Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Selected Works

Ted C Bergstrom

Discipline
Institution
Keyword
Publication Year
File Type

Articles 1 - 30 of 84

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

To Read And Be Read: When Monopolists Control Access To Prestige, Ted C. Bergstrom Dec 2018

To Read And Be Read: When Monopolists Control Access To Prestige, Ted C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

Publishing in an established academic journal of high prestige gives high rewards in terms of salary and promotion for authors and prestige for their universities. Established for-profit journals with strong reputations can expect to collect
large rents for these reputations in terms either of subscription prices for gated articles or author publication fees for open access articles. This paper takes a look at this situation.


Using Downloads And Citations To Evaluate Journals, Alex Wood-Doughty, Ted C. Bergstrom, Douglas G. Steigerwald Dec 2017

Using Downloads And Citations To Evaluate Journals, Alex Wood-Doughty, Ted C. Bergstrom, Douglas G. Steigerwald

Ted C Bergstrom

Download rates of academic journals have joined citation rates as commonly used
measures of research influence. But in what ways and to what extent do the two
measures differ? This paper examines six years of download data for more than #12;ve
thousand journals subscribed to by the University of California system. While download
rates of journals are highly correlated with citation rates, the average ratio of
downloads to citations varies substantially among academic disciplines. We #12;find that,
typically, the ratio of a journal's downloads to citations depends positively on its impact
factor. Surprisingly, we #12;find that, controlling for citation rates, …


Efficient Ethical Rules For Volunteer's Dilemmas, Ted C. Bergstrom Sep 2017

Efficient Ethical Rules For Volunteer's Dilemmas, Ted C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

This paper extends the classic Volunteer’s Dilemma game to environments in which individuals have differing costs and private information about their own costs. It explores
the nature of symmetric ethical optimum strategies for Volunteer's Dilemma games with and without differing costs. Where costs differ, ethical optima are constructed by symmetrizing the game with a Rawlsian “Veil of Ignorance


Hurwiczcoase2pdf, Ted C. Bergstrom Dec 2016

Hurwiczcoase2pdf, Ted C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

This paper addresses the question of when the Coasian assertion that in the absence of transactions costs, where there are externalities, the outcome will be Pareto optimal and the level of externalities will be independent of the assignment of property rights. We show that this claim is true in an environment, which though restricted, is broader than the class of quasi-lineqr utilities.


Let Me, Or Let George? Motives Of Competing Altruists, Ted Bergstrom, Rodney Garratt, Greg Leo Dec 2015

Let Me, Or Let George? Motives Of Competing Altruists, Ted Bergstrom, Rodney Garratt, Greg Leo

Ted C Bergstrom

Sometimes a costly action taken by a single individual is sufficient to benefit an entire group. This should imply technical economies of scale to groups of larger size. But in a group of selfishly motivated agents, a countervailing force, the free-rider problem, may actually reduce the likelihood of provision as group size increases. Yet there are con- spicuous real-world cases where, in seeming defiance of the free-rider problem, a small minority provides a public good that benefits a large population. Examples include unpaid contributions to Wikipedia, Linux, and the bone-marrow registry. We suggest that these successful outcomes occur because a …


Co-Ordinated Volunteers' Dilemmas, Ted C. Bergstrom, Greg Leo Dec 2014

Co-Ordinated Volunteers' Dilemmas, Ted C. Bergstrom, Greg Leo

Ted C Bergstrom

We study a version of the Volunteers Dilemma in which only one of the volunteers is selected to perform a task.


Saving Lives With Stem Cell Transplants, Damien Sheehan-Connor, Ted C. Bergstrom, Rodney Garratt Dec 2014

Saving Lives With Stem Cell Transplants, Damien Sheehan-Connor, Ted C. Bergstrom, Rodney Garratt

Ted C Bergstrom

Blood stem cell transplants can be life-saving for some patients, but the chances of finding a matching donor are small unless a large number of potential donors are evaluated. Many nations maintain large registries of potential donors who have offered to donate stem cells if they are the best available match for a patient needing a transplant. An alternative source of stem cells, umbilical cord blood, is stored in banks. Everyone faces a small probability of needing a transplant which will increase their likelihood of survival. The registries and cord blood banks are thus an interesting example of a pure …


