Below is the progam
October 24, 5:30 - 8:00 pm
- Welcome Reception, Hotel Paradox
- Registration Desk Open, Hotel Paradox
Friday, October 25, 8:00 am -9:00 am
Plenary Session: Rachel Croson, University of Texas Arlington, "Experimental Economics Imperialism"
Chair: Tim Cason
Chair: Tim Cason
Friday, October 25, 7:30 am - 6:30 pm
Registration Desk Open, Hotel Paradox
Paradox Breakfast Buffet, Solaire Restaurant, 6:30 - 8:30 am
Paradox Lunch Buffet, Solaire Restaurant, 12:00 - 1:20 pm
Paradox Breakfast Buffet, Solaire Restaurant, 6:30 - 8:30 am
Paradox Lunch Buffet, Solaire Restaurant, 12:00 - 1:20 pm
Friday, October 25, 9am - 6:00 pm
Experimental Software and Hardware Demos, Hotel Paradox
- Table 1: Driving Simulator, Lisa Rutstrom
- Table 2: MobLab: interactive markets and games on mobile devices, Walter Yuan and Rachel Bodsky
Friday, October 25, 9:20am - 10:20am
Session 1, Sequoia A: Auctions: Bidding Behavior
- Anmol Ratan, Does anticipated loss-aversion explain overbidding in first-price auctions?
- Shang Wu, The Willingness-to-Pay Discrepancy between Incentive Compatible Auctions and Posted Price Offerings
- Theodore Turocy, Bidding behavior in affiliated-values first-price auctions
Session 2, Sequoia B: Conflict and Contests
- Roman Sheremeta, Commitment Problems in Conflict Resolution
- William Ingersoll, Agent Bargaining
- Charles Holt, An Experimental Analysis of Asymmetric Power in Conflict Bargaining
Session 3, Sequoia C: Games: Sophistication and Expertise
- Tobias Salz, Estimating Dynamic Games of Oligopolistic Competition: An Experimental Investigation
- Natalia Mishagina, COORDINATION, COMMON KNOWLEDGE AND AN H1N1 OUTBREAK
- John Wooders, Blind Stealing: Experience and Expertise in a Mixed-Strategy Poker Experiment
Session 4, Sequoia D: Market Design 1
- Ahrash Dianat, Experiments on Strategic Behavior and Equilibrium Selection in Two-Sided Matching Markets
- Ming Jiang, An Experimental Study of Chinese College Admissions
- Judd Kessler, An Experimental Test of a Complex Market Design: Changing the Course Allocation System at Wharton
Session 5, Grove: Risk Preference
- Salar Jahedi, The Role of Information in Explaining Decoy Effects
- Marina Schroder, Dictating the Risk
- James Andreoni, Unexpected Utility: Testing Expected Utility and Its Alternatives using Convex Risk Budgets
Session 6, Cypress: Interpersonal Influence
- Dietmar Fehr, Talking about others: Gossip as a means to increase trust and cooperation
- Marco Kleine, Fairness and Persuasion - How Stakeholders' Statements influence Third-Party Distribution
- Lucas Coffman, Interpersonal Influence
Session 7, Fitness Center: Cooperation and Institutions 2
- David Kingsley, Endowment Heterogeneity and Informal Sanctions in a Public Goods Experiment
- Claudia Keser, Cooperation among heterogeneous agents
- Martin Schmidt, Cooperation and punishment among heterogeneous agents
Friday, October 25, 10:40am - 12:00pm
Session 1, Sequoia A: Decision Making Under Ambiguity
- Charles Sprenger, On Measuring Ambiguity Aversion
- Oscar Zapata, The effect of ambiguity on preferences over gains and losses: Experimental evidence
- Alex Roomets, Unintended Hedging in Ambiguity Experiments
- Yoram Halevy, No Two Experiments are Identical
Session 2, Sequoia B: Repeated Games 1
- Kenju Kamei, Play it Again: Partner Choice, Reputation Building and Learning in Restarting Finitely-Repeated Dilemma Games
- Lijia Tan, Voluntary Contribution Mechanism Played over an Infinite HorizonVoluntary Contribution Mechanism Played over an Infinite Horizon Voluntary Contribution Mechanism Played over an Infinite Horizon
- Sean D'Evelyn, Dump, Date, or Marry: Endogenous Group Formation with Varied Contract Length
