Econometrics
Relevant Creators
economist working on a cure for baldness that involves linear regression and wine. Texan. Hoping to one day pull a rabbit out of a hat.
Co-author of the popular science book, "The Why Axis," which offers new insights in various areas of economics research through field experiments.
English teacher and freelance editor parent. Physics scholar parent.
VP Economist, Amazon
Bringing you #Bitcoin on-chain and macro analysis every single day.
Assistant Professor of philosophy at @FilozoficznyUJ. Posts about philosophy of science, mountains, and memes. Mostly memes though.
Econ prof @SeattleU. Book The Effect http://theeffectbook.net out now! Check my pinned thread for all my projects. Substack https://nickchk.substack.com/
Guido Wilhelmus Imbens (born 3 September 1963) is a Dutch-American economist whose research concerns econometrics and statistics. He holds the Applied Econometrics Professorship in Economics at the Stanford Graduate School of Business at Stanford University, where he has taught since 2012.In 2021, Imbens was awarded half of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences jointly with Joshua Angrist "for their methodological contributions to the analysis of causal relationships." Their work focused on natural experiments, which can offer empirical data in contexts where controlled experimentation may be expensive, time-consuming, or unethical. In 1994 Imbens and Angrist introduced the local average treatment effect (LATE) framework, an influential mathematical methodology for reliably inferring causation from natural experiments that accounted for and defined the limitations of such inferences. Imbens' work with Angrist, together with the work of co-recipient David Card, is credited with catalyzing the "credibility revolution" in empirical microeconomics.
Israeli-American economist and Ford Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Recipient of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 2021 for methodological contributions to the analysis of causal relationships.
Chief Scientific Officer @ThorneHealthTec | Author, The Age of Scientific Wellness | Professor @HoodPriceLab @ISBsci | Board on Life Sciences @theNASEM
Leroy "Lee" Edward Hood is an American biologist who has served on the faculties at the California Institute of Technology and the University of Washington. Hood has developed ground-breaking scientific instruments which made possible major advances in the biological sciences and the medical sciences.
Economist with degrees in economics from Harvard University. Dissertation on British iron and steel won the David A. Wells Prize in 1973.