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Libby Weber

Researcher at University of California, Irvine

Publications -  21
Citations -  623

Libby Weber is an academic researcher from University of California, Irvine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transaction cost & Bounded rationality. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 19 publications receiving 513 citations. Previous affiliations of Libby Weber include University of Southern California.

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Designing Effective Contracts: Exploring the Influence of Framing and Expectations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that the contract frame determines its impact, and that promotion and prevention-framed contracts induce different emotions, behaviors, and expectations, leading to different exchange outcomes and relationships, depending on the context.
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Moving Opportunism to the Back Seat: Bounded Rationality, Costly Conflict, and Hierarchical Forms

TL;DR: The authors argue that bounded rationality is a separate source of transaction costs and that these costs are not equally mitigated by all forms of hierarchy, allowing certain hierarchical forms to be associated with particular frames and social referents that naturally enhance specific bounded rationality based conflicts.
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Transaction Cost Economics and the Cognitive Perspective: Investigating the Sources and Governance of Interpretive Uncertainty

TL;DR: In contrast to traditional transaction cost economics hazards, which are derived from transaction characteristics, interpretive uncertainty is driven by relational characteristics (the attributes of the parties in relation to each other) and is mitigated by aligning the frames of the exchange partners rather than by traditional safeguards, such as penalty clauses as mentioned in this paper.
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An Analysis of Extendibility and Early Termination Provisions: The Importance of Framing Duration Safeguards

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors augment transaction cost economics with social cognitive psychology to show that contract framing is an important element in minimizing issues in focal exchanges and managing buyer-supplier rela...
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Presenilin-1 immunoreactivity is localized intracellularly in Alzheimer's disease brain, but not detected in amyloid plaques

TL;DR: Immunohistochemical analysis of postmortem brain tissue from control and Alzheimer's disease patients using this SW2 antibody indicates an intracellular localization of PS-1 immunoreactivity with prominent perinuclear characteristics in neurons, with staining also detected in neuritic processes.