- Jan Potters, Flexibility and collusion with imperfect monitoring
Session 3, Sequoia C: Finance 1
- Jens Schubert, Creating Bubbles Out of Thin Air: The Effect of Biased Reward Functions on Price Convergence and Volatility
- Oege Dijk, Bank Run Psychology
- Anya (Savikhin) Samak, Effect of Visual Representation and Experience on Asset Market Bubbles
- Shengle Lin, Marked to Market Accounting and Financial Market Instability: Experimental Evidence
Session 4, Sequoia D: Belief Formation
- Eric Cardella, The Impact of Variance and Skewness of Court Awards on Eminent Domain
- Stephanie Heger, Performance Uncertainty and Optimistic Beliefs
- Justin Rao, Filter Bubbles, Echo Chambers, and Ideological Segregation in Online News Consumption
- Philip Brookins, Reducing within-group overconfidence through group identity and between-groups confidence judgements
Session 5, Grove: Environmental 1
- Hernan Bejarano, Do Cab Drivers Charge for Congestion? A Traffic Field Experiment in Lima, Peru
- Dina Tasneem, An Experimental Study of a Common Property Renewable Resource Game in Continuous Time
- Rami Harb, Driving Responses and Opinions: How Do Drivers React to Road Pricing?
Session 6, Cypress: Bargaining (Behavioral)
- Georg Primes, It's not all in the face - Misjudging your opponents in competitive bargaining.
- Johannes Jaschke, I see you, you see me: how perceived facial dominance and trustworthiness influence bargaining behavior.
- Kristian Lopez Vargas, The Demand for Expressing Emotions
- Theo Offerman, In Search of the Angry Button
Session 7, Fitness Center: Cooperation and Institutions 1
- Eric Dickson, Legitimate Authority, Procedural Fairness, and Communication: A Public Goods Experiment
- Dimitry Mezhvinsky, Boycotting and Buycotting: Third-Party Punishment and Reward in Groups
- Tobias Cagala, Cooperation under Third-Party Rent Extraction
- E Lance Howe, To punish or withhold? Implicit versus explicit sanctions in a risky social dilemma: evidence from Kamchatka, Russia.
Friday, October 25, 1:20pm - 2:40pm
Session 1, Sequoia A: Networks
- Arya Gaduh, The Strategic Formation of Networks: Experimental Evidence
- David Rojo Arjona, Centrality, Control and Exclusion in Network Social Dilemmas
- Julian Romero, Hysteresis of Network Formation
- Rong Rong, Growing the Right Stars: A Laboratory Study on Network Formation with Heterogeneous Agents
Session 2, Sequoia B: Repeated Games 2
- Guillaume Frechette, The Impact of Monitoring in Infinitely Repeated Games: Perfect, Public, and Private
- Siqian Zhu, A Comment on Cycles and Instability in a Rock-Paper-Scissors Population Game: A Continuous Time Experiment
- Ajalavat Viriyavipart, Testing Global Games, Risk Dominance, and Payoff Dominance in Repeated Global Stag Hunt Games
- John Ledyard, Repeated Battle of Sexes: Experimental Evidence and Individual Evolutionary Learning
Session 3, Sequoia C: Finance 2
- Tomoki Kitamura, An Experimental Analysis of Bubble: Private Information and Trading Behavior
- Michael McBride, Limelight on Dark Markets: An Experimental Study of Liquidity and Information
- Isabel Trevino, Understanding the channels of financial contagion: Theory and experiments
Session 4, Sequoia D: Special Session: Pay Protocols
- James C. Cox, Paradoxes and Mechanisms for Choice under Risk
- Yoram Halevy, Elicitation of Risk and Uncertainty Preferences
- Paul Healy, Incentives in Experiments: The RPS Mechanism
Session 5, Grove: Environmental 2
- Jacob Fooks, Experiments in Environmental Service Provisioning Mechanisms with Spatially Explicit Externalities: An Application in Coastal Infrastructure
- Christopher Anderson, Evaluating Common Pools to Mitigate Shutdown and Market Risk in Multi-output Quota Markets with Stochastic Production Ratios
