Andrew B. Whinston
Andrew B. Whinston (born June 3, 1936), is an American economist and computer scientist. He serves as the Hugh Roy Cullen Centennial Chair in Business Administration and works as a Professor of Information Systems, Computer Science, and Economics, and Director of the Center for Research in Electronic Commerce (CREC) in the McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin.In the late 1950s, he was Sanxsay Fellow at Princeton University. Whinston achieved his PhD from the Carnegie Institute of Technology in 1962, when he also received the Alexander Henderson Award for Excellence in Economic Theory. He then started working at the economics department of Yale University, where he was a member of the Cowles Foundation. In 1964, he became Associate Professor of Economics at University of Virginia. By 1966, he was a Full Professor at Purdue University, where he became the university's inaugural Weiler Distinguished Professor of management, economics, and computer science.
In 1962, Whinston published a research paper in the ''Journal of Political Economy'' on how non-cooperative game theory could be applied to issues in microeconomics. In a second paper entitled "A Model of Multi-Period Investment Under Uncertainty", which appeared in ''Management Science,'' he used nonlinear optimization methods to determine optimal portfolios over time.
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