1,043 research outputs found
Marriage as a Rat Race: Noisy Pre-Marital Investments with Assortative Matching
We study the incentive to invest to improve marriage prospects, in a frictionless marriage market with non-transferable utility. Stochastic returns to investment eliminate the multiplicity of equilibria in models with deterministic returns, and a unique equilibrium exists under reasonable conditions. Equilibrium investment is efficient when the sexes are symmetric. However, when there is any asymmetry, including an unbalanced sex ratio, investments are generically excessive. For example, if there is an excess of boys, then there is parental over-investment in boys and under-investment in girls, and total investment will be excessive.marriage, ex ante investments, gender differences, assortative matching tournament, sex ratio
HYBRID: TRANSDISCIPLINARY: TRANSFORMATIVE:
This document brings together materials produced for and during a PhD by Designstudy and workshop day held at Leeds College of Art on May 14th 2015. This day was dedicated to exploring multiple possibilities of innovatively disseminating practice based design research.
Twenty-nine participants contributed to the day with a 5 minute presentation of one instance of dissemination of their research, reflecting on what they did, what worked and what did not and why. These presentations, and the practices at their core, where the basis for our collective exploration.
This journal has been produced on May 14th 2015 as an experiment in how knowledge generated through an event can be disseminated instantly - in a form that allows for unpolished and fresh thoughts to be circulated.
The Instant Journals pages consist of each participants biography, their research topic and a question that they were looking to explore on the day. This is followed by a page where they had one hour at the end of the day to document a response to this original question
A Critical Appraisal of Remedies in the EU Microsoft Cases
We discuss and compare the remedies from the European Union’s two
cases against Microsoft. The first E.U. case ("E.U. Microsoft
I") alleged that Microsoft illegally bundled the Windows Media
Player with Windows and that Microsoft did not provide adequate
documentation that would allow full interoperability between Windows
servers and non- Microsoft servers, as well as between Windows clients
and non-Microsoft servers. After finding Microsoft liable and imposing a
large fine, the E.U. imposed as remedies two requirements on Microsoft:
(1) to sell a version of Windows without Windows Media Player
("Windows-N") and (2) to publish and license interoperability
information. Windows-N was a commercial failure, and there has been only
limited cross-platform server entry. In its second investigation of
Microsoft ("E.U. Microsoft II"), the E.U. alleged illegal
tying of Internet Explorer with Windows. The E.U. settled with Microsoft
by having them accept the "choice screen proposal": an
obligation to ask consumers whose computers have Internet Explorer
pre-installed to choose a browser from a menu of competing browsers
through compulsory Windows updates. Thus, the E.U. imposed quite
different remedies in the two cases: an unbundling remedy for the
Windows Media Player but close to a must-carry requirement for Internet
Explorer. We analyze and compare the different approaches
HYBRID: TRANSDISCIPLINARY: TRANSFORMATIVE: An instance of travelling in practice-led research: Talk in 5 minutes
HYBRID: TRANSDISCIPLINARY: TRANSFORMATIVE
An instance of travelling in practice-led research: Talk in 5 minutes
Hybrid practices with (or without) digital or interactive technologies can transport us to unexpected new spaces and places; On our nomadic practitioner journeys we transform: move, change and coevolve through thinking and experimenting with tools, creating objects, artefacts, experiences, new ways or methods, languages, and production paradigms. This five minute reflexive talk; explores how becoming more open and receptive to co-creative approaches of this nature can positively enhance, shift, transform and transcend; us as practitioners, our approaches, and methods and the disciplines themselves now and in the future.
I have collaborated with colleagues from within School of Art, Design & Architecture and in School of Music, Media and Humanities and external partners from outside the University on various phases of an evolving AHRC/EPSRC research project focused on the 3D Environments, acoustics modelling, animation and music of prehistory since 2009. This practice led trans-disciplinary experimental immersive acoustic research is concerned with understanding and exploring the ritual praxis of Neolithic makers of Stonehenge. The multiplexity of unanticipated experiences and un-expected data we sourced, created, developed and disseminated together, is shared in this talk at PhD by Design. During the progressive phases of this practice-led transdisciplinary research, we, as practitioners: artists, designers, theorists, makers, musicians, historians, curators.., collectively gained a deeper understanding into how humans: then and now, and the technologies we make, can generate a unique transformative contribution to the dissolving of physical, disciplinary and cultural boundaries
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