Evgeny Zalyubovsky
eugenezal.bsky.social
Evgeny Zalyubovsky
@eugenezal.bsky.social
PhD student/Prae-Doc @ University of Vienna; MSc @ HSE, BAE @ HSE/NES, both in Moscow. Econ theory, info econ, game theory; music, Star Wars, a bit of photography…
As far as I understand, this is sadly not fiction, but rather an attempt to simulate media coverage of real events as if they were happening in a country other than the US
February 1, 2025 at 8:17 PM


Has anyone else also noticed (or even better, documented) this bias? Or am I myself biased about it?

Also, has anyone checked how good a proxy Twitter/X actually is/was for purposes of measuring economic sentiment?
January 16, 2025 at 1:00 PM
My bad, I managed to miss/forget that you’re not one of the coauthors for this paper. 🙈
I better go sleep then 😄
January 6, 2025 at 9:38 PM
*profits are technically higher from paying employees less, at least in the short run. PV might be too sensitive to chosen projections and/or market valuation of observed changes. In a nutshell, I meant some (medium-term?) metric (combo?) to distinguish cash squeeze from sustainable growth
January 6, 2025 at 9:33 PM
Do low-pay workers’ earnings not fall (stat. significantly) just because there isn’t enough room above the minimal wages for them to fall?

Also, can anything be said on whether these firms with increased inst. ownership are actually “healthier” (have higher survival rates, success metrics*)?
January 6, 2025 at 9:21 PM
Still occurs on some (linear? 😉) beaches that I’ve seen, but is IMO increasingly rare even there
January 6, 2025 at 2:15 AM
Reposted by Evgeny Zalyubovsky
Stephen Spiller (@spillersas.bsky.social) reanalyzed multiple open datasets to reveal that “Widely-Used Measures of #Overconfidence Are Confounded With Ability”

Dr. Spiller and the paper are on #Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?vi...

#psychometrics #openScience #cogSci #JDM #assessment
November 23, 2024 at 7:49 PM
I'm not too experienced, but I've only ever seen i/I or n/N used to denote players in a game. P would sometimes be used as a probability function P() instead of Pr() or, very rarely, for payoffs, and p, together with q, would often be used as a parameter (especially for probabilities or beliefs)
November 17, 2024 at 12:38 AM