0 found or coming from within something, for example a system or a person's body or mind: --
1 used in economics to describe something that is inside a particular system, rather than outside that system: --
Pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic analysis of antipsychotics-induced extrapyramidal symptoms based on receptor occupancy theory incorporating endogenous dopamine release.
What all this means is that endogenous changes in social norms may accentuate problems of moral hazard in connection with various welfare-state arrangements.
For example, the rules may state when variables must be exogenous/endogenous, when certain phenomena/ processes must be included in the model, and so on.
By adopting the endogenous configuration space approach we propose two kinematic dexterity measures, called local and global dexterity.
Evidently, the modeling of endogenous movements of wages and interest rates is important.
The endogenous discount factor model exhibits some significantly important undesirable properties, such as the impatience effect and implausible dynamics generated by permanent productivity shocks.
The endogenous income distribution is found to exhibit bimodality, with the lower-income group attending public schools and the upper-income group attending private schools.
We study comparative statics results for the steady-state monetary equilibria of a simple random matching model of money with endogenous prices and no extrinsic uncertainty.