Leaving airplane middle seats empty could cut coronavirus risk almost in half, a study says
“The airlines are setting their own policies but the airlines and the public should know about the risk implications of their choices."
“The airlines are setting their own policies but the airlines and the public should know about the risk implications of their choices."
A key principle in asset pricing theory is that investors are compensated for bearing systematic risk, but not idiosyncratic risk.
Hyungsoo Kim (MBA ’12) has created an innovative fashion timepiece, The Bradley, that everyone, including the blind, can touch to tell time.
Prof. Negin Golrezaei developed a search model that learns consumer preferences to optimize product rankings.
Michellana Jester writes: "...the new habits we're having to integrate now may already be pushing us to our emotional and physical limits."
Jing Li says: "..there is a real threat to the adoption of clean technology, which could outweigh any 'silver lining' in environmental benefits."
Professor Zeynep Ton takes a look at what makes some jobs bad – and how our economy could invest in better jobs.
Arnold Barnett found an occupied middle seat increased the odds of virus transmission by 79%.
Henry Jacoby and co-authors write: "Ignoring the science to cook the numbers discredits the federal process for public decision-making."
...now is an appropriate time for the federal government to consider economic research carefully in order to provide significant relief...