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Justin Burkett

Justin Burkett

· Associate Professor, Interim Director of Doctoral ProgramsVerified

Georgia Institute of Technology · Economics

Active 2006–2025

h-index7
Citations127
Papers259 last 5y
Funding
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About

Justin Burkett is an Associate Professor of Economics at Georgia Tech since 2020. His research interests include Auctions, and he has held positions at Georgia Tech and Wake Forest University.

Research topics

  • Computer Science
  • Economics
  • Microeconomics
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Econometrics
  • Engineering
  • Mathematical economics
  • Industrial organization
  • Environmental economics

Selected publications

  • Intertemporal allocation with unknown discounting

    Journal of Economic Theory · 2025-05-27

    article1st authorCorresponding
  • Statistical uncertainty and coarse contracts

    Journal of Economic Theory · 2024 · 4 citations

    1st authorCorresponding
    • Econometrics
    • Economics
    • Mathematical economics
  • Utilization and perception of a digital clinical tracking tool in undergraduate nursing education

    Teaching and learning in nursing · 2024-03-06 · 3 citations

    articleOpen access

    Evaluating undergraduate nursing students’ clinical performance is a complex practice that relies on outdated methods that do not align with the growing use of technology in nursing curricula. This study is an exploration of nursing students’ and clinical instructors’ experiences using a digital evaluation tool or traditional paper-based evaluation tool. Third year nursing students and clinical instructors were given the opportunity to use a digital or paper-based evaluation tool during one semester; a survey was sent to all participants at the end of the semester. Student survey responses indicated that they preferred the digital evaluation tool as it provided for timely and specific in self-reflection and instructor feedback that was easily accessible. A digital evaluation tool is effective in supporting nursing students in the clinical evaluation process through encouraging reflection on specific learning behaviors, timely feedback from instructors, and an overall improvement in their clinical practice.

  • Data-driven contract design

    Journal of Economic Theory · 2024-08-24 · 2 citations

    article1st author
  • Improving the evaluation of clinical competence in undergraduate students, evidence and technology: An integrative review

    Journal of Professional Nursing · 2024-10-10 · 2 citations

    review
  • Data-Driven Contract Design

    2023

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Computer Science
    • Business
    • Computer Science
  • Virtual Reality in Today’s Healthcare Settings: An Analysis Using the Alberta Quality Matrix for Health

    Healthcare Quarterly · 2022-07-29 · 3 citations

    article

    Virtual reality (VR) is emerging as a treatment modality across a variety of healthcare settings. Integrating a new technology as a form of therapy requires informed analysis to ensure that it is an effective, efficient, safe and valuable addition to the client experience. Using the Alberta Quality Matrix for Health as a framework, this detailed analysis examines the application of VR in pain management, mental health, stroke rehabilitation and palliative care. Through this multifocal lens, gaps are identified and a glimpse is provided into VR's potential for widespread adoption across healthcare settings.

  • The Effect of Prosumer Duality on Power Market: Evidence From the Cournot Model

    IEEE Transactions on Power Systems · 2022 · 15 citations

    • Industrial organization
    • Economics
    • Microeconomics

    Distributed energy resources and market deregulation enable traditional electricity consumers to become prosumers (producers/consumers) that can use their idle production capacity or concentrate production and consumption assets. Emerging prosumers can provide benefits to the system by exchanging energy and energy-related services. More importantly, they can do so in a more competitive way than the traditional producer/consumer systems. We extend the traditional Cournot model to show that the dual nature of prosumers can lead to more competitive behavior under a game theoretic scenario. We show that best response supply quantities of a prosumer are usually closer to the competitive level compared to those of a producer. We further extend these findings to model prosumer behavior in the presence of transmission constraints, production uncertainty, demand, and production costs.

  • Data-Driven Contract Design

    SSRN Electronic Journal · 2022 · 1 citations

    1st authorCorresponding
    • Computer Science
    • Business
    • Computer Science
  • The Effect of Prosumer Duality on Power Market: Evidence from the Cournot Model

    arXiv (Cornell University) · 2021-03-04

    preprintOpen access

    Distributed energy resources behind the meter and automation systems enable traditional electricity consumers to become prosumers (producers/consumers) that can participate in peer-to-peer exchange of electricity and in retail electricity markets. Emerging prosumers can provide benefits to the system by exchanging energy and energy-related services. More importantly, they can do so in a more honest and more competitive way than the traditional producer/consumer systems. We extend the traditional Cournot model to show that the dual nature of prosumers can lead to more competitive behavior under a game theoretic scenario. We show that best response supply quantities of a prosumer are usually closer to the competitive level compared to those of a producer.

Frequent coauthors

  • Brian Baisa

    Amherst College

    7 shared
  • Maxwell Rosenthal

    4 shared
  • Santiago Grijalva

    Georgia Institute of Technology

    2 shared
  • Eve Tsybina

    National Transportation Research Center

    2 shared
  • Paul Wright

    2 shared
  • Kyle Woodward

    GoPro (United States)

    2 shared
  • Emel Filiz‐Ozbay

    2 shared
  • Anne Arvidson

    University of Calgary

    2 shared

Labs

Education

  • Ph.D., Economics

    University of Maryland, College Park

    2012
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