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Decision Making & Negotiations

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Decision Making & Negotiations Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Decision Making & Negotiations

Decision Making & Negotiations Research

An Exploration of Trend-Cycle Decomposition Methodologies in Simulated Data

Authors
Robert Hodrick
Date
February 1, 2020
Format
Working Paper

This paper uses simulations to explore the properties of the HP filter of Hodrick and Prescott (1997), the BK filter of Baxter and King (1999), and the H filter of Hamilton (2018) that are designed to decompose a univariate time series into trend and cyclical components. Each simulated time series approximates the natural logarithms of U.S. Real GDP, and they are a random walk, an ARIMA model, two unobserved components models, and models with slowly changing nonstationary stochastic trends and definitive cyclical components.

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Stochastic Market Microstructure Models of Limit Order Books (abstract + video)

Authors
Costis Maglaras and R. Cont
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Invited Tutorial INFORMS Fall Conference

Many financial markets are operated as electronic limit order books (LOBs). Over short time scales, seconds to minutes, LOBs can be best understood and modeled as stochastic dynamical systems, and, specifically, ones that exhibit interesting and relevant queueing phenomena. I will offer a brief overview of algorithmic trading in a limit order book, and highlight how queueing phenomena play an important role in trade execution, and as a consequence in market behavior.

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Modeling Dynamic Heterogeneity Using Gaussian Processes

Authors
Ryan Dew, Yang Li, and Asim Ansari
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

Marketing research relies on individual-level estimates to understand the rich heterogeneity of consumers, firms, and products. While much of the literature focuses on capturing static cross-sectional heterogeneity, little research has been done on modeling dynamic heterogeneity, or the heterogeneous evolution of individual-level model parameters. In this work, the authors propose a novel framework for capturing the dynamics of heterogeneity, using individual-level, latent, Bayesian nonparametric Gaussian processes.

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Search Query Formation by Strategic Consumers

Authors
Jia Liu and Olivier Toubia
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Quantitative Marketing and Economics

Submitting queries to search engines has become a major way for consumers to search for information and products. The massive amount of search query data available today has the potential to provide valuable information on consumer preferences. In order to unlock this potential, it is necessary to understand how consumers translate their preferences into search queries. Strategic consumers should attempt to maximize the information content of the search results, conditional on a set of beliefs on how the search engine operates.

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Incomplete Market Demand Tests for Kreps-Porteus-Selden Preferences

Authors
Felix Kubler, Larry Selden, and Xiao Wei
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Economic Theory

What does utility maximization subject to a budget constraint imply for intertemporal choice under uncertainty? Assuming consumers face a two period consumption-portfolio problem where asset markets are incomplete, we address this question following both the standard local infinitesimal and finite data approaches. To focus on the separate roles of time and risk preferences, individuals maximize KPS (Kreps-Porteus-Selden) preferences. The consumption-portfolio problem is decomposed into a one period portfolio problem and a two period certainty consumption-saving problem.

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The Role of Numbers in the Customer Journey

Authors
Shelle Santana, Manoj Thomas, and Vicki Morwitz
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Retailing

At each stage in customers' journeys, they encounter different types of numeric information that they process using different judgment strategies. Relevant numbers might include budgets, price, product attributes, product counts, product ratings, numbers in brand names, health and nutrition information, financial information, time-related information, and others. This manuscript provides a review of the vast array of numerical information presented to consumers at different stages of the customer journey.

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Consumer Reactions to Drip Pricing

Authors
Shelle Santana, Steven Dallas, and Vicki Morwitz
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Marketing Science

This research examines how drip pricing--a strategy whereby a firm advertises only part of a product's price upfront and then reveals additional mandatory or optional fees/surcharges as the consumer proceeds through the buying process--affects consumer choice and satisfaction. Across six studies, we find that when optional surcharges are dripped (vs. revealed upfront) consumers are more likely to initially select a lower base priced option which, after surcharges are included, is often more expensive than the alternative.

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The Smartphone as a Pacifying Technology

Authors
Shiri Melumad and Michel Tuan Pham
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Journal of Consumer Research

In light of consumers’ growing dependence on their smartphones, this article investigates the nature of the relationship that consumers form with their smartphone and its underlying mechanisms. We propose that in addition to obvious functional benefits, consumers in fact derive emotional benefits from their smartphone—in particular, feelings of psychological comfort and, if needed, actual stress relief. In other words, in a sense, smartphones are not unlike adult pacifiers.

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Multiperiod Contracting and Salesperson Effort Profiles: The Optimality of "Hockey Stick," "Giving Up" and "Resting on Laurels"

Authors
Kinshuk Jerath and Fei Long
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

We study multi-period sales-force incentive contracting where salespeople can engage in effort gaming, a phenomenon that has extensive empirical support. Focusing on a repeated moral hazard scenario with two independent periods and a risk-neutral agent with limited liability, we conduct a theoretical investigation to understand which effort profiles the firm can expect under the optimal contract.

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