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51 - 54 of 54 search results for `study economics` |u:www.cam.ac.uk
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  2. Clubs pay the price: report shows luck determines football managers’…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/news/clubs-pay-the-price-report-shows-luck-determines-football-managers-tenure
    13 Jul 2006: However, according to the Cambridge study, reputation is not determined significantly by the manager’s talent, effort or decision making skills, but mostly by pure luck. ... This remarkably interdisciplinary study by Drs Toke Aidt and Daniel Sgroi with
  3. Overcrowded Internet domain space is stifling demand, suggesting a…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/overcrowded-internet-domain-space-is-stifling-demand-suggesting-a-future-not-com-boom
    Thumbnail for Overcrowded Internet domain space is stifling demand, suggesting a future ‘not-com’ boom | University of Cambridge 1 Mar 2016: Dr Thies Lindenthal from the University of Cambridge, who conducted the study, says that – while the domain name market may be new – the economics is not. ... For the study, published today in the Journal of Real Estate Finance & Economics,
  4. Climate change to shrink economies of rich, poor, hot and cold…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/climate-change-to-shrink-economies-of-rich-poor-hot-and-cold-countries-alike-unless-paris-agreement
    Thumbnail for Climate change to shrink economies of rich, poor, hot and cold countries alike unless Paris Agreement holds | University of Cambridge 19 Aug 2019: of the study from Cambridge’s Faculty of Economics. ... The economics of climate change stretch far beyond the impact on growing crops,” said Mohaddes.
  5. Stress hormones in financial traders may trigger ‘risk aversion’ and…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/stress-hormones-in-financial-traders-may-trigger-risk-aversion-and-contribute-to-market-crises
    Thumbnail for Stress hormones in financial traders may trigger ‘risk aversion’ and contribute to market crises | University of Cambridge 18 Feb 2014: In the latest study they combined field work with lab work, a rare approach in economics, to test for the effects of this elevated cortisol on financial risk-taking. ... While other researchers have argued that women are more risk averse than men, the

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