Recipients of grants from the NET Institute in Summer
1.
Miguel Campo, Stern
2.
Jose J. Canals-Cerda,
3. Jay Pil Choi, Michigan State University, Strategic Product Pre-Announcements in Markets with Network Effects.
4. Jeremy T. Fox,, University of Chicago, Consolidation and Roaming Agreements in the US Wireless Phone Industry.
5. Aurora García-Gallego, Universitat Jaume I, Castellón, Spain, Nikolaos Georgantzís, Universitat Jaume I, Castellón, Pedro Pereira, Autoridade da Concorrência, Portugal, José C. Pernías-Cerrillo, Universitat Jaume I, Castellón, Individual Pricing Behavior Against Simulated Equilibrium Play: An Experimental Study On The Risk-Related Elements Of Pricing In The Presence Of Internet Search Engines.
6. Anindya Ghose, Stern School of Business, NYU, Used Good Trade and Adverse Selection: A Cross-Country Comparison of Electronic Secondary Markets.
7. Anindya Ghose, Stern School of Business, NYU, and Arun Sundararajan, Stern School of Business, NYU, Versioning and Quality Distortion in Software? Evidence from E-Commerce Panel Data.
8.
David Gabel, Queens College, and
Carolyn Gideon,
9. Onsel
Emre, University of Chicago,
Ali Hortacsu,
10. Yannis M. Ioannides, Tufts University and Adriaan R. Soetevent, University of Amsterdam and Tinbergen Institute, Social Networking and Individual Outcomes: Individual Decisions and Market Context.
11. Tobias Kretschmer, London School of Economics, Competing Technologies in the Database Management Systems Market.
12.
Evangelos Katsamakas,
13.
Prasenjit Mitra, Sandeep Purao, John W. Bagby, Karthikeyan Umapathy, and
Sharoda Paul, Pennsylvania State University, An
Empirical Analysis of Development Processes for Anticipatory Standards.
14.
Matthew Nagler,
15.
Barak Orbach,
16. Marc Rysman, Boston University, and Tim Simcoe, University of Toronto, Patents and the Performance of Voluntary Standard Setting Organizations.
17. Martin Gaynor, Yunfeng Shi, Rahul Telang, and William Vogt, H. John Heinz III School of Public Policy and Management, Carnegie Mellon University, Cell Phone Demand and Consumer Learning An Empirical Analysis.
18. Yossi Spiegel, Tel Aviv University, The Incentive To Participate In Open Source Projects: A Signaling Approach.
19.
Kai
Suezle, Ifo Institute for Economic Research,
20.
Arun Sundararajan, Stern
21. Sudip Bhattacharjee, Ram D. Gopal, Kaveepan Lertwachara, James R. Marsden, School of Business, University of Connecticut, and Rahul Telang, H John Heinz III School of Public Policy and Management, Carnegie Mellon University, The Effect of P2P File Sharing on Music Markets: A Survival Analysis of Albums on Ranking Charts.
22. Animesh Animesh, Vandana Ramachandran, and Siva Viswanathan, Robert H Smith School of Business, University of Maryland, Quality Uncertainty and Adverse Selection in Sponsored Search Markets.
23.
Michael
Ward,