Cost Effectiveness Of Open Access Publications, Jevin D. West, Ted C. Bergstrom, Carl T. Bergstrom Sep 2014

Cost Effectiveness Of Open Access Publications, Jevin D. West, Ted C. Bergstrom, Carl T. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

Open access publishing has been proposed as one possible solution to the serials crisis—the rapidly growing subscription prices in scholarly journal publishing. However, open access publishing can present economic pitfalls as well, such as excessive article processing charges. We discuss the decision that an author faces when choosing to submit to an open access journal. We develop an interactive tool to help authors compare among alternative open access venues and thereby get the most for their article processing charges. (JEL I2, C1, A1)


Evaluating Big Deal Journal Bundles, Ted Bergstrom Jun 2014

Evaluating Big Deal Journal Bundles, Ted Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

Large commercial publishers sell bundled online subscriptions to their entire list of academic journals at prices significantly lower than the sum of their á la carte prices. Bundle prices differ drastically between institutions, but they are not publicly posted. The data that we have collected enable us to compare the bundle prices charged by commercial publishers with those of nonprofit societies and to examine the types of price discrimination practiced by commercial and nonprofit journal publishers. This information is of interest to economists who study monopolist pricing, librarians interested in making efficient use of library budgets, and scholars who are …


Saving Lives With Stem Cell Transplants, Damien Sheehan-Connor, Ted Bergstrom, Rodney Garratt Dec 2013

Saving Lives With Stem Cell Transplants, Damien Sheehan-Connor, Ted Bergstrom, Rodney Garratt

Ted C Bergstrom

For patients with certain diseases, blood stem cell transplants can be life-saving. But a transplant is likely to be successful only if the immune systems of the donor and recipient are a close genetic match. Human immune systems are extremely diverse and a patient's chances of finding a matching donor would be small without the ability to search a very large number of possible donors. For this reason, most advanced nations maintain large registries of potential donors who have offered to donate stem cells if they happen to be the best available match for a patient needing a transplant. In …


On The Evolution Of Hoarding, Risk-Taking, And Wealth Distribution In Nonhuman And Human Populations, Ted C. Bergstrom Dec 2013

On The Evolution Of Hoarding, Risk-Taking, And Wealth Distribution In Nonhuman And Human Populations, Ted C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

This paper applies the theory of the evolution of risk-taking in the presence of idiosyncratic and environmental risks to the example of food hoarding by animals and explores implications of the resulting theory for human attitudes toward risk.


Measures Of Assortativity, Ted Bergstrom Dec 2012

Measures Of Assortativity, Ted Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

This paper discusses alternative measures of assortative matching and relates them to Sewall Wright's F-statistic. We also explore applications of measures of assortativity to evolutionary dynamics. We generalize Wright's statistic to allow the possibility that some types match more assortatively than others, and explore the possibility of identifying parameters of this more general model from the observed distribution of matches by the partners' types.


Cost-Effectiveness Of Open Access Publications, Jevin D. West, Ted C. Bergstrom, Carl T. Bergstrom Dec 2012

Cost-Effectiveness Of Open Access Publications, Jevin D. West, Ted C. Bergstrom, Carl T. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

Open access publishing has been proposed as one possible solution to the serials crisis | the rapidly growing subscription prices in scholarly journal publishing. However, open access publishing can present economic pitfalls as well, such as excessive article processing charges. We discuss the decision that an author faces when choosing to submit to an open access journal. We develop an interactive tool to help authors compare among alternative open access venues and thereby get the most for their article processing charges.


Motivations Of Competing Altruists, Ted C. Bergstrom, Rodney Garratt, Gregory Leo Dec 2012

Motivations Of Competing Altruists, Ted C. Bergstrom, Rodney Garratt, Gregory Leo

Ted C Bergstrom

This is a preliminary report on our experimental work with competing altruists.


Ethics And The Volunteers' Dilemma, Ted C. Bergstrom Oct 2012

Ethics And The Volunteers' Dilemma, Ted C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

This paper explores the Nash equilibria that arise under alternative rules for ethical behavior in settings like the volunteers' dilemma and finds "optimal" ethical rules for such settings.


