Doctoral Committee
Contents
Committee Pages
Committee members can access the Committee Pages to see my current schedule, recent work, and so forth.
Doctoral Committee Members
My dissertation committee at Berkely is comprised of:
Michael Katz
Michael is the chair of my dissertation committee. He is an excellent economic theorist and his primary research area is the economics of innovation. I took two directed studies courses with Michael in 2010, and was proud to have him on my oral's committee.
I currently work with Michael on Models of Venture Capital and research related to Patents. Michael is my theory guru, though he provides input into every aspect of my work.
Toby Stuart
Toby is the co-chair of my dissertation committee and is currently visiting Berkeley from Harvard. Toby claims to be a sociologist, but is also a fantastic empiricist and one of the leading names in the entrepreneurship literature. I met Toby in a meeting with Silicon Valley Bank, and am glad to call him both a friend and a mentor.
I currently work with Toby on a project Attributing Performance to VC Partners and another relating to Online Dating. Toby is my empirical guru.
Christine Parlour
Christine is my finance field advisor. I met Christine when I took her Market Microstructure class. Christine is a superb contract theorist and brings her finance perspective to my research.
I have auditted or taken (for grade) the Discrete Time Asset Pricing, Macro Finance, Empirical Finance, Corporate Finance, and Market Microstructure courses offered at Berkeley, and Christine helps me to bring a finance perspective to my research.
Suzanne Scotchmer
Suzanne is my 'outside' advisor. Suzanne holds Chairs in the Economics Department, The Goldman School of Public Policy, and the School of Law at UC Berkeley, and brings her unique and refreshing perspective to my work. I was delighted to have Suzanne as the outside member of my Oral's Committee and heartily recommend her book to other PhDs considering research on innovation and incentives.
Oral's Committee
Dave Mowery
Dave is an economic historian and is famous for his work on the effects of policy towards university-based innovation. Dave was the chair of my oral's committee, and is the supervisor of my collegue (and office-mate) Neil Thompson.
Steve Tadelis
Steve is (in-)famous amongst economics and business grad-students the world over as one the authors of the Solutions Manual for Mas-Colell, Whinston and Green. His research focuses on contract theory. I took both his contract theory class and a directed studies class on the theory of the firm with him. I also won the Earl F. Cheit Teaching award for GSI-ing MBA Microeconomics under him.
Other Mentors
Jim Brander
Jim is worshipped as a benevolent God in some parts of Canada, and I am one of his loyalest devotees. You can read about Jim on wikipedia (I didn't write that entry). Jim was my supervisor (i.e. committee chair) at the Sauder School of Business at UBC and is an economic polymath, equally superb in theory and empirics, and covering a range of topics from International Trade to Venture Capital.
Thomas Hellmann
Thomas is a clear leader in the field on entrepreneurial finance, and was my second supervisor at UBC. Thomas and I worked together on a number of highly data-intensive projects, and I took my first directed studies class in venture capital from him. I was delighted to attend his NBER Entrepreneurship Research Boot Camp in July 2011.
Bronwyn Hall
Bronwyn was one of the original reasons I applied to Berkeley. Bronwyn is now retired (she claims she retired more than five years ago), but her expertise in empricial analysis, particularly of patent data, is unrivalled. Bronwyn refered me to Iain Cockburn (at the NBER), and got me my job at the NBER Patent Data Project.