M
Marco Boeri
Researcher at Queen's University Belfast
Publications - 69
Citations - 2090
Marco Boeri is an academic researcher from Queen's University Belfast. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Regret. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 57 publications receiving 1797 citations. Previous affiliations of Marco Boeri include Research Triangle Park & RTI International.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
The STARTEC Decision Support Tool for Better Tradeoffs between Food Safety, Quality, Nutrition, and Costs in Production of Advanced Ready-to-Eat Foods
Taran Skjerdal,Andras Gefferth,Miroslav Spajic,Edurne Gaston Estanga,Alessandra De Cesare,Silvia Vitali,Frederique Pasquali,Federica Bovo,Gerardo Manfreda,Rocco Mancusi,Marcello Trevisiani,Girum Tadesse Tessema,Tone Mathisen Fagereng,Lena Haugland Moen,Lars Lyshaug,Anastasios Koidis,Gonzalo Delgado-Pando,Alexandros Ch. Stratakos,Marco Boeri,Cecilie From,Hyat Syed,Mirko Muccioli,Roberto Mulazzani,Catherine Halbert +23 more
TL;DR: Compared to other decision support tools, the STARTEC-tool is product-specific and multidisciplinary and includes interpretation and targeted recommendations for end-users.
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Random regret minimization: Exploration of a new choice model for environmental and resource economics
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce the discrete choice model-paradigm of Random Regret Minimization (RRM) to the field of environmental and resource economics, and compare RRM-based models with RUM-based ones in terms of parameter estimates, goodness of fit, elasticities and consequential policy implications.
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Young Women's Stated Preferences for Biomedical HIV Prevention: Results of a Discrete Choice Experiment in Kenya and South Africa.
Alexandra Minnis,Alexandra Minnis,Erica N Browne,Marco Boeri,Kawango Agot,Ariane van der Straten,Ariane van der Straten,Khatija Ahmed,Rachel Weinrib,Carol Mansfield +9 more
TL;DR: This paper conducted a discrete choice experiment survey with 536 women aged 18-30 years to assess preferences for hypothetical HIV prevention products characterized by the attributes of efficacy, pregnancy prevention, delivery form, dosing frequency, and side effects.
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Learning, fatigue and preference formation in discrete choice experiments
TL;DR: It is found in a field study that learning and fatigue behavior may only be exhibited by a small subset of respondents, but most respondents in the sample show preference and variance stability consistent with rational pre-existent and well formed preferences.
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Food fraud and consumers' choices in the wake of the horsemeat scandal
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate consumers' preferences across Europe for a selected ready meal, ready to heat (RTH) fresh lasagne, to consider whether the effects of potential food frauds on consumers' choices can be mitigated by introducing enhanced standards of RTH products.