We study a contest with multiple (not necessarily equal) prizes. Contestants have private information about an ability parameter that affects their costs of bidding. The contestant with the highest bid wins the first prize, the contestant with the second-highest bid wins the second prize, and so on until all the prizes are allocated. All contestants incur their respective costs of bidding. The contest's designer maximizes the expected sum of bids. Our main results are: 1) We display bidding equlibria for any number of contestants having linear, convex or concave cost functions, and for any distribution of abilities. 2) If the cost functions are linear or concave, then, no matter what the distribution of abilities is, it is optimal for the d...
I study sequential contests where the efforts of earlier players may be disclosed to later players b...
© 2018 In this paper, we analyze the role of negative prizes in contest design with a fixed budget, ...
This paper derives the effort-maximizing contest rule and the optimal endogenous entry in a context ...
We study a contest with multiple (not necessarily equal) prizes. Contestants have private informatio...
Abstract: We study a contest with multiple (not necessarily equal) prizes. Ex-ante symmetric, risk-n...
We study asymmetric all-pay auctions with multiple objects where players’ values for the objects are...
We consider the design of contests for n agents when the principal can choose both the prize profile...
We study all-pay contests under incomplete information where the reward is a function of the contest...
We study two-stage all-pay auctions with two identical prizes. In each stage, players compete for on...
This thesis consists of three chapters devoted to the study of the economics of contests. Each chapt...
We reconsider whether a grand multi-winner contest elicits more equilibrium effort than a collection...
We characterize the optimal prize allocation, namely the allocation that maximizes a group's effecti...
We study all-pay contests under incomplete information where the reward is a function of the contest...
A unique characteristic of crowdsourcing contest is the coexistence of multiple contests and each in...
We consider the design of contests when the principal can choose both the prize profile and how the ...
I study sequential contests where the efforts of earlier players may be disclosed to later players b...
© 2018 In this paper, we analyze the role of negative prizes in contest design with a fixed budget, ...
This paper derives the effort-maximizing contest rule and the optimal endogenous entry in a context ...
We study a contest with multiple (not necessarily equal) prizes. Contestants have private informatio...
Abstract: We study a contest with multiple (not necessarily equal) prizes. Ex-ante symmetric, risk-n...
We study asymmetric all-pay auctions with multiple objects where players’ values for the objects are...
We consider the design of contests for n agents when the principal can choose both the prize profile...
We study all-pay contests under incomplete information where the reward is a function of the contest...
We study two-stage all-pay auctions with two identical prizes. In each stage, players compete for on...
This thesis consists of three chapters devoted to the study of the economics of contests. Each chapt...
We reconsider whether a grand multi-winner contest elicits more equilibrium effort than a collection...
We characterize the optimal prize allocation, namely the allocation that maximizes a group's effecti...
We study all-pay contests under incomplete information where the reward is a function of the contest...
A unique characteristic of crowdsourcing contest is the coexistence of multiple contests and each in...
We consider the design of contests when the principal can choose both the prize profile and how the ...
I study sequential contests where the efforts of earlier players may be disclosed to later players b...
© 2018 In this paper, we analyze the role of negative prizes in contest design with a fixed budget, ...
This paper derives the effort-maximizing contest rule and the optimal endogenous entry in a context ...