2,178 research outputs found
An experimental inquiry into the effect of yardstick competition on corruption
This study reports theory-testing laboratory experiments on the effect of yardstick competition on corruption. On the incumbent side, yardstick competition acts as a corruption-taming mechanism if the incumbent politician is female. On the voter side, voters focus on the difference between the tax rate in their own jurisdiction and that in another. If the tax rate is deemed unfair compared to the one in another jurisdiction, voters re-elect less. The findings support the claim by Besley and Case (1995) that incumbent behavior and tax setting are tied together through the nexus of yardstick competition. This renders generalizability to these laboratory experiments and addresses some concerns raised by Levitt and List (2007).Corruption, Yardstick Competition, Political Agency, Asymmetric
Numerical Investigation of Installed Jet Noise Sensitivity to Lift and Wing/Engine Positioning
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.As the turbofan engines of modern transport aircraft have increasingly larger bypass ratios,
by necessity to avoid longer undercarriage, the engine must be installed closer to the wing. This
then has the potential of interaction between the jet flow and a deployed flap. This interaction
can be an important noise source when the high-lift systems are deployed, as at approach and
take-off. Investigating the parameters that have a strong influence on the installation noise
penalty can help in identifying noise reduction measures. In this paper Wall-Modelled Large
Eddy Simulations (WMLES), combined with the FfowcsWilliams and Hawkings (FW-H) sound
extrapolation method, are performed to reproduce three experimental cases, with the aim of
isolating the different contributions of flap angle and trailing-edge/jet-axis distance h. The
first case (DOAK), consisting of a single jet installed near a horizontal flat plate, confirms the
fundamental mechanisms of jet-surface interaction and jet-surface reflection in the absence of
lift. The second case (DLR-F16), with a coaxial jet installed under a high-lift wing, reveals the
trailing-edge/jet-axis distance h as the dominant parameter, with a possible influence of the
flap angle at low frequencies. The third case (SYMPHONY) is used to study the interaction of a
coaxial jet with a full aircraft geometry using Fourier decomposition of the pressure near-field
to analyse the effects on sound sources and radiation
Comprehension and risk elicitation in the field: Evidence from rural Senegal
In the past decade, it has become increasingly common to use simple laboratory games and decision tasks as a device for measuring both the preferences and understanding of rural populations in the developing world. This is vitally important for policy implementation in a variety of areas. In this paper, we report the results observed using three distinct risk elicitation mechanisms, using samples drawn from the rural population in Senegal, West Africa. Whatever the intellectual merits of a particular elicitation strategy, there is little value in performing such tests if the respondents do not understand the questions involved. We test the understanding of and the level of meaningful responses to the typical Holt-Laury task, to a simple binary mechanism pioneered by Gneezy and Potters in 1997 and adapted by Charness and Gneezy in 2010, and to a nonincentivized willingness-to-risk scale à la Dohmen et al. We find a disturbingly low level of understanding with the Holt-Laury task and an unlikely-to-be-accurate pattern with the willingness-to-risk question. On the other hand, the simple binary mechanism produces results that closely match the patterns found in previous work, although the levels of risk-taking are lower than in previous studies. Our study is a cautionary note against utilizing either sophisticated risk-elicitation mechanisms at the possible cost of seriously diminished levels of comprehension or nonincentivized questions in the rural developing world.comprehension, risk elicitation, laboratory experiments in the field, rural,
Potential collusion and trust: Evidence from a field experiment in Vietnam
We conduct framed trust games using contract dairy farmers in Vietnam as first movers to assess the impact of potential collusion on trust. Disaggregated analysis suggests that female farmers are more likely to trust overall, but are also more responsive to the addition of a third party and potential collusion. A third party induces them to trust at higher levels, but potential collusion between the trustee and the third party also induces them to trust at lower levels. Our findings corroborate well with existing studies on gender differences in decision making, which suggest that women's social preferences are more context-specific than men's.collusion, field experiment, Gender, trust game,
