From natural variation to optimal policy? The importance of endogenous peer group formation
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2857574
DOI10.3982/ECTA10168zbMATH Open1274.91357OpenAlexW2168495796MaRDI QIDQ2857574FDOQ2857574
Authors: Scott E. Carrell, Bruce I. Sacerdote, James E. West
Publication date: 4 November 2013
Published in: Econometrica (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.3982/ecta10168
Recommendations
- Peer group effects in applied general equilibrium.
- Peer effects in endogenous networks
- Endogenous group formation via unproductive costs
- Peer effects and endogenous social interactions
- Endogenous groups and dynamic selection in mechanism design
- Endogenous group formation and responsibility diffusion: an experimental study
- Endogenous formation of cooperation structures
- Endogenous network formation in a Tullock contest
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 2209532
Cited In (23)
- Randomization inference for peer effects
- Matching with peer monitoring
- Adjusted QMLE for the spatial autoregressive parameter
- On the difficulty of characterizing network formation with endogenous behavior
- Inferring optimal peer assignment from experimental data
- Exact and higher-order properties of the MLE in spatial autoregressive models, with applications to inference
- Spectral Estimation of Large Stochastic Blockmodels with Discrete Nodal Covariates
- Teacher-to-Classroom Assignment and Student Achievement
- Endogenous network production functions with selectivity
- Bias and high-dimensional adjustment in observational studies of peer effects
- A robust test for network generated dependence
- A model of peer effects in school
- Estimating social effects with randomized and observational network data
- Efficient peer effects estimators with group effects
- Estimation of spillover effects with matched data or longitudinal network data
- A network social interaction model with heterogeneous links
- Causality in econometrics: choice vs chance
- Production and learning in teams
- Randomization tests for peer effects in group formation experiments
- Social norms in networks
- Exact \(p\)-values for network interference
- Ability peer effects in university: evidence from a randomized experiment
- Value formation: the role of esteem
This page was built for publication: From natural variation to optimal policy? The importance of endogenous peer group formation
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q2857574)