9 research outputs found

    Information for monitoring : a simple model of its value and a new determination technique

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    Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 1984.MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND DEWEY.Bibliography: leaves 167-172.by Michael Edmond Francis Treacy.Ph.D

    Technology 2001: The Second National Technology Transfer Conference and Exposition, volume 2

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    Proceedings of the workshop are presented. The mission of the conference was to transfer advanced technologies developed by the Federal government, its contractors, and other high-tech organizations to U.S. industries for their use in developing new or improved products and processes. Volume two presents papers on the following topics: materials science, robotics, test and measurement, advanced manufacturing, artificial intelligence, biotechnology, electronics, and software engineering

    Studies in the dynamics of contracts and markets

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    The present thesis studies two distinct issues, namely merger waves and optimal contracts for delivery in settings with time to build. The first part of the thesis proposes a theoretical explanation for the occurrence of merger waves. Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) come in waves, a fact that has puzzled economists as far back as the 1950's. Accordingly, there exists a vast empirical literature studying the time-series properties of M&A activity, and numerous studies devoted to identifying correlation between M&A activity and economic and financial variables. A review of merger theory is presented in the first chapter. In the second chapter, a formal model is developed that incorporates both dependenceo f the merger decisiono n macroeconomic variables and strategic interaction between firms. Specifically, a model is set up in which a number of acquiring firms compete over time for a small number of target firms. In each period, an acquirer may either attempt a takeover, or postpone the takeover decision. By delaying a takeover attempt, the acquiring firm may gain from more favourable future market conditions. On the other hand, postponement of the takeover involves the risk of preemption from rivals. This tradeoff leads to equilibria in which all acquirers simultaneously seek to merge. An extension of the model into one of incomplete information (i. e. a setting in which there is strategic uncertainty) allows one to pin down a unique perfect Bayesian equilibrium, and thus the expected timing of the merger wave. The second part of the thesis studies contractual relationships between economic agents in situations where there is time to build. Specifically, it seeks to analyse how delivery time is determined under asymmetric information. In order to do this, two different models are presented, each one focusing on a separate issue. The first is a continuous time adverse selection model in which a principal hires an agent to complete a project, but where the agent's ability is private information and unknown to the principal. Furthermore, the principal is unable to monitor the agent's rate of effort or progress on the project. In this setting the optimal contract is derived and characterised. The main finding is that the principal can use completion time to screen agents of different efficiency. The optimal contract thus specifies wages as a function of completion time in a way that optimally trades off efficiency with informational rents. It turns out that the optimal contract has the most efficient agent deliver at the efficient point in time, paying him large informational rents. For less efficient agents, the optimal contract stipulates inefficient delay in delivery time, with the most inefficient agent receiving no informational rents, The second model is one of dynamic moral hazard, in which the agent's effort is unobservableto the principal. In order to complete the project, the agent must successfully complete a sequence of distinct tasks in a fixed pre-specified order. Whether or not a task is completed depends on the agent's effort. In this setting, different contracts are analysed. Namely, the cases of observable effort and unobservable effort with spot contracting are characterised, The analysis shows that under both scenarios, project delays are most likely to occur in early stages of development, and are related directly to the power of the offered incentive scheme. Last, contracts with commitment on the part of the principal are discussed

    Communication, Learning and Optimal Monetary Policy.

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    The second part of the thesis deals with interest rate policy under inflation targeting when there is uncertainty in the term structure of interest rates emanating from unobserved, possibly volatile, market sentiments. In situations where expectations depend on the state of the economy--the rate of inflation and the level of the output gap, the central bank faces uncertainty about the degree of persistence in aggregate demand and inflation. Interestingly, the speed of learning about the degree of persistence depends on the interest rate policy followed and the resulting variability in inflation and the output gap, where higher variability speeds up learning and improves control of inflation in the long run. The analysis shows that passive and active learning scenarios have different implications for the degree of response of the rate of interest to the state of the economy and thus for the short-run conduct of monetary policy.

    Assessing the impact of hyperphagia on the behaviour of children with Prader-Willi Syndrome

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    Background Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS) is a complex genetic syndrome associated with hyperphagia and behavioural problems. Recent research suggested a link between hyperphagia and behavioural and emotional problems in PWS such as anger and anxiety. The current study aimed to explore this relationship further. Method Through parental report postal questionnaires, data was collected on the age, gender, weight, hyperphagia and behavioural and emotional problems of 105 children with PWS aged 4-18 years (M: 9.63 years). Results Following preliminary analysis, a series of multiple regressions were performed. Hyperphagic drive significantly predicted antisocial/disruptive behaviour, anxiety, social relating problems, communication disturbances and self-absorbed behaviours. Whilst hyperphagic behaviour did not significantly predict any behavioural/emotional problems. Conclusions This study reinforces research which has suggested an association between hyperphagia and non-food related behaviour in PWS. This has implications for the understanding of PWS and the development of psychological interventions for behavioural and emotional problems

    Operators in the lexicon : on the negative logic of natural language

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    LEI Universiteit LeidenTheoretical and Experimental Linguistic
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