An experiment on the impact of weather shocks and insurance on risky investment
We conduct a framed field experiment in rural Ethiopia to test the seminal hypothesis that insurance provision induces farmers to take greater, yet profitable, risks. Farmers participated in a game protocol in which they were asked to make a simple decision: whether to purchase fertilizer, and if so, how many bags. The return to fertilizer was dependent on a stochastic weather draw made in each round of the game protocol. In later rounds of the game protocol, a random selection of farmers made this decision in the presence of a stylized weather-index insurance contract. Insurance was found to have some positive effect on fertilizer purchases. Purchases were also found to depend on the realization of the weather in the previous round. We explore the mechanisms of this relationship and find that it may be the result of both changes in wealth weather brings about and changes in perceptions of the costs and benefits of fertilizer purchases.Fertilizer, field experiment, hypothesis, input response, Insurance,
Numerical solution of three-dimensional rectangular submerged jets with the evidence of the undisturbed region of flow
The evolution of turbulent rectangular submerged free jets has been
investigated numerically with a two-dimensional (2D) approach by the
present authors and, by using the large eddy simulations (LES) at several
Reynolds numbers. The average numerical results confirmed the presence of
the undisturbed region of flow (URF) located between the slot exit and the
beginning of the potential core region (PCR) previously observed
experimentally at the University of Rome “Tor Vergata” by Gori and
coworkers. The 2D study of the present authors carried out under the
conditions previously investigated in the literature, showed that the URF has
a self-similar behavior, and proposed a new law for the evolution of the
momentum. The present paper extends the LES to three-dimensional (3D)
rectangular submerged free jets, in the range from Re =5,000 to
Re =40,000, showing that the self-similar behavior of URF is also present
in the 3D numerical simulations, as well as in the PCR and in the fully
developed region (FDR)
Patterns of Scalable Bayesian Inference
Datasets are growing not just in size but in complexity, creating a demand
for rich models and quantification of uncertainty. Bayesian methods are an
excellent fit for this demand, but scaling Bayesian inference is a challenge.
In response to this challenge, there has been considerable recent work based on
varying assumptions about model structure, underlying computational resources,
and the importance of asymptotic correctness. As a result, there is a zoo of
ideas with few clear overarching principles.
In this paper, we seek to identify unifying principles, patterns, and
intuitions for scaling Bayesian inference. We review existing work on utilizing
modern computing resources with both MCMC and variational approximation
techniques. From this taxonomy of ideas, we characterize the general principles
that have proven successful for designing scalable inference procedures and
comment on the path forward
Breaking the norm: An empirical investigation into the unraveling of good behavior
We present results from an artefactual field experiment conducted in rural Peru that considers how observing nonreciprocal behavior influences an individual's decision to reciprocate. Specifically, we consider the behavior of second movers in a trust game, assessing how their decision to reciprocate is influenced by the observed behavior of others and the extent to which their actions can be observed. In documenting how an external shock to the number observed not to reciprocate influences reciprocation, the paper endeavors to provide some insight into how reciprocity can unravel when individuals are learning behavior in a new market institution.artefactual field experiment, norms, nonreciprocal behavior, Trust, Markets, Institutions,
An experimental inquiry into the effect of yardstick competition on corruption
This study reports theory-testing laboratory experiments on the effect of yardstick competition on corruption. On the incumbent side, yardstick competition acts as a corruption-taming mechanism if the incumbent politician is female. On the voter side, voters focus on the difference between the tax rate in their own jurisdiction and that in another. If the tax rate is deemed unfair compared to the one in another jurisdiction, voters re-elect less. The findings support the claim by Besley and Case (1995) that incumbent behavior and tax setting are tied together through the nexus of yardstick competition. This renders generalizability to these laboratory experiments and addresses some concerns raised by Levitt and List (2007)
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