Britta Hoyer
University of Paderborn
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Publication
Featured researches published by Britta Hoyer.
Defence and Peace Economics | 2016
Kris De Jaegher; Britta Hoyer
How is collective defence by players affected when they face a threat from an intelligent attacker rather than a natural threat? This paper analyses this question using a game-theoretic model. Facing an intelligent attacker has an effect if players move first and visibly set their defence strategies, thereby exposing any players who do not defend, and if the attacker is, moreover, not able to commit to a random attack. Depending on the parameters of the game, the presence of an intelligent attacker either increases the probability that players jointly defend (where such joint defence either does or does not constitute a utilitarian optimum), or decreases the probability that players jointly defend (even though joint defence is a utilitarian optimum).
Applied Economics Letters | 2019
Daniel Kaimann; Britta Hoyer
ABSTRACT We investigate the degree of price competition among telecommunication firms. Underlying a Bertrand model of price competition, we empirically model pricing behaviour in an oligopoly. We analyse panel data of individual pricing information of mobile phone contracts offered between 2011 and 2017. We provide empirical evidence that price differences as well as reputational effects serve as a signal to buyers and significantly affect market demand. Additionally, we find that brands lead to an increase in demand and thus are able to generate spillover effects even after price increase.
Journal of Conflict Resolution | 2018
Kris De Jaegher; Britta Hoyer
We present a game-theoretic model of the repression–dissent nexus, focusing on preemptive repression. A small group of instigating dissidents triggers a protest if each dissident participates. The dissidents face random checks by security forces, and when an individual dissident is caught while preparing to participate, he or she is prevented from doing so. Each dissident can invest in countermeasures, which make checks ineffective. For large benefits of protest, higher preemptive repression in the form of a higher number of checks has a deterrence effect and makes dissidents less prone to invest in countermeasures, decreasing the probability of protest. For small benefits of protest, higher preemptive repression instead has a backfiring effect. Both myopic and farsighted governments avoid the backfiring effect by setting low levels of preemptive repression (velvet-glove strategy). However, only a farsighted government is able to exploit the deterrence effect by maintaining a high level of preemptive repression (iron-fist strategy).
Journal of Theoretical Biology | 2016
Kris De Jaegher; Britta Hoyer
Archive | 2012
Britta Hoyer
Archive | 2012
K. de Jaegher; Britta Hoyer
Archive | 2015
Hans Haller; Britta Hoyer
Archive | 2017
Sonja Brangewitz; Behnud Mir Djawadi; Angelika Endres; Britta Hoyer
Archive | 2017
Britta Hoyer; Nadja Stroh-Maraun
Archive | 2016
Britta Hoyer; T.M. van Huizen; L.M. Keijzer; T. Rezaei Khavas; Stephanie Rosenkranz; Bastian Westbrock