design Problem
JOHN JOSEPH HORTON (New York University)
RAMESH JOHARI (Stanford University)
[View Abstract]
Changing the Course Allocation Mechanism at Wharton
ERIC BUDISH (University of Chicago)
JUDD KESSLER (University of Pennsylvania)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
The Economics of the Common Application
CHRISTOPHER AVERY (Harvard University)
PARAG A. PATHAK (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
[View Abstract]
Discussants:
ALI HORTACSU (University of Chicago)
STEVEN TADELIS (University of California-Berkeley)
EDUARDO AZEVEDO (University of Pennsylvania)
ERIC BUDISH (University of Chicago)

******

Jan 03, 2015 2:30 pm, Sheraton Boston, Beacon E 
Econometric Society

Empirical Analyses of Selling Mechanisms in Dynamic Environments (D4)

PresidingGLENN ELLISON (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
An Empirical Analysis of Informationally Restricted Dynamic Auctions of Used Cars
SUNGJIN CHO (Seoul National University)
HARRY JOHN PAARSCH (Amazon)
JOHN RUST (Georgetown University)
[View Abstract]
Invest in Information or Wing It? A Model of Dynamic Pricing with Seller Learning
GUOFANG HUANG (Carnegie Mellon University)
HONG LUO (Harvard Business School)
JING XIA (Harvard University)
[View Abstract]
Primary-Market Auctions for Event Tickets: Eliminating the Rents of "Bob the Broker"
ERIC BUDISH (University of Chicago)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Discussants:
JAKUB KASTL (Stanford University)
BRADLEY LARSEN (Stanford University)
GLENN ELLISON (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
*********

Jan 04, 2015 8:00 am, Hynes Convention Center, Room 206 
American Economic Association

Electronic Commerce and Big Data (L8, M2)

PresidingJUSTIN RAO (Microsoft Research)
Sales Taxes Shielding on the Amazon.com Platform
ALEJANDRO MOLNAR (Vanderbilt University)
PAULO SOMAINI (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
[View Abstract]
Salience and Quality Choice
BRADLEY LARSEN (Stanford University )
DOMINIC COEY (eBay Research Labs)
KANE SWEENEY (eBay Research Labs)
[View Abstract]
Do-Not-Track and the Economics of Third-Party Advertising
GIORGOS ZERVAS (Boston University)
JUSTIN RAO (Microsoft Research)
SHARAD GOEL (Microsoft Research)
CEREN BUDAK (Microsoft Research)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Big Data to the Rescue? Machine Learning and Causal Inference in Online Advertising
RANDALL LEWIS (Google, Inc.)
MICHAEL HANKIN (University of Southern California)
[View Abstract]
Discussants:
DAVID REILEY (Google, Inc.)
MICHAEL OSTROVSKY (Stanford University)
STEVEN TADELIS (University of California-Berkeley and eBay Research Labs)
DENIS NEKIPELOV (University of California-Berkeley)
************

Jan 04, 2015 10:15 am, Sheraton Boston, Commonwealth 
American Economic Association

Moral Values and Economic Behavior (A1, Z1)

PresidingALVIN E. ROTH (Stanford University)
Forbidden Fruits: The Political Economy of Science, Religion, and Growth
ROLAND BENABOU (Princeton University)
DAVIDE TICCHI (Institute for Advanced Studies-Lucca)
ANDREA VINDIGNI (Institute for Advanced Studies-Lucca)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Combating Vote-Selling: A Field Experiment in the Philippines
ALLEN HICKEN (University of Michigan)
STEPHEN LEIDER (University of Michigan)
NICO RAVANILLA (University of Michigan)
DEAN YANG (University of Michigan)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
More Money, More Problems? Can High Pay Be Coercive And Repugnant?
SANDRO AMBUEHL (Stanford University)
MURIEL NIEDERLE (Stanford University)
ALVIN E. ROTH (Stanford University)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Are Attitudes about Morally Controversial Transactions Affected by Information? The Case of Payments for Human Organs
JULIO J. ELIAS (Universidad del CEMA)
NICOLA LACETERA (University of Toronto)
MARIO MACIS (Johns Hopkins University)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Discussants:
ANDREI SHLEIFER (Harvard University)
JUDD KESSLER (University of Pennsylvania)
THEODORE BERGSTROM (University of California-Santa Barbara)
RODNEY GARRATT (Federal Reserve Bank of New York)
**********

