Publications

Publications

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2022 / Rosario Maggistro, Paolo Pellizzari, Elena Sartori, Marco Tolotti

Dangerous tangents: an application of Γ-convergence to the control of dynamical systems

Decisions in Economics and Finance, Vol. 45, 451-480
2024 / Michel Grabisch, M. Alperen Yasar

Frequentist belief update under ambiguous evidence in social networks

International Journal of Approximate Reasoning, Vol. 172 (109240)
EPOC Working Paper No. 20 / Work Package 01
2024 / Marco LiCalzi, M. Alperen Yasar

Vocabulary aggregation

2022 / Domenico Delli Gatti, Severin Reissl

Agent-Based Covid economics (ABC): Assessing non-pharmaceutical interventions and macro-stabilization policies

Industrial and Corporate Change, Vol. 31, 410-447
2024 / Predrag Pilipovic, Adeline Samson, Susanne Ditlevsen

Parameter estimation in nonlinear multivariate stochastic differential equations based on splitting schemes

The Annals of Statistics, Vol. 52, No. 2, 842-867
EPOC Working Paper No. 19 / Work Package 01
2024 / Matthieu Bulté, Helle Sørensen

An Autoregressive Model for Time Series of Random Objects

2021 / Gabriele Tedeschi, David Vidal-Tomás, Domenico Delli-Gatti, Mauro Gallegati

The macroeconomic effects of default and debt restructuring: An agent based exploration

International Review of Economics and Finance, Vol. 76, 1146-1163
2024 / Catarina Midões, Enrica De Cian, Giacomo Pasini, Sara Pesenti, and Malcolm N. Mistry

SHARE-ENV: A Data Set to Advance Our Knowledge of the Environment–Wellbeing Relationship

Environ. Health, 2, 95-104
Summary
Climate change interacts with other environmental stressors and vulnerability factors. Some places and, owing to socioeconomic conditions, some people, are far more at risk. The data behind current assessments of the environment–wellbeing nexus is coarse and regionally aggregated, when considering multiple regions/groups; or, when granular, comes from ad hoc samples with few variables. To assess the impacts of climate change, we require data that are granular and comprehensive, both in the variables and population studied. We build a publicly accessible data set, the SHARE-ENV data set, which fulfills these criteria. We expand on EU representative, individual-level, longitudinal data (the SHARE survey), with environmental exposure information about temperature, radiation, precipitation, pollution, and flood events. We illustrate through four simplified multilevel linear regressions, cross-sectional and longitudinal, how full-fledged studies can use SHARE-ENV to contribute to the literature. Such studies would help assess climate impacts and estimate the effectiveness and fairness of several climate adaptation policies. Other surveys can be expanded with environmental information to unlock different research avenues.
EPOC Working Paper No. 18 / Work Package 03
2024 / Nurten Kaynarca, Antoine Mandel

Technological evolution of production networks

2021 / Domenico Delli Gatti, Elisa Grugni

Breaking bad: supply chain disruptions in a streamlined agent-based model

The European Journal of Finance, Vol. 28, 1446-1473
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