不对称信息下的高校内部资源分配与激励模型研究 — 以合肥工业大学研究生分配与助研费分析为例 (Research on the Model of Internal Resource Allocation and Incentives in Universities under Asymmetric Information — Taking Postgraduate Distribution and Research Assistant Fee System of Hefei University of Technology as an Example)

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jingjing Ding ◽  
Junyan Yang ◽  
qian liu
Econometrica ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Milton Harris ◽  
Robert M. Townsend

Author(s):  
Niamh Moloney

This article focuses on the particular challenges and risks raised by the regulation of financial services and markets. It reviews the traditional rationales for regulation and how regulation has experienced repeated reforms which are becoming increasingly transformative in their ambition. It suggests that what marks out this regulatory area is the significant level of risk involved in the regulatory project. It also considers how regulatory tools can be fine-tuned to mitigate the evolving risks of intervention. It considers the expanding domain of regulation as domestic markets have become closely inter-connected, the related risks, and the nature of the regulatory response. The traditional rationale for financial services and markets regulation is the correction of market failures related to asymmetric information and to externalities, notably systemic risks, in order to support market efficiency and efficient resource allocation.


1982 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 604-620 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Harris ◽  
C. H. Kriebel ◽  
A. Raviv

2018 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neil Malhotra

AbstractAlthough Boyer & Petersen's (B&P's) cataloguing of and evolutionary explanations for folk-economic beliefs is important and valuable, the authors fail to connect their theories to existing explanations for why people do not think like economists. For instance, people often have moral intuitions akin to principles of fairness and justice that conflict with utilitarian approaches to resource allocation.


2012 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 232-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phia S. Salter ◽  
Glenn Adams

Inspired by “Mother or Wife” African dilemma tales, the present research utilizes a cultural psychology perspective to explore the dynamic, mutual constitution of personal relationship tendencies and cultural-ecological affordances for neoliberal subjectivity and abstracted independence. We administered a resource allocation task in Ghana and the United States to assess the prioritization of conjugal/nuclear relationships over consanguine/kin relationships along three dimensions of sociocultural variation: nation (American and Ghanaian), residence (urban and rural), and church membership (Pentecostal Charismatic and Traditional Western Mission). Results show that tendencies to prioritize nuclear over kin relationships – especially spouses over parents – were greater among participants in the first compared to the second of each pair. Discussion considers issues for a cultural psychology of cultural dynamics.


2018 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 196-206 ◽  
Author(s):  
Byungho Park ◽  
Rachel L. Bailey

Abstract. In an effort to quantify message complexity in such a way that predictions regarding the moment-to-moment cognitive and emotional processing of viewers would be made, Lang and her colleagues devised the coding system information introduced (or ii). This coding system quantifies the number of structural features that are known to consume cognitive resources and considers it in combination with the number of camera changes (cc) in the video, which supply additional cognitive resources owing to their elicitation of an orienting response. This study further validates ii using psychophysiological responses that index cognitive resource allocation and recognition memory. We also pose two novel hypotheses regarding the confluence of controlled and automatic processing and the effect of cognitive overload on enjoyment of messages. Thirty television advertisements were selected from a pool of 172 (all 20 s in length) based on their ii/cc ratio and ratings for their arousing content. Heart rate change over time showed significant deceleration (indicative of increased cognitive resource allocation) for messages with greater ii/cc ratios. Further, recognition memory worsened as ii/cc increased. It was also found that message complexity increases both automatic and controlled allocations to processing, and that the most complex messages may have created a state of cognitive overload, which was received as enjoyable by the participants in this television context.


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