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Decision Making & Negotiations

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Decision Making & Negotiations Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Decision Making & Negotiations

Decision Making & Negotiations Research

The Comparative Advantage of Educated Workers in Implementing New Technology

Authors
Ann Bartel and Frank Lichtenberg
Date
February 1, 1987
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Economics and Statistics

We estimate labor demand equations derived from a (restricted variable) cost function in which "experience" on a technology (proxied by the mean age of the capital stock) enters "non-neutrally." Our specification of the underlying cost function is based on the hypothesis that highly educated workers have a comparative advantage with respect to the adjustment to and implementation of new technologies.

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The Empirical Evidence on the Efficiency of Forward and Futures Foreign Exchange Markets. Vol. 24, Fundamentals of Pure and Applied Economics

Authors
Robert Hodrick
Date
January 1, 1987
Format
Book
Publisher
Harwood Academic Publishers

Written for graduate students, researchers and professionals in international finance and academia, this book provides a useful foundation for future research in developing quantitative measures of risk and expected return in international finance. After a discussion of a general rational expectations asset pricing model, Hodrick considers the development and implementation of econometric tests of various hypotheses that have been offered as candidate characterizations of efficiency in foreign exchange markets.

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Ergodicity in parametric nonstationary Markov chains: An application to simulated annealing methods

Authors
Shoshana Anily and Awi Federgruen
Date
January 1, 1987
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Operations Research

A nonstationary Markov chain is weakly ergodic if the dependence on the state distribution on the starting state vanishes as time tends to infinity. A chain is strongly ergodic if it is weakly ergodic and converges in distribution. In this paper we show that the two ergodicity concepts are equivalent for finite chains under rather general (and widely verifiable) conditions. We discuss applications to probabalistic analyses of general search methods for combinatorial optimization problems (simulated annealing).

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On the validity and utility of queueing models of human service systems

Authors
Linda Green and Peter Kolesar
Date
January 1, 1987
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Annals of Operations Research

Based on observations made during an extensive study of police patrol operations in New York City, we examine the issues of the validity and utility of queueing models of service systems in which adaptive behavior by the (human) customers or servers is likely. We find that in addition to depending on the technical accuracy of its assumptions, the accuracy of such a model will also depend upon the level of managerial control of the system and adequacy of resources.

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Managing and Coping with Budget Cut Stress in Hospitals

Authors
Todd Jick
Date
January 1, 1987
Format
Chapter
Book
Stress in the Health Professions
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Asset Price Volatility, Bubbles, and Process Switching

Authors
Robert Flood and Robert Hodrick
Date
September 1, 1986
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

Evidence of excess volatilities of asset prices compared with those of market fundamentals is often attributed to speculative bubbles. This study demonstrates that bubbles could in theory lead to excess volatility, but it shows that certain variance bounds tests preclude bubbles as an explanation. The evidence ought to be attributed to model misspecification or inappropriate statistical tests. One important misspecification occurs if a researcher incorrectly specifies the time series properties of market fundamentals.

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Variational characterizations in Markov decision processes

Authors
Awi Federgruen and Paul Schweitzer
Date
August 1, 1986
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications

Most quantities of interest in discounted and undiscounted (semi-) Markov decision processes can be obtained by solving a system of functional equations. This paper derives bounds and variational characterizations for the solutions of such systems.

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An inventory model with limited production capacity and uncertain demands I: The average-cost criterion

Authors
Awi Federgruen and Paul Zipkin
Date
May 1, 1986
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Mathematics of Operations Research

This paper considers a single-item, periodic-review inventory model with uncertain demands. In contrast to prior treatments of this problem we assume a finite production capacity per period. Assuming stationary data, a convex one-period cost function and a discrete demand distribution, we show (under a few additional unrestrictive assumptions) that a modified base-stock policy is optimal under the average-cost criterion; in addition, we characterize the optimal base-stock level.

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An inventory model with limited production capacity and uncertain demands II: The discounted-cost criterion

Authors
Awi Federgruen and Paul Zipkin
Date
May 1, 1986
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Mathematics of Operations Research

This paper considers a single-item, periodic review inventory model with uncertain demands. We assume a finite production capacity in each period. With stationary data, a convex one-period cost function and a continuous demand distribution, we show (under a few additional unrestrictive assumptions) that a modified basic-stock policy is optimal under the discounted cost criterion, both for finite and infinite planning horizons. In addition we characterize the optimal base-stock levels in several ways.

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