Sabety, P., and Carlson, V. (2003). Using information to drive change: New ways of
moving markets. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution.
Schlag, K. (1998). Why imitate, and if so, how? A boundedly rational approach to
multi-armed bandits. Journal of Economic Theory, 78, 130-56.
Schlag, K. (1999). Which one should I imitate? Journal of Mathematical Economics,
31, 493-522.
Schmitt, N. (1995). Product imitation, product differentiation and international
trade. International Economic Review, 36, 503-608.
Schwartz, H. (1987). Perception, judgment and motivation in manufacturing enter-
prises: Findings and preliminary hypotheses from in-depth interviews. Journal
of Economic Behavior and Organization 8, 543-65.
Schwartz, H. (2004). The economic analysis underlying corporate decision making:
What economists do when confronted with business realities. Business Eco-
nomics, 39, 50-59.
Seamans, R. (2006). How does clustering by cable TV firms affect technology diffu-
sion? Working Paper, University of California-Berkeley.
Simon, H. A. (1954). Bandwagon and underdog effects and the possibility of election
predictions. Public Opinion Quarterly, 18, 245-253.
Simon, H. A. (1955). A behavioral model of rational choice. The Quarterly Journal
of Economics, 69, 99-118.
Sinclair, P. J. N. (1990). The economics of imitation. Scottish Journal of Political
Economy, 37, 113-144.
Turner, M.A. (2007). A simple theory of smart growth and sprawl. Journal of Urban
Economics, 61, 2144.
Vega-Redondo, F. (1997). The evolution of Walrasian behavior. Econometrica, 65,
375-384.
34