TAKESHI AMEMIYA
Edward Ames Edmonds Professor of Economics
Ph.D. Johns Hopkins University; M.A. The American University.
Research Interests: Econometric theory, Plato and Aristotle, ancient Greek economy.
Current Research: Econometric theory, Plato and Aristotle, ancient Greek economy.
Representative Recent Publications: (1) “Endogenous Sampling in Duration Models,” Monetary and Economic Studies, 2001, Vol.19, No. 3, 77-96; (2) “A Generalization of the Nested Logit Model” in Klein and Mittnik, eds., Contribution to Modern Econometrics, Kluwer 2002; (3) “Reply to John Davies,” in Manning and Morris eds., The Ancient Economy: Evidence and Models, Stanford University Press (forthcoming).
Teaching Interests: Econometrics (undergraduate and graduate levels), economy and economics of ancient Greece.
Technical Skills: Mathematics, statistics, Japanese language, classical Greek.
Cross-Disciplinary Interests: Statistics, Japanese studies, classical Greek culture, and Greek philosophy.
Professional Affiliations: Econometric Society (Fellow), American Statistical Association (Fellow), American Academy of Arts and Sciences, International Statistical Institute, Co-Editor, Journal of Econometrics.