855 research outputs found
Multi-dimensional Virtual Values and Second-degree Price Discrimination
We consider a multi-dimensional screening problem of selling a product with
multiple quality levels and design virtual value functions to derive conditions
that imply optimality of only selling highest quality. A challenge of designing
virtual values for multi-dimensional agents is that a mechanism that pointwise
optimizes virtual values resulting from a general application of integration by
parts is not incentive compatible, and no general methodology is known for
selecting the right paths for integration by parts. We resolve this issue by
first uniquely solving for paths that satisfy certain necessary conditions that
the pointwise optimality of the mechanism imposes on virtual values, and then
identifying distributions that ensure the resulting virtual surplus is indeed
pointwise optimized by the mechanism. Our method of solving for virtual values
is general, and as a second application we use it to derive conditions of
optimality for selling only the grand bundle of items to an agent with additive
preferences
Optimal Auctions for Correlated Buyers with Sampling
Cr\'emer and McLean [1985] showed that, when buyers' valuations are drawn
from a correlated distribution, an auction with full knowledge on the
distribution can extract the full social surplus. We study whether this
phenomenon persists when the auctioneer has only incomplete knowledge of the
distribution, represented by a finite family of candidate distributions, and
has sample access to the real distribution. We show that the naive approach
which uses samples to distinguish candidate distributions may fail, whereas an
extended version of the Cr\'emer-McLean auction simultaneously extracts full
social surplus under each candidate distribution. With an algebraic argument,
we give a tight bound on the number of samples needed by this auction, which is
the difference between the number of candidate distributions and the dimension
of the linear space they span
Optimal Multi-Unit Mechanisms with Private Demands
In the multi-unit pricing problem, multiple units of a single item are for
sale. A buyer's valuation for units of the item is ,
where the per unit valuation and the capacity are private information
of the buyer. We consider this problem in the Bayesian setting, where the pair
is drawn jointly from a given probability distribution. In the
\emph{unlimited supply} setting, the optimal (revenue maximizing) mechanism is
a pricing problem, i.e., it is a menu of lotteries. In this paper we show that
under a natural regularity condition on the probability distributions, which we
call \emph{decreasing marginal revenue}, the optimal pricing is in fact
\emph{deterministic}. It is a price curve, offering units of the item for a
price of , for every integer . Further, we show that the revenue as a
function of the prices is a \emph{concave} function, which implies that
the optimum price curve can be found in polynomial time. This gives a rare
example of a natural multi-parameter setting where we can show such a clean
characterization of the optimal mechanism. We also give a more detailed
characterization of the optimal prices for the case where there are only two
possible demands
Goiter frequency is more strongly associated with gastric adenocarcinoma than urine iodine level
Purpose: We designed our study to evaluate the hypothesis that gastric cancer is correlated with iodine deficiency or thyroid dysfunction. Materials and Methods: We investigated the total body iodine reserve, thyroid function status and autoimmune disorder in 40 recently diagnosed gastric adenocarcinoma cases versus 80 healthy controls. The participants came from a region with high gastric cancer rate but sufficient iodine supply due to salt iodination. The investigation included urine iodine level, thyroid gland clinical and ultrasonograph-ic examination, and thyroid function tests. Results: Goiter was detected more frequently in the case group (P=0.001); such a finding, however, was not true for lower than normal urine iodine levels. The free T3 mean level was significantly lower in the case group compared to the control group (P=0.005). Conclusions: The higher prevalence of goiter rather than low levels of urinary iodine in gastric adenocarcinoma cases suggests that goi-ter, perhaps due to protracted but currently adjusted iodine deficiency, is more likely to be associated with gastric adenocarcinoma com-pared to the existing iodine deficiency itself. © 2013 by The Korean Gastric Cancer Association
Pricing in Social Networks with Negative Externalities
We study the problems of pricing an indivisible product to consumers who are
embedded in a given social network. The goal is to maximize the revenue of the
seller. We assume impatient consumers who buy the product as soon as the seller
posts a price not greater than their values of the product. The product's value
for a consumer is determined by two factors: a fixed consumer-specified
intrinsic value and a variable externality that is exerted from the consumer's
neighbors in a linear way. We study the scenario of negative externalities,
which captures many interesting situations, but is much less understood in
comparison with its positive externality counterpart. We assume complete
information about the network, consumers' intrinsic values, and the negative
externalities. The maximum revenue is in general achieved by iterative pricing,
which offers impatient consumers a sequence of prices over time.
We prove that it is NP-hard to find an optimal iterative pricing, even for
unweighted tree networks with uniform intrinsic values. Complementary to the
hardness result, we design a 2-approximation algorithm for finding iterative
pricing in general weighted networks with (possibly) nonuniform intrinsic
values. We show that, as an approximation to optimal iterative pricing, single
pricing can work rather well for many interesting cases, but theoretically it
can behave arbitrarily bad
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