Single-Payer Volunteers' Dilemma, Ted C. Bergstrom Oct 2012

Single-Payer Volunteers' Dilemma, Ted C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

The "Volunteers' Dilemma model which was introduced by Andreas Diekmann is a game theoretic model of diffusion of responsibility where only one person is needed to perform a publicly beneficial act, but many people could do it. Players do not know what the others have done. In the symmetric mixed strategy Nash equilibrium for this game, the probability that nobody takes action increases as the number of players increases. This paper shows that the same result holds even when volunteers are taken anonymously but only one person is selected to perform the action/


The Good Samaritan And Traffic On The Road To Jericho, Ted C. Bergstrom Oct 2012

The Good Samaritan And Traffic On The Road To Jericho, Ted C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

Driving along a lonely road, you come upon a stalled car and a motorist who appears to have run out of gas. You consider stopping to offer help, although this may cost you several minutes and some extra driving. Would your decision be different if the road were heavily travelled? If you were to run of gas, would you prefer that it be on a busy street or on a lonely road?


Models Of Assortative Matching, Ted Bergstrom Jun 2012

Models Of Assortative Matching, Ted Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

This paper explores the theory and statistical identification of two distinct models of assortative matching. One model corresponds closely to Sewall Wright's F-statistic, also known as the coefficient of inbreeding, or index of assortativity. A second model is based on random encounters in which individuals are more likely to match on an encounter with their own type than with the other.


Review Of Robert Frank's Darwin Economy, Ted C. Bergstrom Apr 2012

Review Of Robert Frank's Darwin Economy, Ted C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

This is a short book review of Frank's ``Darwin Economy''.


Librarians And The Terrible Fix: Economics Of The Big Deal, Ted C. Bergstrom Jun 2010

Librarians And The Terrible Fix: Economics Of The Big Deal, Ted C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

The academic journal market is characterized by delegated purchasing, unreliable signals of demand, and a complex, difficult-to-evaluate product. As a result, the demand for journals is highly inelastic to prices. Large commercial publishers have capitalized on this inelastic demand, by reducing competition through mergers and consolidations, by offering Big Deal bundled contracts, and raising their prices to levels far above average cost. We suggest that the demand for access to journal articles would be much more price elastic and the overall cost to the academic community would be lower if universities were to abstain from purchasing bundled site licenses at …


Big Macs And Eigenfactor Scores: Don't Let The Correlation Coefficients Fool You, Jevin D. West, Carl T. Bergstrom, Theodore C. Bergstrom Apr 2010

Big Macs And Eigenfactor Scores: Don't Let The Correlation Coefficients Fool You, Jevin D. West, Carl T. Bergstrom, Theodore C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

A recent article by Phil Davis suggested that the Eigenvalue metric does adds little useful information to the more simply calculated measure of total citations published by the ISI. This paper argues that Davis's claim is an instance of a classic statistical fallacy of spurious correlation. Based on an analysis of the entire 2006 ISI Journal Citation Reports, we show that there are statistically and economically significant differences between the Eigenfactor metrics and the ISI's impact factor and total citations.


The Uncommon Insight Of Elinor Ostrom, Ted C. Bergstrom Feb 2010

The Uncommon Insight Of Elinor Ostrom, Ted C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

Abstract Standard economic approaches to the problem of overuse of common property resources have emphasized two competing remedies, the Pigovian approach of corrective taxation and the property rights approach of internalizing externalities by means of assigning marketable property rights to individual owners with exclusive claim on the entire commons. Elinor Ostrom pursues a third approach, which is based on case studies of existing communities that have established successful and durable systems of managing common property resources. This paper discusses her work and suggests that economists with an interest in public policy have much to gain from becoming familiar with the …


A Public Choice Framework For Controlling Transmissable And Evolving Diseases, Benjamin Althouse, Ted Bergstrom, Carl Bergstrom Jan 2010

A Public Choice Framework For Controlling Transmissable And Evolving Diseases, Benjamin Althouse, Ted Bergstrom, Carl Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

No abstract provided.


