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Mark A. Satterthwaite

Researcher at Northwestern University

Publications -  136
Citations -  15615

Mark A. Satterthwaite is an academic researcher from Northwestern University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gravitational wave & LIGO. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 136 publications receiving 14897 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark A. Satterthwaite include University of Zielona Góra & Australian National University.

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Strategy-proofness and Arrow's conditions: Existence and correspondence theorems for voting procedures and social welfare functions

TL;DR: In this paper, the strategy-proofness condition for voting procedures corresponds to Arrow's rationality, independence of irrelevant alternatives, nonnegative response, and citizens' sovereignty conditions for social welfare functions.
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Efficient Mechanisms for Bilateral Trading

TL;DR: In this article, the seller's valuation and the buyer's valuation for a single object are assumed to be independent random variables, and each individual's valuation is unknown to the other.
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Predictions for the rates of compact binary coalescences observable by ground-based gravitational-wave detectors

J. Abadie, +722 more
TL;DR: In this paper, Kalogera et al. presented an up-to-date summary of the rates for all types of compact binary coalescence sources detectable by the initial and advanced versions of the ground-based gravitational-wave detectors LIGO and Virgo.
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Predictions for the Rates of Compact Binary Coalescences Observable by Ground-based Gravitational-wave Detectors

J. Abadie, +709 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an up-to-date summary of the rates for all types of compact binary coalescence sources detectable by the Initial and Advanced versions of the ground-based LIGO and Virgo Astrophysical estimates for compact-binary coalescence rates depend on a number of assumptions and unknown model parameters.
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Is More Information Better? The Effects of 'Report Cards' on Health Care Providers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used national data on Medicare patients at risk for cardiac surgery and found that cardiac surgery report cards in New York and Pennsylvania led both to selection behavior by providers and to improved matching of patients with hospitals.