Details about Francis Joseph DiTraglia
Access statistics for papers by Francis Joseph DiTraglia.
Last updated 2018-08-09. Update your information in the RePEc Author Service.
Short-id: pdi336
Jump to Journal Articles
Working Papers
2017
- Mis-classified, Binary, Endogenous Regressors: Identification and Inference
NBER Working Papers, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc View citations (7)
2016
- A Framework for Eliciting, Incorporating, and Disciplining Identification Beliefs in Linear Models
NBER Working Papers, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc View citations (8)
2014
- Using Invalid Instruments on Purpose: Focused Moment Selection and Averaging for GMM
PIER Working Paper Archive, Penn Institute for Economic Research, Department of Economics, University of Pennsylvania View citations (18)
See also Journal Article Using invalid instruments on purpose: Focused moment selection and averaging for GMM, Journal of Econometrics, Elsevier (2016) View citations (28) (2016)
- Using Invalid Instruments on Purpose: Focused Moment Selection and Averaging for GMM, Second Version
PIER Working Paper Archive, Penn Institute for Economic Research, Department of Economics, University of Pennsylvania View citations (3)
2005
- Yes, Wall Street, There Is a January Effect! Evidence from Laboratory Auctions
Working Papers, Department of Economics, College of William and Mary View citations (7)
Journal Articles
2018
- A generalized focused information criterion for GMM
Journal of Applied Econometrics, 2018, 33, (3), 378-397
2016
- Using invalid instruments on purpose: Focused moment selection and averaging for GMM
Journal of Econometrics, 2016, 195, (2), 187-208 View citations (28)
See also Working Paper Using Invalid Instruments on Purpose: Focused Moment Selection and Averaging for GMM, PIER Working Paper Archive (2014) View citations (18) (2014)
2013
- Portfolio selection: An extreme value approach
Journal of Banking & Finance, 2013, 37, (2), 305-323 View citations (16)
2011
- Measuring altruism in a public goods experiment: a comparison of U.S. and Czech subjects
Experimental Economics, 2011, 14, (3), 426-437 View citations (15)
|
The links between different versions of a paper are constructed automatically by matching on the titles.
Please contact if a link is incorrect.
Use this form
to add links between versions where the titles do not match.
|