Search results for "D03"

showing 10 items of 10 documents

The many faces of human sociality: uncovering the distribution and stability of social preferences

2018

There is vast heterogeneity in the human willingness to weigh others' interests in decision making. This heterogeneity concerns the motivational intricacies as well as the strength of other-regarding behaviors, and raises the question how one can parsimoniously model and characterize heterogeneity across several dimensions of social preferences while still being able to predict behavior over time and across situations. We tackle this task with an experiment and a structural model of preferences that allows us to simultaneously estimate outcome-based and reciprocity-based social preferences. We find that non-selfish preferences are the rule rather than the exception. Neither at the level of …

2000 General Economics Econometrics and Financeindividual behaviorVerhaltensökonomieSocial preferencesECON Department of EconomicsEntscheidungsfindung10007 Department of Economics0502 economics and businessC91EconomicsEconometricsHeterogenitätddc:330Social preferences; Heterogeneity; Stability; Finite mixture models050207 economicsSocial preferencesStrukturmodellPreference (economics)Sociality050205 econometrics finite mixture models05 social sciencesStochastic gameBehavioral microeconomics (underlying principles)Representative agentstabilityPräferenzReciprocity (evolution)Altruismus330 EconomicsPredictive powerD03C49heterogeneityGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceValue (mathematics)laboratory
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Angiotensin Receptor Neprilysin Inhibition Compared With Enalapril on the Risk of Clinical Progression in Surviving Patients With Heart Failure

2015

Background— Clinical trials in heart failure have focused on the improvement in symptoms or decreases in the risk of death and other cardiovascular events. Little is known about the effect of drugs on the risk of clinical deterioration in surviving patients. Methods and Results— We compared the angiotensin-neprilysin inhibitor LCZ696 (400 mg daily) with the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor enalapril (20 mg daily) in 8399 patients with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction in a double-blind trial. The analyses focused on prespecified measures of nonfatal clinical deterioration. In comparison with the enalapril group, fewer LCZ696-treated patients required intensification of med…

Angiotensin receptorVascular damage Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 16]receptorsTetrazolesheart failureAngiotensin-Converting Enzyme InhibitorsKaplan-Meier EstimateSacubitrilAngiotensin; Heart failure; Neprilysin; Receptors; Aminobutyrates; Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists; Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors; Biomarkers; Double-Blind Method; Enalapril; Heart Failure; Humans; Kaplan-Meier Estimate; Natriuretic Peptide Brain; Neprilysin; Peptide Fragments; Risk Factors; Stroke Volume; Survivors; Tetrazoles; Treatment Outcome; Troponin; Disease Progression; Medicine (all); Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine; Physiology (medical)AngiotensinEnalaprilRisk FactorsEnalapril/therapeutic useNatriuretic Peptide BrainHeart Failure/bloodSurvivorsReceptorNeprilysinAminobutyrates: Systèmes cardiovasculaire & respiratoire [D03] [Sciences de la santé humaine]Troponin/bloodTroponinAngiotensin Receptor Antagonists/therapeutic useDrug CombinationsAngiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors/therapeutic useTreatment OutcomeTetrazoles/therapeutic useCardiologyDisease ProgressionValsartanNeprilysinHeart Failure/blood/drug therapy/physiopathologyCardiology and Cardiovascular Medicinemedicine.drugReceptormedicine.medical_specialtyHeart failureneprilysinAngiotensin Receptor Antagonistsreceptors angiotensinDouble-Blind MethodPhysiology (medical)Internal medicineRenin–angiotensin systemmedicineHumansheart failure neprilysin receptors angiotensinEnalaprilbusiness.industryBiphenyl CompoundsStroke Volumemedicine.diseasePeptide FragmentsEndocrinologyAminobutyrates/therapeutic useStroke Volume/physiologyHeart failureNatriuretic Peptide Brain/blood: Cardiovascular & respiratory systems [D03] [Human health sciences]businessNeprilysin/antagonists & inhibitorsPeptide Fragments/bloodSacubitril ValsartanBiomarkersBiomarkers/blood
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On the existence of weak solution to the coupled fluid-structure interaction problem for non-Newtonian shear-dependent fluid

2016

We study the existence of weak solution for unsteady fluid-structure interaction problem for shear-thickening flow. The time dependent domain has at one part a flexible elastic wall. The evolution of fluid domain is governed by the generalized string equation with action of the fluid forces. The power-law viscosity model is applied to describe shear-dependent non-Newtonian fluids.

