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Publishing and Promotion in Economics: the Curse of the Top Five
Publishing and Promotion in Economics: The Curse of the Top Five James J. Heckman 2017 AEA Annual Meeting Chicago, IL January 7th, 2017 Heckman Curse of the Top Five Top 5 Influential, But Far From Sole Source of Influence or Outlet for Creativity Heckman Curse of the Top Five Table 1: Ranking of 2, 5 and 10 Year Impact Factors as of 2015 Rank 2 Years 5 Years 10 Years 1. JEL JEL JEL 2. QJE QJE QJE 3. JOF JOF JOF 4. JEP JEP JPE 5. ReStud JPE JEP 6. ECMA AEJae ECMA 7. AEJae ECMA AER 8. AER AER ReStud 9. JPE ReStud JOLE 10. JOLE AEJma EJ 11. AEJep AEJep JHR 12. AEJma EJ JOE 13. JME JOLE JME 14. EJ JHR HE 15. HE JME RED 16. JHR HE EER 17. JOE JOE - 18. AEJmi AEJmi - 19. RED RED - 20. EER EER - Note: Definition of abbreviated names: JEL - Journal of Economic Literature, JOF - Journal of Finance, JEP - Journal of Economic Perspectives, AEJae-American Economic Journal Applied Economics, AER - American Economic Review, JOLE-Journal of Labor Economics, AEJep-American Economic Journal Economic Policy, AEJma-American Economic Journal Macroeconomics, JME-Journal of Monetary Economics, EJ-Economic Journal, HE-Health Economics, JHR-Journal of Human Resources, JOE-Journal of Econometrics, AEJmi-American Economic Journal Microeconomics, RED-Review of Economic Dynamics, EER-European Economic Review; Source: Journal Citation Reports (Thomson Reuters, 2016). Heckman Curse of the Top Five Figure 1: Articles Published in Last 10 years by RePEc's T10 Authors (Last 10 Years Ranking) (a) T10 Authors (Unadjusted) (b) T10 Authors (Adjusted) Prop. -
Brendan K. Beare
Brendan K. Beare Department of Economics University of California – San Diego 9500 Gilman Drive #0508 La Jolla, California 92093, U.S.A. Email: [email protected] : http://econweb.ucsd.edu/ bbeare/ ∼ Born: January 23, 1980 Citizenship: Australia & United States Current position 2015– Associate Professor, University of California – San Diego Prior appointments held 2008–2015 Assistant Professor, University of California – San Diego 2007–2008 Research Fellow, Nuffield College and University of Oxford Education 2007 PD in Economics, Yale University 2006 MA in Statistics, Yale University 2005 MP in Economics, Yale University 2004 MA in Economics, Yale University 2002 BE(H) in Econometrics, University of New South Wales Honors & awards 2011–2016 Sir Clive W. J. Granger Chair, University of California – San Diego 2008 George Trimis Prize for Distinguished Dissertation in Economics, Yale University 2007 MA by Resolution, University of Oxford 2007 Dissertation Fellowship, Yale University 2006 Carl Arvid Anderson Prize, Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics 2006 Cowles Summer Prize, Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics 2002–2006 Cowles Prize, Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics 2002–2006 University Fellowship, Yale University 2002 Economic Society of Australia Honours Prize 1 Publications 2019 Beare, Brendan K. and Shi, Xiaoxia. An improved bootstrap test of density ratio ordering. Econometrics and Statistics, 10: 9-26. 2019 Seo, Won-Ki and Beare, Brendan K. Cointegrated linear processes in Bayes Hilbert space. Statistics and Probability Letters, 147: 90-95. 2018 Beare, Brendan K. Unit root testing with unstable volatility. Journal of Time Series Analysis, 39(6): 816-835. 2018 Beare, Brendan K. and Dossani, Asad. Option augmented density forecasts of market returns with monotone pricing kernel. -
Alberto Abadie
ALBERTO ABADIE Office Address Massachusetts Institute of Technology Department of Economics 50 Memorial Drive Building E52, Room 546 Cambridge, MA 02142 E-mail: [email protected] Academic Positions Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, MA Professor of Economics, 2016-present IDSS Associate Director, 2016-present Harvard University Cambridge, MA Professor of Public Policy, 2005-2016 Visiting Professor of Economics, 2013-2014 Associate Professor of Public Policy, 2004-2005 Assistant Professor of Public Policy, 1999-2004 University of Chicago Chicago, IL Visiting Assistant Professor of Economics, 2002-2003 