Events

Views Navigation

Event Views Navigation

Today

Job Market Seminars Bruno Salcedo (Penn State University)

"Pricing Algorithms and Tacit Collusion" Abstract There is an increasing tendency for firms to use pricing algorithms that speedily react to market conditions, such as the ones used by major airlines and online retailers like Amazon. I consider a dynamic model in which firms commit to pricing algorithms in the short run. Over time, their algorithms can be revealed…

Job Market Seminars Stefano Sacchetto (London Business School)

"Merger Activity in Industry Equilibrium" ABSTRACT We study a dynamic industry-equilibrium model that features mergers, entry, and exit by heterogeneous firms. We show how different sources of synergies affect merger cyclicality. Improvements in marginal productivity between merging firms generate a procyclical motive for mergers, while reductions in fixed costs of production generate a countercyclical one.…

Occasional Seminars Allievi Program Defense Sessions

14.00 Matteo Assandri title: Risk aversion and preferences for redistribution: a laboratoryexperiment 15.00 Maddalena Sacconetitle: Exploring Microcredit in China: Insights from an Agent-basedSimulation Model 16.00 Augusto Fasanotitle: The patient-zero problem: a comparison between the Monte Carlomethod and Belief Propagation

Seminars in Statistics Mattia Ciollaro (Carnegie Mellon University)

An inferential theory of clustering for functional data Recently, it has been shown that Morse theory can be exploited to de- velop a sound inferential background for clustering: one can rigorously define both population and empirical clusters by means of the gradient flows asso- ciated to the population density p and the estimated density pˆ.…

Seminars in Statistics Juhee Lee (University of California at Santa Cruz)

Bayesian inference for intra-tumor heterogeneity in mutations and copy number variation Tissue samples from the same tumor are heterogeneous. They consist of different subclones that can be characterized by differences in DNA nucleotide sequences and copy numbers on multiple loci. Inference on tumor heterogeneity thus involves the identification of the subclonal copy number and single…

Seminars in Statistics Harry Crane (Rutgers University)

Relative exchangeability Symmetry arguments lie at the heart of classical considerations in inductive inference and statistics.  In statistics, de Finetti's notion of exchangeability is the most prominent symmetry assumption, laying the foundation for Bayesian inference.  In practice, many statistical and scientific problems exhibit only partial symmetry determined by some underlying structure in a population.  As…