Jan 04, 2015 10:15 am, Boston Marriott Copley, Vermont 
Economic Science Association

Political Engineering (D7, D6)

PresidingT. NICOLAUS TIDEMAN (Virginia Tech)
Quadratic Voting
STEVEN P. LALLEY (University of Chicago)
E. GLEN WEYL (Microsoft Research New England)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Aggregating Local Preferences To Guide Policy
DANIEL BENJAMIN (Cornell University)
GABRIEL CARROLL (Stanford University)
ORI HEFFETZ (Cornell University)
MILES KIMBALL (University of Michigan)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Storable Votes and Judicial Nominations in the United States Senate.
ALESSANDRA CASELLA (Columbia University)
SEBASTIEN TURBAN (California Institute of Tecnology)
GREGORY WAWRO (Columbia University)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Purchasing Votes without Cash: Implementing Quadratic Voting Outside the Lab
ROMAN DAVID ZARATE (University of California-Berkeley)
CESAR MANTILLA (Toulouse School of Economics)
JUAN CAMILO CÁRDENAS (Universidad de los Andes)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Discussants:
ERIC S. MASKIN (Harvard University)
RICHARD J. ZECKHAUSER (Harvard University)
JOHN MORGAN (University of California-Berkeley)
ERIK SNOWBERG (California Institute of Technology)
**********

Jan 04, 2015 10:15 am, Boston Marriott Copley, Simmons 
Industrial Organization Society

Frontiers of Empirical Industrial Organization (L1)

PresidingMARC RYSMAN (Boston University)
Drip Pricing When Consumers Have Limited Foresight: Evidence from Driving School Fees
DAVID MUIR (University of Pennsylvania)
KATJA SEIM (University of Pennsylvania)
MARIA ANA VITORINO (University of Minnesota)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
The Welfare Effects of Congestion in Uncoordinated Assignment: Evidence from the NYC HS Match
ATILA ABDULKADIROGLU (Duke University)
NIKHIL AGARWAL (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
PARAG A. PATHAK (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
[View Abstract]
Deposit Competition and Financial Fragility: Evidence from the United States Banking Sector
MARK EGAN (University of Chicago)
ALI HORTACSU (University of Chicago)
GREGOR MATVOS (University of Chicago)
[View Abstract]
Information Frictions and the Welfare Consequences of Adverse Selection
BENJAMIN HANDEL (University of California-Berkeley)
JONATHAN KOLSTAD (University of Pennsylvania)
JOHANNES SPINNEWIJN (London School of Economics)
Discussants:
CHRIS CONLON (Columbia University)
FRANCESCO DECAROLIS (Boston University)
GINGER ZHE JIN (University of Maryland)
DAN ACKERBERG (University of Michigan)
******

Jan 04, 2015 12:30 pm, Sheraton Boston, Riverway 
Korea-America Economic Association/American Economic Association

The Economics of the Internet (L8, D8)

PresidingJAY PIL CHOI (University New South Wales and Michigan State University)
Social Media and News Consumption
SUSAN ATHEY (Stanford University)
MARKUS MOBIUS (Microsoft Research)
JENO PAL (Central European University)
[View Abstract]
Net Neutrality, Business Models, and Internet Interconnection
JAY PIL CHOI (University New South Wales and Michigan State University)
DOH-SHIN JEON (Toulouse School of Economics)
BYUNG-CHEOL KIM (Georgia Institute of Technology)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Match Quality, Search, and the Internet Market for Used Books
GLENN ELLISON (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
SARA ELLISON (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
[View Abstract]
An Empirical Analysis of Consumer Online Search
THOMAS BLAKE (eBay Research Labs)
CHRIS NOSKO (University of Chicago)
STEVEN TADELIS (University of California-Berkeley)
[View Abstract]
Discussants:
KYOO IL KIM (Michigan State University)
JOSHUA GANS (University of Toronto)
MINJAE SONG (Bates White)
YUN JEONG CHOI (Yonsei University)
*******

