I am a Ph.D. candidate in Economics at Johns Hopkins University.
I am on the 2024-2025 job market. Research Areas Microeconomic theory, consumer demand, revealed preference analysis, decision theory, behavioral industrial organization, econometrics Job Market Paper I examine how limited attention affects a consumer's decisions when selecting from an ordered list of alternatives (such as found on Amazon and other online retail platforms). My model attributes consumers' stochastic choices to variations in the number of items on a list considered by the consumer, which can differ across lists. As an application of my model, I study a list design problem where a list designer seeks to construct a list that maximizes the worst-case profit, among all the cases that could arise given the stochastic choice data available to the designer. Email: [email protected] CV |
Works in progress
- A List-based Random Attention Model
- Revealed Preference in Production Decisions in a Monopoly Market
- Firm behavior in a Market with Inattentive Consumers
- A Constrained Quasilinear Utility Model (with John Quah)
- Inferences for Partially Functional Coefficients Models with Endogeneity (with Ji-Liang Shiu, Jingrong Li, and Zizhong Yan)
Teaching experience
- Teaching assistant to Microeconomic Theory I (Ph.D.), 2020 - 2024
- Teaching assistant to Microeconomic Theory II (Ph.D.), 2022 - 2024
- Teaching assistant to Elements of Microeconomics, 2021