Stem Cell Matching For Patients Of Mixed Race, Ted C. Bergstrom Dec 2009

Stem Cell Matching For Patients Of Mixed Race, Ted C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

Patients with leukemia and other blood diseases stand a good chance of recovery and a return to normal life if they receive a stem cell transplant from a living donor. In the absence of a transplant, their survival prospects are grim. For a transplant to be successful, the human leukocyte antigens (HLA) of the donor and recipient must be a close genetic match. To facilitate non-sibling matches, the developed nations of the world have set up national volunteer registries. The larges such registry is the NMDP (National Marrow Donor Program). We estimate the distribution of HLA types for individuals of …


One Chance In A Million: Altruism And The Bone Marrow Registry, Ted Bergstrom, Rod Garratt, Damien Sheehan-Connor Aug 2009

One Chance In A Million: Altruism And The Bone Marrow Registry, Ted Bergstrom, Rod Garratt, Damien Sheehan-Connor

Ted C Bergstrom

Transplants of donated stem cells save the lives of many patients with blood diseases. Donation is somewhat painful, butrarely has lasting adverse effects. Patients can accept transplants only from donors with compatible immune systems. Those lacking a sibling match must seek donations from the population at large. The probability that two persons of the same race are compatible is less than 1/10,000. Health authorities maintain a registry of several million genetically-tested potential donors who have agreed to donate if asked. We study the peculiar structure of voluntary public good provision represented by the registry, and compare the marginal benefits and …


Ethics, Evolution, And Games Among Neighbors, Ted C. Bergstrom Mar 2009

Ethics, Evolution, And Games Among Neighbors, Ted C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

Several similar maxims, known as "Golden Rules" are found in the writings of moral philosophers and religious teachers. Though similar, these maxims appeal to di#11;fferent principles; and do not always recommend the same actions nor lead to the same equilibrium outcome in interactive games. This paper examines some of these rules and explores the way that they may emerge as a result of biological or social evolution.


Simple Economies With Multiple Equilibria, Ted C. Bergstrom, Ken-Ichi Shimomura, Takehiko Yamato Jan 2009

Simple Economies With Multiple Equilibria, Ted C. Bergstrom, Ken-Ichi Shimomura, Takehiko Yamato

Ted C Bergstrom

This paper studies a general class of pure exchange economies that have multiple equilibria, which extend an example presented by Lloyd Shapley and Martin Shubik. For such economies, we find easily verified conditions that determine whether there are multiple equilibria. We also provide simple methods for constructing economies in which arbitrary pre-specified sets of prices are equilibria. These economies have simple comparative statics, since prices at interior competitive equilibrium depend on the parameters of utility but not on the endowment quantities.


A Public Choice Framework For Controlling Transmissable And Evolving Diseases, Ted C. Bergstrom, Carl T. Bergstrom, Ben Althouse Dec 2008

A Public Choice Framework For Controlling Transmissable And Evolving Diseases, Ted C. Bergstrom, Carl T. Bergstrom, Ben Althouse

Ted C Bergstrom

Control measures used to limit the spread of infectious disease often generate externalities. Vaccination for transmissible diseases can re- duce the incidence of disease even among the unvaccinated, whereas antimicrobial chemotherapy can lead to the evolution of antimicro- bial resistance and thereby limit its own e#11;ectiveness over time. We integrate the economic theory of public choice with mathematical models of infectious disease to provide quantitative framework for making allocation decisions in the presence of these externalities. To illustrate, we present a series of examples: vaccination for tetanus, vaccination for measles, antibiotic treatment of otitis media, and antiviral treatment of pandemic …


Differences In Impact Factor Across Fields And Over Time, Benjamin M. Althouse, Jevin D. West, Ted C. Bergstrom, Carl T. Bergstrom Aug 2008

Differences In Impact Factor Across Fields And Over Time, Benjamin M. Althouse, Jevin D. West, Ted C. Bergstrom, Carl T. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

The impact factor of an academic journal for any year is the number of times the average article published in that journal in the previous two years are cited in that year. From 1994-2005, the average impact factor of journals listed by the ISI has been increasing by an average of 2.6 percent per year. This paper documents this growth and explores its causes.


Solving The Beautiful Mind Coordination Problem, Ted C. Bergstrom Dec 2007

Solving The Beautiful Mind Coordination Problem, Ted C. Bergstrom

Ted C Bergstrom

There are n boys and m girls. The boys are all expected utility maximizers and agree about the desirability of the prospect of dating each girl. Boys assign utility v_i to a date with girl i, where v_1>v_2>\dots v_n>0 and a utility of 0to having no date. Girls don't care which boy they go out with and they prefer having a date to not having a date. We find the Nash equilibrium strategy for boys.