Dilatant35D30General MathematicsConstant Viscosity Elastic (Boger) Fluidsfluid-structure interactionhemodynamics01 natural sciencesexistence of weak solutionPhysics::Fluid Dynamics76A0576D03Fluid–structure interactionshear-thinning fluids0101 mathematicsMathematicsWeak solution010102 general mathematicsMechanicsnon-Newtonian fluidsNon-Newtonian fluid010101 applied mathematicsShear rateCondensed Matter::Soft Condensed Matter74F10Shear (geology)Generalized Newtonian fluidshear-thickening fluids35Q30
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"Facta non verba" : an experiment on pledging and giving

2015

International audience; We design an experiment to investigate whether asking people to state how much they will donate to a charity (i.e., to pledge) increases their actual donation. Individuals’ endowment is either certain or a random variable. We study different types of pledges, namely, private, public and irrevocable, which differ in terms of the cost to the individual for not keeping the promise. We show that in absence of endowment uncertainty, private and public pledges are associated with lower donations as compared to donations in the no-pledge case: private pledges slightly reduce donations and public pledges reduce them more significantly. Donations increase with uncertainty (in…

Economics and EconometricsSociology and Political Sciencecharitable givingEndowmentmedia_common.quotation_subject050109 social psychologyMonetary economicsjel:D64Pledgejel:D03Dictator gameState (polity)Political sciencedictator game0502 economics and businessEconomics0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesStatistical dispersionJEL: C - Mathematical and Quantitative Methods/C.C9 - Design of Experiments/C.C9.C91 - Laboratory Individual BehaviorJEL: D - Microeconomics/D.D6 - Welfare Economics/D.D6.D64 - Altruism • Philanthropy050207 economicsApplied PsychologyPledgemedia_commonLaw and economicsjel:C91business.industryCommunication05 social sciencesCharity givingPublic relations[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceCharity givingPledgeCommitmentCommunicationExperimentsCommitmentDonation[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administrationbusinessExperimentsJEL: D - Microeconomics/D.D0 - General/D.D0.D03 - Behavioral Microeconomics: Underlying PrinciplesCharity giving; Pledge; Commitment; Communication; ExperimentsJEL: D - Microeconomics/D.D0 - General
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Choosing Who You Are: The Structure and Behavioral Effects of Revealed Identification Preferences

2017

Differences in individuals’ social identity have recently been shown to explain differences in behavior. But where do differences in social identity come from? Theory claims that identification allows people to affect their social identity by choosing who they are. Accordingly, this paper treats social identity as a choice and analyzes its behavioral effects. We find identification to be systematically related to behavioral heterogeneity in group-specific social preferences. In a first step, we measure identification preferences using a revealed preference approach in a laboratory experiment. Confirming social identity theory, participants reveal a stronger identification preference for gro…

IdentificationSocial distanceOutgroup DiscriminationAffect (psychology)Social preferencesPreferenceIdentification (information)Social PreferencesSocial IdentityRevealed preferenceC91ddc:330C92D03PsychologySocial identity theorySocial psychologySocial status
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On the convergence of fixed point iterations for the moving geometry in a fluid-structure interaction problem

2019

In this paper a fluid-structure interaction problem for the incompressible Newtonian fluid is studied. We prove the convergence of an iterative process with respect to the computational domain geometry. In our previous works on numerical approximation of similar problems we refer this approach as the global iterative method. This iterative approach can be understood as a linearization of the so-called geometric nonlinearity of the underlying model. The proof of the convergence is based on the Banach fixed point argument, where the contractivity of the corresponding mapping is shown due to the continuous dependence of the weak solution on the given domain deformation. This estimate is obtain…

