Showing posts with label names. Show all posts
Showing posts with label names. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Some Links

1. It's not your peers, and it's not your friends: Some progress toward understanding the educational peer effect mechanism

2. Econometric Methods for Causal Evaluation of Education Policies and Practices:
A Non-Technical Guide

3. Denis the Dentist: people disproportionately choose careers whose labels resemble their names

4. http://www.babynamewizard.com/

5. Penelope Trunk: Brazen Careerist

6. Randomness, Luck, and other Situational Sources of Success and Failure

7. Why jobs obtained through networks may lower your earnings

8. Vive la Révolution!: Long term returns of 1968 to the angry students

9. Simultaneous behaviour: during the Winter Olympics in Edmonton (Canada) (HT: Eoin Rouine)

Monday, April 02, 2007

Whats in a name?



By: C. Mirjam van Praag , Bernard M.S. van Praag
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp2673&r=cbe
Alphabetic name ordering on multi-authored academic papers, which is the convention in the economics discipline and various other disciplines, is to the advantage of people whose last name initials are placed early in the alphabet. As it turns out, Professor A, who has been a first author more often than Professor Z, will have published more articles and experienced a faster growth rate over the course of her career as a result of reputation and visibility. Moreover, authors know that name ordering matters and indeed take ordering seriously: Several characteristics of an author group composition determine the decision to deviate from the default alphabetic name order to a significant extent.