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Newsletter 80: Sep 16, 2013

CDS Weekly Newsletter
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The Center for Decision Sciences at Columbia Business School

Welcome to the Center for Decision Sciences' Weekly Newsletter. Below you can find a list of events of interest. 

We welcome constructive feedback and suggestions to improve this newsletter. You may unsubscribe from this newsletter (but remain on our mailing list for other information) by clicking here and unchecking “Receive Newsletter.”
 

Upcoming seminars of potential interest at Columbia
 
Monday, September 16
 
11.00-11.50, IAB 1101 (Microeconomic Theory Colloquium)
        Pietro Ortoleva
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on Microeconomic Theory Colloquium:
http://econ.columbia.edu/seminar-schedule
 
12.00-1.30, Schermerhorn 200B (Psych Department Cognitive Lunch)
         Tory Higgins (Columbia)
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on Psych Dept Cognitive Lunch:
https://lists.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/cognitive_lunch
 
12.00-1.30, IAB 1101 (Applied Microeconomics Colloquium)
         Anna Tompsett (SDEV)
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on the Applied Microeconomics Colloquium:
http://econ.columbia.edu/seminar-schedule
 
2.30-4.00, IAB 1101 (Economic theory seminar)
        Aislinn Bohren
        “Stochastic Games in Continuous Time: Persistent Actions in Long-Run Relationships”
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on Economic Theory seminar:
http://www4.gsb.columbia.edu/finance/seminars/economictheory
 
Tuesday, September 17
 
2.15-3.45, 1101 IAB (Industrial Organization and Strategy Seminar)
         Donald Ngwe (Columbia)
         “Why Outlet Stores Exist: Extending Markets While Reducing Cannibalization”
          iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on the IO, Organization and Strategy Seminar:
http://www4.gsb.columbia.edu/finance/seminars/industorg
 
4.15-5.45, 1101 IAB (Money Macro Seminar)
         Thomas Phillon (PER visitor)
         “Has the US Finance Industry Become Less Efficient? On the Theory and Measurement of Finance Intermediation”
          iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on the Money macro seminar:
http://www4.gsb.columbia.edu/finance/seminars/money
 
Wednesday, September 18
 
12.00-1.00, 1102 IAB (Industrial Organization Colloquium)
         Ju Hyun Kim
         Job market talk: “Identifying the distribution of treatment effects under support restrictions”
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on the Industrial Organization Colloquium:
http://jagiellonia.econ.columbia.edu/colloquia/industorg/
 
2.10-4.00, 1101 IAB (International Economics Workshop)
         Swati Dhingra
         “Monopolistic Competition and Optimum Product Diversity Under Firm Heterogeneity” (with John Morrow)
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on the International Economics Workshop:
http://www4.gsb.columbia.edu/finance/seminars/interecon
 
4.15-5.45, 1101 IAB (Applied Microeconomics: Environment, Health, Labor and Public Finance Seminar)
         Corinne Low
         “Pricing the Biological Clock: Reproductive Capital on the US Marriage Market”
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on the Applied Microeconomics: Environment, Health, Labor and Public Finance Seminar:
http://www4.gsb.columbia.edu/finance/seminars/appliedmicro
 
Thursday, September 19
 
2.10-4.00, 1101 IAB (Industrial Organization and Strategy and Econometrics Joint Seminar)
         Hanning Fang (UPenn)
         “Equilibrium Labor Market Search and Health Insurance Reform”(with Naoki Aizawa)
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on the Industrial Organization and Strategy and Econometrics Joint Seminar:
http://www4.gsb.columbia.edu/finance/seminars/industorg

2.15-3.45, Uris 333 (Finance Seminar)
         James Choi
         “Small Cues Change Savings Choices” (with Emily Haisley, Jennifer Kurkoski, and Cade Massey)
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on the Finance seminar:
http://www4.gsb.columbia.edu/finance/seminars/finance
 
 
Upcoming seminars of potential interest at NYU
 
Monday, September 16

4.30-5.30, 19 W 4th St, Rm 517 (Applied Microeconomics Workshop)
         Bentley MacLeod (Columbia)
         “Rational temporal predications can underlie apparent failures to sustain delay of gratification”
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on the Applied Microeconomics Workshop:
http://econ.as.nyu.edu/object/econ.event.applied
 
Tuesday, September 17
 
2.30-4.00, 19 W 4th St, Rm 517 (Neuroeconomics Seminar)
         Joseph Kable (UPenn)
         “Diagnosis and Unnecessary Procedure Use: Evidence from C-sections” - joint with Janet Currie
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on the Neuroeconomics Seminar:
http://www.neuroeconomics.nyu.edu/events_neuroeconomics_seminar.html
 
Wednesday, September 18
 
4.00-5.00, 19 W 4th St, Rm 517 (Microeconomic Theory Workshop)
         Roy Radner (NYU)
         “Bounded Rationality: In Search of a Definition; with an Example”
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on the Microeconomic Theory Workshop:
http://econ.as.nyu.edu/object/econ.event.microeconomic
 
Thursday, September 19
 
12.30-1.30, 6 Washington Place, Rm. 551 (Cognition and Perception Colloquia)
         David Heeger (NYU)
         “Normalization as a Canonical Neural Computation”
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on the Cognition and Perception Colloquia:
http://www.psych.nyu.edu/events/colloquia.html
 
4.00-5.00, 6 Washington Place, Rm. 551 (Social Colloquia)
         Kees van den Bos (Utrecht)
         “Normalization as a Canonical Neural Computation”
         iCal (to add this event to your calendar)
 
For more information on the Social Colloquia:
http://www.psych.nyu.edu/events/colloquia.html
 
 
Web Link of the Week:

Consumer Mistakes in ObamaCare Exchanges May Cost Taxpayers $9B

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