National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) Cambridge, MA Research Associate (Labor Studies), 2009-present Faculty Research Fellow (Labor Studies), 2002-2009 Non-Academic Positions Amazon.com, Inc. Seattle, WA Academic Research Consultant, 2020-present Education Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, MA Ph.D. in Economics, 1995-1999 Thesis title: \Semiparametric Instrumental Variable Methods for Causal Response Mod- els." Centro de Estudios Monetarios y Financieros (CEMFI) Madrid, Spain M.A. in Economics, 1993-1995 Masters Thesis title: \Changes in Spanish Labor Income Structure during the 1980's: A Quantile Regression Approach." 1 Universidad del Pa´ıs Vasco Bilbao, Spain B.A. in Economics, 1987-1992 Specialization Areas: Mathematical Economics and Econometrics. Honors and Awards Elected Fellow of the Econometric Society, 2016. NSF grant SES-1756692, \A General Synthetic Control Framework of Estimation and Inference," 2018-2021. NSF grant SES-0961707, \A General Theory of Matching Estimation," with G. Imbens, 2010-2012. NSF grant SES-0617810, \The Economic Impact of Terrorism: Lessons from the Real Estate Office Markets of New York and Chicago," with S. Dermisi, 2006-2008. -
Curriculum Vitae: Michael W. Trosset
Curriculum Vitae: Michael W. Trosset Department of Statistics Telephone: (812) 856-1178 Indiana University E-mail: [email protected] Bloomington, IN 47401 Web Page: http://www.math.wm.edu/∼trosset/ Education • University of California, Berkeley (Department of Statistics); Fannie & John Hertz Foundation Fellow, September 1978 to December 1981; Dissertation: Minimax Estimation With Side Conditions, directed by Peter J. Bickel; Ph.D., December 1983. • Rice University (Mathematics and Mathematical Sciences); B.A., summa cum laude, May 1978. Employment • Professor, Department of Statistics, Indiana University. August 2006 to present. • Director, Indiana Statistical Consulting Center. August 2006 to present. • Associate Professor, Department of Mathematics, College of William & Mary. August 1998 to June 2006. Promoted to Professor in April 2006. • Formerly Visiting Associate Professor and Adjunct Lecturer, Departments of Mathematics, Statistics, and Psychology, University of Arizona (August 1993 to July 1998); Senior Postdoctoral Fellow, W.M. Keck Center for Computational Biology and Visiting Lecturer, Department of Statistics, Rice Uni- versity (September 1996 to June 1997); Visiting Lecturer, Department of Computational & Applied Mathematics, Rice University (Spring 1993); Consultant (June 1988 to July 1998); Assistant Pro- fessor, Department of Statistics, University of Arizona (August 1984 to December 1988); Instructor, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Rice University (January 1982 to May 1984); Research Assis- tant, Division of -
Econometric Theory
Econometric Theory John Stachurski January 10, 2014 Contents Preface v I Background Material1 1 Probability2 1.1 Probability Models.............................2 1.2 Distributions................................. 16 1.3 Dependence................................. 25 1.4 Asymptotics................................. 30 1.5 Exercises................................... 39 2 Linear Algebra 49 2.1 Vectors and Matrices............................ 49 2.2 Span, Dimension and Independence................... 59 2.3 Matrices and Equations........................... 66 2.4 Random Vectors and Matrices....................... 71 2.5 Convergence of Random Matrices.................... 74 2.6 Exercises................................... 79 i CONTENTS ii 3 Projections 84 3.1 Orthogonality and Projection....................... 84 3.2 Overdetermined Systems of Equations.................. 90 3.3 Conditioning................................. 93 3.4 Exercises................................... 103 II Foundations of Statistics 107 4 Statistical Learning 108 4.1 Inductive Learning............................. 108 4.2 Statistics................................... 112 4.3 Maximum Likelihood............................ 120 4.4 Parametric vs Nonparametric Estimation................ 125 4.5 Empirical Distributions........................... 134 4.6 Empirical Risk Minimization....................... 137 4.7 Exercises................................... 149 5 Methods of Inference 153 5.1 Making Inference about Theory...................... 153 5.2 Confidence Sets.............................. -