Jan 04, 2015 2:30 pm, Hynes Convention Center, Room 204 
American Economic Association

Recent Advances in the Analysis of Auction Data (L1, D4)

PresidingKEN HENDRICKS (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
The Bidder Exclusion Effect
DOMINIC COEY (eBay Research Labs)
BRADLEY LARSEN (Stanford University)
KANE SWEENEY (eBay Research Labs)
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Collusion and Reciprocity in First-Price Procurements
PAULO SOMAINI (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
[View Abstract]
Simultaneous First-Price Auctions with Preferences over Combinations
MATTHEW GENTRY (London School of Economics)
TATIANA KOMAROVA (London School of Economics)
PASQUALE SCHIRALDI (London School of Economics)
[View Abstract]
A Simple Test for Moment Inequality Models with an Application to English Auctions
ANDRES ARADILLAS-LOPEZ (Pennsylvania State University)
AMIT GANDHI (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
DANIEL QUINT (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Discussants:
TATIANA KOMAROVA (London School of Economics)
SERAFIN GRUNDL (Federal Reserve Board)
PAULO SOMAINI (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
ALEJANDRO MOLNAR (Vanderbilt University)
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an 04, 2015 2:30 pm, Sheraton Boston, Beacon F 
Econometric Society

Advances in Collusion and Antitrust Policy (K2, L4)

PresidingJUDITH CHEVALIER (Yale University)
Co-Opetition: Some Antitrust of Arrangements Between Competitors
JEAN TIROLE (Toulouse School of Economics)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Effects of Antitrust Leniency on Concealment Effort by Colluding Firms
LESLIE MARX (Duke University)
CLAUDIO MEZZETTI (University of Melbourne)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Cooperation, R&D Spillovers and Antitrust Policy
ANGEL LOPEZ (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
XAVIER VIVES (IESE Business School)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Discussants:
BARRY NALEBUFF (Yale University)
JOSEPH E. HARRINGTON (University of Pennsylvania)
LUIS CABRAL (New York University)
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Jan 05, 2015 8:00 am, Sheraton Boston, Constitution Ballroom B 
American Economic Association

Patent Economics (K2, O3)

PresidingJOSHUA LERNER (Harvard University)
Standard-Essential Patents
JOSHUA LERNER (Harvard University)
JEAN TIROLE (Toulouse School of Economics)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Do Firms Underinvest in Long-Term Research? Evidence from Cancer Clinical Trials
ERIC BUDISH (University of Chicago)
BENJAMIN ROIN (Harvard University)
HEIDI WILLIAMS (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Intellectual Property Rights and Access to Innovation: Evidence from TRIPS
MARGARET KYLE (Toulouse School of Economics)
YI QIAN (Northwestern University)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Discussants:
UFUK AKCIGIT (University of Pennsylvania)
PETRA MOSER (Stanford University)
PIERRE AZOULAY (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
LOUIS KAPLOW (Harvard University)
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Jan 05, 2015 8:00 am, Sheraton Boston, Beacon G 
Econometric Society

Theory of Matching Markets (C1)

PresidingRAMESH JOHARI (Stanford University)
Stable Matching in Large Economies
YEON-KOO CHE (Columbia University)
JINWOO KIM (Seoul National University)
FUHITO KOJIMA (Stanford University)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Efficiency and Stability in Large Matching Markets
YEON-KOO CHE (Columbia University)
OLIVIER TERCIEUX (Paris School of Economics)
[View Abstract]
Managing Congestion in Dynamic Matching Markets
NICK ARNOSTI (Stanford University)
RAMESH JOHARI (Stanford University)
YASH KANORIA (Columbia University)
[View Abstract] [Download Preview]
Matching with Peers in School Choice
ATILA ABDULKADIROGLU (Duke University)
[View Abstract]
Discussants:
PARAG A. PATHAK (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
ITAI ASHLAGI (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
JOHN JOSEPH HORTON (New York University)
JACOB LESHNO (Columbia University)
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