We are excited to announce the following keynotes for ESAM2019.
Yacine Ait-Sahalia
Yacine Aït-Sahalia is the Otto A. Hack 1903 Professor of Finance and Economics at Princeton University where he served as the inaugural Director of the Bendheim Center for Finance from 1998 until 2014. He was previously an Assistant Professor (1993-96), Associate Professor (1996-98) and Professor of Finance (1998) at the University of Chicago’s Graduate School of Business, where he received the Emory Williams Award for Excellence in Teaching in 1995. His research concentrates on financial econometrics, fixed income and derivative securities, optimal portfolio selection, and has been published in leading academic journals. His research contributions in financial econometrics include various methods to estimate and test continuous-time models that are sampled at discrete time intervals, including nonparametric methods, closed-form expansions for the transition density of continuous-time models and various methods to analyze high frequency data with a particular emphasis on the presence of jumps. He recently authored High Frequency Financial Econometrics with Jean Jacod, served as the editor of the Review of Financial Studies, the co-managing editor of the Journal of Econometrics and an associate editor for Econometrica, the Journal of Finance and the Annals of Statistics. Professor Aït-Sahalia is an elected Fellow of the Econometric Society, the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, the American Statistical Association and the Society for Financial Econometrics. He is also an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Research Fellow, a Fellow of the Guggenheim Foundation and a Research Associate for the National Bureau of Economic Research. He received his Ph.D. in Economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1993 and is a graduate of Ecole Polytechnique in France.
Bronwyn Hall
Bronwyn H. Hall is Professor of Economics Emerita at the University of California at Berkeley and Visiting Professor at the Max Planck Institute‐Munich. She is a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research and the Institute for Fiscal Studies, London, and a Visiting Fellow at the National Institute of Economics and Social Research, London. She was Professor of Economics of Technology and Innovation at the University of Maastricht, Netherlands 2005‐2015. For 30 years, she was the founding partner of TSP International, an econometric software firm. She received a B.A. in physics from Wellesley College in 1966 and a Ph.D. in economics from Stanford University in 1988.
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Professor Hall currently serves as an associate editor of the Economics of Innovation and New Technology and Industrial and Corporate Change. She is a past member of Advisory Boards of the European Patent Office, the Deutsche Institut fuer Wirtschaftsforschung , and the Innovation Research Centre (University of Cambridge and Imperial College), the U.S. Federal Economic Statistics Advisory Committee, the Expert Group on Knowledge for Growth and High Level Panel on Measuring Innovation at the European Commission, the Science, Technology, and Economic Policy (STEP) Board of the National Research Council, where she served on the Intellectual Property, R&D statistics, the New Economy, Comparative Innovation Policy, and the Value of Research in Advancing National Goals committees. She has visited and taught at several institutions such as Oxford University; Cambridge University; L. Bocconi University, Milan; Scuola Superiore Sant’anna, Pisa; University of Bologna; European University Institute, Florence; the Einaudi Foundation, Rome; LMU‐Muenchen; KU Leuven, Belgium; Hitotsubashi University, Tokyo; and the New Economic School, Moscow.