Rankings of Economics Journals and Departments in India
WP-2010-021 Rankings of Economics Journals and Departments in India Tilak Mukhopadhyay and Subrata Sarkar Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research, Mumbai October 2010 http://www.igidr.ac.in/pdf/publication/WP-2010-021.pdf Rankings of Economics Journals and Departments in India Tilak Mukhopadhyay and Subrata Sarkar Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research (IGIDR) General Arun Kumar Vaidya Marg Goregaon (E), Mumbai- 400065, INDIA Email (corresponding author): [email protected] Abstract This paper is the first attempt to rank economics departments of Indian Institutions based on their research output. Two rankings, one based on publications in international journals, and the other based on publications in domestic journals are derived. The rankings based on publications in international journals are obtained using the impact values of 159 journals found in Kalaitzidakis et al. (2003). Rankings based on publications in domestic journals are based on impact values of 20 journals. Since there are no published studies on ranking of domestic journals, we derived the rankings of domestic journals by using the iterative method suggested in Kalaitzidakis et al. (2003). The department rankings are constructed using two approaches namely, the ‘flow approach’ and the ‘stock approach’. Under the ‘flow approach’ the rankings are based on the total output produced by a particular department over a period of time while under the ‘stock approach’ the rankings are based on the publication history of existing faculty members in an institution. From these rankings the trend of research work and the growth of the department of a university are studied. Keywords: Departments,Economics, Journals, Rankings JEL Code: A10, A14 Acknowledgements: The auhtors would like to thank the seminar participants at Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research. -
Miguel De Carvalho
School of Mathematics Miguel de Carvalho Contact M. de Carvalho T: +44 (0) 0131 650 5054 Information The University of Edinburgh B: [email protected] School of Mathematics : mb.carvalho Edinburgh EH9 3FD, UK +: www.maths.ed.ac.uk/ mdecarv Personal Born September 20, 1980 in Montijo, Lisbon. Details Portuguese and EU citizenship. Interests Applied Statistics, Biostatistics, Econometrics, Risk Analysis, Statistics of Extremes. Education Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal Habilitation in Probability and Statistics, 2019 Thesis: Statistical Modeling of Extremes Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal PhD in Mathematics with emphasis on Statistics, 2009 Thesis: Extremum Estimators and Stochastic Optimization Advisors: Manuel Esqu´ıvel and Tiago Mexia Advisors of Advisors: Jean-Pierre Kahane and Tiago de Oliveira. Nova School of Business and Economics (Triple Accreditation), Portugal MSc in Economics, 2009 Thesis: Mean Regression for Censored Length-Biased Data Advisors: Jos´eA. F. Machado and Pedro Portugal Advisors of Advisors: Roger Koenker and John Addison. Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal `Licenciatura'y in Mathematics, 2004 Professional Probation Period: Statistics Portugal (Instituto Nacional de Estat´ıstica). Awards & ISBA (International Society for Bayesian Analysis) Honours Lindley Award, 2019. TWAS (Academy of Sciences for the Developing World) Young Scientist Prize, 2015. International Statistical Institute Elected Member, 2014. American Statistical Association Young Researcher Award, Section on Risk Analysis, 2011. National Institute of Statistical Sciences j American Statistical Association Honorary Mention as a Finalist NISS/ASA Best y-BIS Paper Award, 2010. Portuguese Statistical Society (Sociedade Portuguesa de Estat´ıstica) Young Researcher Award, 2009. International Association for Statistical Computing ERS IASC Young Researcher Award, 2008. 1 of 13 p l e t t si a o e igulctoson Applied Statistical ModelingPublications 1. -
What Is in a Word Or Two?
