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Jeffrey Bennett

Researcher at Anschutz Medical Campus

Publications -  581
Citations -  25101

Jeffrey Bennett is an academic researcher from Anschutz Medical Campus. The author has contributed to research in topics: Choice modelling & Neuromyelitis optica. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 544 publications receiving 21098 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeffrey Bennett include Centre for Development Studies & Boston Children's Hospital.

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The Significance of the Environment and its Regulation to Australia's Tourism Industry

TL;DR: In this paper, the importance of the natural environment to the tourism industry from the perspective of tourism operators is established and the cases in which government regulation of the environment may be justified are identified.
Posted ContentDOI

Willingness to pay for wetland improvement in Vietnam's Mekong River Delta

TL;DR: Choi et al. as mentioned in this paper used choice modeling to estimate biodiversity values of Tram Chim National Park in Vietnam and found that Vietnamese respondents are willing to pay for the wetland conservation.
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Understanding herders' stocking rate decisions in response to policy initiatives

TL;DR: It was found that while increasing the extent of loan payments and subsidies were popular amongst the herder respondents; these policy options are predicted to have no significant effect on stocking rates and only the policy of increasing pension payments was shown to be both popular amongst respondents and effective in reducing stocking rates.
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Differential Effects of Fingolimod and Natalizumab on B Cell Repertoires in Multiple Sclerosis Patients

TL;DR: It is suggested that natalizumab diminishes the exchange of peripheral and intrathecal B cells without impacting intrathe CAL clonal expansion, and fingolimod treatment fails to alter blood–brain barrier B cell exchange but diminishes intratheCal clonalansion.
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Strategic behaviour: Some experimental evidence

TL;DR: In this article, a test to detect the presence of strategic bias in responses to direct willingness to pay questioning is developed and applied in an experimental setting involving three separate groups of individuals.