Iterative and incremental developmentIterative methodBanach fixed-point theoremApplied MathematicsWeak solution010102 general mathematicsGeometryFixed point01 natural sciences35D30 35Q30 74F10 76D05 76D03Domain (mathematical analysis)010101 applied mathematicsMathematics - Analysis of PDEsLinearizationConvergence (routing)FOS: Mathematics0101 mathematicsAnalysisAnalysis of PDEs (math.AP)Mathematics
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Household Optimism and Borrowing

2012

A unique Finnish household-level data from 1994 to 2009 allow us to measure how households’ financial expectations are related to the subsequent outcomes. We use the difference between the two to measure forecast errors and household optimism and link the errors to households’ borrowing behaviour. We find that households making greatest optimistic forecast errors carry greater levels of debt and are most likely to suffer from excessive debt loads (overindebtedness). They also are less attentive to forecast errors than their pessimistic counterparts when forming their expectations for a subsequent period.

OptimismFinancial economicsCarry (investment)media_common.quotation_subjectDebtEconomicsDemographic economicsPessimismjel:G02jel:D03jel:D14forecast errors; ex ante optimism; borrowingmedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Heterogeneous network games: Conflicting preferences

2013

Proceeding at: 2nd Annual UECE Lisbon Meeting: Game Theory and Applications, took place 2010, November, 4-6, in Lisbon (Portugal). The event Web site http://pascal.iseg.utl.pt/~uece/lisbonmeetings2010/ In many economic situations, a player pursues coordination or anti-coordination with her neighbors on a network, but she also has intrinsic preferences among the available options. We here introduce a model which allows to analyze this issue by means of a simple framework in which players endowed with an idiosyncratic identity interact on a social network through strategic complements or substitutes. We classify the possible types of Nash equilibria under complete information, finding two thr…

TheoryofComputation_MISCELLANEOUSComputer Science::Computer Science and Game Theoryjel:Z13Economics and EconometricsMatemáticasjel:D85Heterogeneity Networks Nash Equilibrium StabilitySocial networksjel:D03MicroeconomicsCOMPLEMENTARITIESsymbols.namesakeBayesian gameEconomicsCoordination gameStrategic complementsjel:C72ComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTINGTheoryofComputation_GENERALNetwork formationNash equilibriumEquilibrium selectionBest responsejel:L14Bayesian equilibriumsymbolsHeterogeneityEpsilon-equilibriumMathematical economicsFinanceIncomplete informationGames and Economic Behavior
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Conflict, Evolution, Hegemony, and the Power of the State

2013

In a model of evolution driven by conflict between societies more powerful states have an advantage. When the influence of outsiders is small we show that this results in a tendency to hegemony. In a simple example in which institutions differ in their “exclusiveness” we find that these hegemonies will be inefficiently “extractive” in the sense of having inefficiently high taxes, high compensation for state officials, and low welfare.

jel:C70jel:A10jel:D73jel:D63jel:D74jel:C72jel:D71jel:C73jel:D61jel:D72jel:D00jel:D01jel:D78jel:D42jel:C00jel:D02jel:D03jel:D0jel:C0jel:A0jel:D3jel:A1Game theory
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Expectations as Reference Points: Field Evidence from Professional Soccer

2015

We show that professional soccer players and their coaches exhibit reference-dependent behavior during matches. Controlling for the state of the match and for unobserved heterogeneity, we show on a minute-by-minute basis that players breach the rules of the game, measured by the referee’s assignment of cards, significantly more often if their teams are behind the expected match outcome, measured by preplay betting odds of large professional bookmakers. We further show that coaches implement significantly more offensive substitutions if their teams are behind expectations. Both types of behaviors impair the expected ultimate match outcome of the team, which shows that our findings do not si…

jel:D81HFjel:D84Strategy and ManagementHBfield dataBFjel:C23Management Science and Operations ResearchLeagueBehavioral economicsHGOutcome (game theory)BDOddsjel:D03German10007 Department of EconomicsEconomics1408 Strategy and ManagementReference pointsMarketingreference points expectations experience high stakes competitionField (Bourdieu)Offensive1803 Management Science and Operations Researchlanguage.human_language330 EconomicsIncentivelanguageSocial psychologyexpectations
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