Roy Radner is a Leonard N. Stern School Professor of Business at New York University. He teaches microeconomics and interdisciplinary topics. His current research interests include bounded rationality, strategic analysis of global climate change, game-theoretic models of corruption, pricing of information goods, statistical theory of data mining, models of information processing and decentralization, and pricing fo information goods. He did his undergraduate and graduate studies at the University of Chicago, receiving an M.S. in mathematics (1951) and a Ph.D. in mathematical statistics (1956). He is a member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is also a Distinguished Fellow of the American Economics Association and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, is a Fellow and Past-President of the Econometric Society, and has been a Guggenheim Foundation Fellow and an Overseas Fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge. He is on the editorial boards of several journals, and regularly serves on committees of the National Research Council. Dr. Radner came to NYU Stern in 1995. Prior to that, he was a faculty member at the University of California, Berkeley, and a Distinguished Member of Technical Staff at AT&T Bell Laboratories.