What Is in a Word or Two? Dale J. Poirier Department of Economics University of California, Irvine April 15, 2004 Abstract To measure the impact of Bayesian reasoning, this paper investigates the occurrence of two words, “Bayes” and “Bayesian,” over 1970-2003 in journal articles in a variety of disciplines, with a focus on economics and statistics. The growth in statistics is documented, but the growth in economics is largely confined to economic theory/mathematical economics rather than econometrics. Poirier (1989, 1992) described the penetration of Bayesian articles in econometrics and statistics journals. Data were collected by examination of individual articles and classifying each as “Bayesian” or “non-Bayesian.” Here the time period is expanded to 1970-2003 (when possible), and the number of journals is expanded to include journals in JSTOR (see Appendix) plus some from Elsevier [Journal of Econometrics (JE) and Economics Letters (EL)], the American Statistical Association [Journal of Business & Economic Statistics (JBES)], and Cambridge University Press [Econometric Theory (ET)]. Attention focuses (but not exclusively) on economics and statistics. The data collection exercise is “objectified” by using search engines to compute the annual proportion of journal “articles” containing in their text either the words “Bayes” or “Bayesian.” While not all such articles are “Bayesian,” their numbers provide an upper bound on the number of Bayesian articles, and they capture the impact of Bayesian thinking on authors. Two qualifiers should be kept in mind. First, what constitutes an “article” differs across journals. Some journals [e.g., Journal of the American Statistical Association (JASA)] count comments and replies separately, whereas other journals [e.g., Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series B (JRSSB)] count them as part of the original text. -
Visualizing Research Collaboration in Statistical Science: a Scientometric
University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Library Philosophy and Practice (e-journal) Libraries at University of Nebraska-Lincoln 9-13-2019 Visualizing Research Collaboration in Statistical Science: A Scientometric Perspective Prabir Kumar Das Library, Documentation & Information Science Division, Indian Statistical Institute, 203 B T Road, Kolkata - 700108, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/libphilprac Part of the Library and Information Science Commons Das, Prabir Kumar, "Visualizing Research Collaboration in Statistical Science: A Scientometric Perspective" (2019). Library Philosophy and Practice (e-journal). 3039. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/libphilprac/3039 Viisualliiziing Research Collllaborattiion iin Sttattiisttiicall Sciience:: A Sciienttomettriic Perspecttiive Prrabiirr Kumarr Das Sciienttiiffiic Assssiissttantt – A Liibrrarry,, Documenttattiion & IInfforrmattiion Sciience Diiviisiion,, IIndiian Sttattiisttiicall IInsttiittutte,, 203,, B.. T.. Road,, Kollkatta – 700108,, IIndiia,, Emaiill:: [email protected] Abstract Using Sankhyā – The Indian Journal of Statistics as a case, present study aims to identify scholarly collaboration pattern of statistical science based on research articles appeared during 2008 to 2017. This is an attempt to visualize and quantify statistical science research collaboration in multiple dimensions by exploring the co-authorship data. It investigates chronological variations of collaboration pattern, nodes and links established among the affiliated institutions and countries of all contributing authors. The study also examines the impact of research collaboration on citation scores. Findings reveal steady influx of statistical publications with clear tendency towards collaborative ventures, of which double-authored publications dominate. Small team of 2 to 3 authors is responsible for production of majority of collaborative research, whereas mega-authored communications are quite low. -
Abbreviations of Names of Serials
Abbreviations of Names of Serials This list gives the form of references used in Mathematical Reviews (MR). ∗ not previously listed E available electronically The abbreviation is followed by the complete title, the place of publication § journal reviewed cover-to-cover V videocassette series and other pertinent information. † monographic series ¶ bibliographic journal E 4OR 4OR. Quarterly Journal of the Belgian, French and Italian Operations Research ISSN 1211-4774. Societies. Springer, Berlin. ISSN 1619-4500. §Acta Math. Sci. Ser. A Chin. Ed. Acta Mathematica Scientia. Series A. Shuxue Wuli † 19o Col´oq. Bras. Mat. 19o Col´oquio Brasileiro de Matem´atica. [19th Brazilian Xuebao. Chinese Edition. Kexue Chubanshe (Science Press), Beijing. (See also Acta Mathematics