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  1. Eric S. Maskin Interview Nobel Prize Talks: Eric S. Maskin. Released 2014-03-20. To master modeling is an art, says Eric Maskin. In this conversation recorded on location during a Nobel Media event in Rio de Janeiro, the 2007 Laureate in Economic Sciences explains how models can be applied to help tackle societal issues such as income inequality.

  2. 埃里克·马斯金(Eric Maskin),2007年诺贝尔经济学奖获得者,在现代经济学最为基础的领域里做出了卓越的贡献,其中包括公共选择理论、博弈论、激励理论与信息理论以及机制设计,培养了一大批活跃在世界各地的一流经济学精英。埃里克·马斯金博士以其深邃的理论贡献,严谨的治学态度以及对 ...

  3. Eric Maskin es un economista estadounidense, profesor de Ciencias Sociales en el Instituto de Estudios Avanzados, en Princeton desde 2001. Recibió el Premio Nobel de Economía en 2007 junto al iniciador de la teoría Leonid Hurwicz y Roger B. Myerson. Maskin aportó otro elemento clave en la evolución de la base teórica elaborada por Hurwicz ...

  4. Eric Maskin. The former Albert O. Hirschman Professor of Economics (2000-2012), Eric Maskin is probably best known for his work on the theory of mechanism design for which he shared the 2007 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics. He has made contributions to many other areas of economics as well, including the theory of income inequality, the study ...

  5. 13 de may. de 2024 · Maskin uses a similar approach to his research on mechanism design. He takes different interests and mixes them together to create valuable ideas that enrich our world. Mechanism design, it seemed to me, could help improve the world and affect many people’s lives," he says. "So I thought that was a great combination, the best of two worlds ...

  6. Eric Maskin es profesor Albert O. Hirschman de Ciencias Sociales en el Instituto de Estudios Avanzados de Princeton. Anteriormente fue profesor de economía en la Universidad de Harvard y en el Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Es muy conocido por sus contribuciones a la teoría de diseño de mecanismos.

  7. Eric S. Maskin’s speech at the Nobel Banquet in the Stockholm City Hall, 10 December 2007. Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies and Gentlemen: Robert Kennedy once said, “Some men see things as they are and ask why. I dream of things that never were and ask why not.”.