Scholars' Bank will
be on a content freeze from 9/6 - 9/16 as we transition to a new & improved version. Minimal downtime expected
on 9/16. Stay tuned for more updates!
Browsing Cameron, Trudy Ann by Title
Navigation
Display Options
Results
-
Cameron, Trudy Ann; Crawford, Graham D.
(University of Oregon, Dept. of Economics, 2003-12)
Certain sociodemographic groups often seem to be relatively more concentrated near environmental hazards than in the surrounding community. It is well-known that snapshot cross-sectional statistical analyses cannot reveal ...
-
Cameron, Trudy Ann; DeShazo, J. R.
(University of Oregon, Dept of Economics, 2008-10)
We show in a theoretical model that benefits of allocating additional attention to evaluating
the marginal attribute with in choice set depend upon the expected utility loss from making a
suboptimal choice as a result ...
-
Cameron, Trudy Ann
(University of Oregon, Dept. of Economics, 2003-07-01)
Failure to allow for directional heterogeneity can obscure otherwise statistically significant distance effects in hedonic property value models. If ambient pollution data are unavailable, researchers often rely upon ...
-
Cameron, Trudy Ann; Gerdes, Geoffrey R.
(University of Oregon, Dept. of Economics, 2003-01-01)
Longstanding debate over the appropriate social discount rate for public projects stems from our lack of knowledge about how individual discount rates vary across people and across choice contexts. Using a sample of roughly ...
-
Cameron, Trudy Ann; DeShazo, J. R.
(University of Oregon, Dept. of Economics, 2004-03)
We develop a structural option price model in which individuals choose among competing
risk-mitigating programs to alter their probability of experiencing future years in various degraded health states. The novel aspects ...
-
Cameron, Trudy Ann; McConnaha, Ian
(University of Oregon, Dept of Economics, 2005-01-01)
In hedonic property value models, economists typically assume that changing perceptions of environmental risk should be captured by changes in housing prices. However, for long-lived environmental problems, we find that ...
-
Cameron, Trudy Ann
(University of Oregon, Dept. of Economics, 2002-07-20)
Willingness to pay for climate change mitigation depends on people's perceptions about just how bad things will get if nothing is done. Individual subjective distributions for future climate conditions are combined with ...
-
Cameron, Trudy Ann; DeShazo, J. R.; Johnson, Erica H.
(University of Oregon, Dept of Economics, 2009-11-22)
Stated preference (SP) survey methods have been used increasingly to assess willingness
to pay for a wide variety of non-market goods and services, including reductions in risks to life
and health. Poorly designed SP ...
-
Cameron, Trudy Ann; Crawford, Graham D.
(University of Oregon, Dept. of Economics, 2003-12)
Certain sociodemographic groups often seem to be relatively more concentrated near environmental hazards than in the surrounding community. It is well-known that snapshot cross-sectional statistical analyses cannot reveal ...
-
DeShazo, J. R.; Cameron, Trudy Ann; Saenz, Manrique, 1971-
(University of Oregon, Dept. of Economics, 2001-11-05)
We develop and evaluate a test of choice set misspecification for a multinomial logit choice model. This test determines whether the choice set designated by the researcher mistakenly assigns relevant substitutes to the ...
-
Cameron, Trudy Ann
(University of Oregon, Dept. of Economics, 2001-07-14)
Willingness to support public programs for risk management often depends on individual subjective risk perceptions in the face of uncertain science. As part of a larger study concerning climate change, we explore individual ...
Search Scholars' Bank
Browse
-
All of Scholars' Bank
-
This Collection
My Account
Statistics