Colloquium] Inst. Mat. Pura Apl. (IMPA), Rio de Janeiro. Math.Sci.Ser.BEngl.Ed.) ISSN 1003-3998. † 24o Col´oq. Bras. Mat. 24o Col´oquio Brasileiro de Matem´atica. [24th Brazilian §ActaMath.Sci.Ser.BEngl.Ed. Acta Mathematica Scientia. Series B. English Edition. Mathematics Colloquium] Inst. Mat. Pura Apl. (IMPA), Rio de Janeiro. Science Press, Beijing. (See also Acta Math. Sci. Ser. A Chin. Ed.) ISSN 0252- † 25o Col´oq. Bras. Mat. 25o Col´oquio Brasileiro de Matem´atica. [25th Brazilian 9602. Mathematics Colloquium] Inst. Nac. Mat. Pura Apl. (IMPA), Rio de Janeiro. § E Acta Math. Sin. (Engl. Ser.) Acta Mathematica Sinica (English Series). Springer, † Aastaraam. Eesti Mat. Selts Aastaraamat. Eesti Matemaatika Selts. [Annual. Estonian Heidelberg. ISSN 1439-8516. Mathematical Society] Eesti Mat. Selts, Tartu. ISSN 1406-4316. § E Acta Math. Sinica (Chin. Ser.) Acta Mathematica Sinica. Chinese Series. Chinese Math. Abh. Braunschw. Wiss. Ges. Abhandlungen der Braunschweigischen Wissenschaftlichen Soc., Acta Math. -
A Nonparametric Estimator of Heterogeneity Variance with Applications to SMR- and Proportion-Data
Biometrical Journal 42 )2000) 3, 321±334 A Nonparametric Estimator of Heterogeneity Variance with Applications to SMR- and Proportion-Data Dankmar BoÈhning Department of Epidemiology Institute for Social Medicine and Medical Psychology Free University Berlin Germany Jesus Sarol Jr. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics The College of Public Health University of the Philippines Manila Philippines Summary In this paper the situation of extra population heterogeneity is discussed from a analysis of variance point of view. We first provide a non-iterative way of estimating the variance of the heterogeneity distribution without estimating the heterogeneity distribution itself for Poisson and binomial counts. The consequences of the presence of heterogeneity in the estimation of the mean are discussed. We show that if the homogeneity assumption holds, the pooled mean is optimal while in the presence of strong heterogeneity, the simple )arithmetic) mean is an optimal estimator of the mean SMR or mean proportion. These results lead to the problem of finding an optimal estimator for situations not repre- sented by these two extreme cases. We propose an iterative solution to this problem. Illustrations for the application of these findings are provided with examples from various areas. Key words: Population heterogeneity; Random effects model; Moment estimator; Variance separation; Confidence interval estimation adjusted for unob- served heterogeneity. 1. Introduction In a variety of biometric applications the situation of extra-population heteroge- neity occurs. In particular, this is the case if there is good reason to model the variable of interest Y through a density of parametric form p)y, q) with a scalar parameter q. -
Kshitij Khare
Kshitij Khare Basic Information Mailing Address: Telephone Numbers: Internet: Department of Statistics Office: (352) 273-2985 E-mail: [email protected]fl.edu 103 Griffin Floyd Hall FAX: (352) 392-5175 Web: http://www.stat.ufl.edu/˜kdkhare/ University of Florida Gainesville, FL 32611 Education PhD in Statistics, 2009, Stanford University (Advisor: Persi Diaconis) Masters in Mathematical Finance, 2009, Stanford University Masters in Statistics, 2004, Indian Statistical Institute, India Bachelors in Statistics, 2002, Indian Statistical Institute, India Academic Appointments University of Florida: Associate Professor of Statistics, 2015-present University of Florida: Assistant Professor of Statistics, 2009-2015 Stanford University: Research/Teaching Assistant, Department of Statistics, 2004-2009 Research Interests High-dimensional covariance/network estimation using graphical models High-dimensional inference for vector autoregressive models Markov chain Monte Carlo methods Kshitij Khare 2 Publications Core Statistics Research Ghosh, S., Khare, K. and Michailidis, G. (2019). “High dimensional posterior consistency in Bayesian vector autoregressive models”, Journal of the American Statistical Association 114, 735-748. Khare, K., Oh, S., Rahman, S. and Rajaratnam, B. (2019). A scalable sparse Cholesky based approach for learning high-dimensional covariance matrices in ordered data, Machine Learning 108, 2061-2086. Cao, X., Khare, K. and Ghosh, M. (2019). “High-dimensional posterior consistency for hierarchical non- local priors in regression”, Bayesian Analysis 15, 241-262. Chakraborty, S. and Khare, K. (2019). “Consistent estimation of the spectrum of trace class data augmen- tation algorithms”, Bernoulli 25, 3832-3863. Cao, X., Khare, K. and Ghosh, M. (2019). “Posterior graph selection and estimation consistency for high- dimensional Bayesian DAG models”, Annals of Statistics 47, 319-348.