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The rich, multi-faceted and multi-disciplinary field of
matching-based market design is an active and important one due to
its highly successful applications with economic and sociological
impact. Its home is economics, but with intimate connections to
algorithm design and operations research. With chapters contributed
by over fifty top researchers from all three disciplines, this
volume is unique in its breadth and depth, while still being a
cohesive and unified picture of the field, suitable for the
uninitiated as well as the expert. It explains the dominant ideas
from computer science and economics underlying the most important
results on market design and introduces the main algorithmic
questions and combinatorial structures. Methodologies and
applications from both the pre-Internet and post-Internet eras are
covered in detail. Key chapters discuss the basic notions of
efficiency, fairness and incentives, and the way market design
seeks solutions guided by normative criteria borrowed from social
choice theory.
Pioneered by American economist Paul Samuelson, revealed preference
theory is based on the idea that the preferences of consumers are
revealed in their purchasing behavior. Researchers in this field
have developed complex and sophisticated mathematical models to
capture the preferences that are 'revealed' through consumer choice
behavior. This study of consumer demand and behavior is closely
tied up with econometrics (especially nonparametric econometrics),
where testing the validity of different theoretical models is an
important aspect of research. The theory of revealed preference has
a very long and distinguished tradition in economics, but there was
no systematic presentation of the theory until now. This book deals
with basic questions in economic theory, such as the relation
between theory and data, and studies the situations in which
empirical observations are consistent or inconsistent with some of
the best known theories in economics.
Pioneered by American economist Paul Samuelson, revealed preference
theory is based on the idea that the preferences of consumers are
revealed in their purchasing behavior. Researchers in this field
have developed complex and sophisticated mathematical models to
capture the preferences that are 'revealed' through consumer choice
behavior. This study of consumer demand and behavior is closely
tied up with econometrics (especially nonparametric econometrics),
where testing the validity of different theoretical models is an
important aspect of research. The theory of revealed preference has
a very long and distinguished tradition in economics, but there was
no systematic presentation of the theory until now. This book deals
with basic questions in economic theory, such as the relation
between theory and data, and studies the situations in which
empirical observations are consistent or inconsistent with some of
the best known theories in economics.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
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