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134
How Broadcasting Quotas Harm Program Diversity Mathieu Perona∗
, 2010
"... Broadcasting quotas of domestic contents are commonplace in developed countries, be it for radio or television programming. The core argument for them is to promote diversity by making more room for domestic content. By doing so, they increase the sales of domestic content and hence foster a more di ..."
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, our setup concurs with the idea that competition between broadcasters also reduces diversity of programming compared with a similar situation un-der monopoly. Using a Stackelberg competition framework, we show that the incumbent broadcaster concentrates on the most popular genres. Since they affect
The Performance Evaluation of Management of the Government Monopoly of Public Goods 1
"... As the public management theory is established, there is a growing public concern on government performance. But public goods haven’t been fully out of the traditional government monopoly management model which is outdated in the objective requirement of the public management system. Similarly, publ ..."
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As the public management theory is established, there is a growing public concern on government performance. But public goods haven’t been fully out of the traditional government monopoly management model which is outdated in the objective requirement of the public management system. Similarly
Simultaneous Effects of Supply and Demand Elasticity with Market Types on Tax Incidence (Graphical Analysis of Perfect Competition, Monopoly and Oligopoly Markets)
"... The type and character of tax (level of tax rate, narrow or far-reaching scope of tax, being indirect or direct), difference of the market in which activities are being carried out (perfect competition market, monopolist competition, oligopoly, monopoly, etc.), cost conditions (fixed cost conditions ..."
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The type and character of tax (level of tax rate, narrow or far-reaching scope of tax, being indirect or direct), difference of the market in which activities are being carried out (perfect competition market, monopolist competition, oligopoly, monopoly, etc.), cost conditions (fixed cost
A Spatial Theory of News Consumption and Electoral Competition. The Review of Economic Studies
, 2008
"... Abstract. This paper introduces a model in which rational vot-ers select news sources with ideological positions similar to their own. We nd that extreme media outlets do not in
uence polit-ical outcomes, and that new entry always makes party policies more centrist. In an optimal media, diversity of ..."
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Cited by 18 (2 self)
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duopoly than un-der monopoly. JEL classication. D72, L82
unknown title
"... In microeconomics, industrial organization, and public economics handbooks1, natural monopoly is described as a situation in which, for structural reasons, only one firm finds it profitable to produce in the market; the diagrams used are similar to the following. ..."
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In microeconomics, industrial organization, and public economics handbooks1, natural monopoly is described as a situation in which, for structural reasons, only one firm finds it profitable to produce in the market; the diagrams used are similar to the following.
von:
, 2009
"... Die Theorie an und für sich ist nichts nütze, als insofern sie uns den Zusammenhang der Erscheinungen glauben macht. ..."
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Die Theorie an und für sich ist nichts nütze, als insofern sie uns den Zusammenhang der Erscheinungen glauben macht.
ABA: Argumentation Based Agents
"... Abstract. Many works have identified the potential benefits of us-ing argumentation to address a large variety of multiagent problems. In this paper we take this idea one step further and develop the con-cept of a fully integrated argumentation-based agent architecture that allows us to develop agen ..."
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agents that are coherently designed on an un-derlying argumentation based foundation. Under this architecture, an agent is composed of a collection of modules each of which is equipped with a local argumentation theory. Similarly, the intra-agent control of the agent is governed by local argumentation
Using Sequential Observations to Model and Predict Player Behavior
- In Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on the Foundations of Digital Games
, 2011
"... In this paper, we present a data-driven technique for design-ing models of user behavior. Previously, player models were designed using user surveys, small-scale observation experi-ments, or knowledge engineering. These methods generally produced semantically meaningful models that were limited in t ..."
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Cited by 9 (1 self)
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in their applicability. To address this, we have developed a purely data-driven methodology for generating player mod-els based on past observations of other players. Our un-derlying assumption is that we can accurately predict what a player will do in a given situation if we examine enough data from former players
Learning from Point Sets with Observational Bias
"... Many objects can be represented as sets of multi-dimensional points. A common approach to learning from these point sets is to assume that each set is an i.i.d. sample from an unknown un-derlying distribution, and then estimate the sim-ilarities between these distributions. In realistic situations, ..."
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Many objects can be represented as sets of multi-dimensional points. A common approach to learning from these point sets is to assume that each set is an i.i.d. sample from an unknown un-derlying distribution, and then estimate the sim-ilarities between these distributions. In realistic situations
Email pricing
, 2010
"... We compare the magnitude of, and welfare generated by, uniform welfare-maximising, Ramsey and monopoly pricing in email networks. Messages are defined by the utility they give to their sender and receiver. Senders tend to pay more than receivers when the average sender utility is higher than the ave ..."
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welfare analysis shows that in some situations the use of uniform, Ramsey and zero prices will not generate substantial welfare losses relative to feasible perfectly discriminatory prices. Monopoly prices are unlikely to be efficient.
Results 1 - 10
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134