- James Murphy, Price Controls and Banking in Emissions Trading Programs
Session 6, Cypress: Labor 1
- John Hamman, Dependency Status and Preferences for Social Insurance
- Laura Gee, The More You Know: How Information affects job search in a large field experiment
- Tracy Liu, Right Contract for Right Workers? Survey and Experimental Evidence
- Mongoljin Batsaikhan, Trust, Trustworthiness, and Success in Business
Session 7, Fitness Center: Beliefs and Others Behavior
- Yun Wang, An Experimental Investigation on Belief and Higher-Order Belief in the Centipede Games
- Alison Sanchez, An Experimental Analysis of the Cognitive Processes Underlying Beliefs and Perception Manipulation
- Jeffrey Butler, Inequality and Relative Ability Beliefs
- Erik Kimbrough, Theory of Mind: Theory and Experiment
Friday, October 25, 3:00pm - 4:20pm
Session 1, Sequoia A: Cooperation and Institutions 3
- Alexander Smith, Investing in Institutions for Cooperation
- Brock Stoddard, Uncertainty in Payoff-Equivalent Appropriation and Provision Games
- Menusch Khadjavi, Setting the Bar - An Experimental Investigation of Immigration Requirements
- Qilin Zhang, Punishment with Uncertainty in Public Goods Experiment
Session 2, Sequoia B: Repeated Games 3
- Andrew Kloosterman, Cooperation in Stochastically Evolving Environments: An Experimental Study of Public Information in Markov Games
- Steven Wu, Endogenous Incomplete Contracts: Theory and Experiments
- Kyle Hyndman, An Experimental Investigation into the Success or Failure of Joint Ventures
Session 3, Sequoia C: Industrial Organization 1
- Vjollca Sadiraj, Higher Quality and Lower Cost from Improving Hospital Discharge Decision Making
- Matt Goldman, Experiments as Insturments: Understanding Consumer Behavior in Sponsored Search
Session 4, Sequoia D: Biased Beliefs
- Adam Sanjurjo, A Cold Shower for the Hot Hand Fallacy
- Sandro Ambuehl, Consistent Individual Deviations from Bayesian Belief Updating and the Demand for Information
- Dominik Duell, Attribution Bias in Strategic Environments
- Olga Bogach, Luck, entitlement, and redistribution: experimental evidence
Session 5, Grove: Behavioral Finance
- Peiran Jiao, Belief in Mean Reversion and the Disposition Effect
- Jacopo Magnani, The Disposition Effect and Realization Preferences: a Direct Test
- Emel Filiz Ozbay, Do Lottery Payments Induce Savings Behavior? Evidence from the Lab
- Thomas Stephens, Nominal Loss Aversion and Individual Investment Decisions
Session 6, Cypress: Inequality and Social Preferences
- David Owens, The Source of Inequality and Preferences for Wealth Redistribution
- Maria Porter, Characterizing Preferences for Giving to Parents in an Experimental Setting: Reciprocity or Altruism
- Paulo Peneda Saraiva, Modelling Socially Responsible Investment Decisions
- Julian Jamison, Behavioral Poverty Traps and Time Preferences in Liberia
Session 7, Fitness Center: Legislative Bargaining and Committtee Behavior
- Anthony Bradfield, Legislative Bargaining with Teams
- Chloe Tergiman, Cheap-Talk, Back Room Deals and Multilateral Bargaining
- Sebastian Fehrler, How Transparency Kills Information Aggregation (And Why That May Be a Good Thing)
- Andrzej Baranski, Communication in Legislative Bargaining
Friday, October 25, 4:40pm - 6:00pm
Session 1, Sequoia A: Cooperation and Institutions 4
- J. Forrest Williams, Debt and (Future) Taxes: Financing Intergenerational Public Goods
- Rulliere Jean-Louis, Verbal Feedback and Punishment in Public Good Games.
- Fatemeh Momeni, Voluntary and Mandatory provision of Common Pool Resources with Heterogeneous appropriators
- Sara Adler, Effects of Threshold Uncertainty on Common Pool resource Depletion
Session 2, Sequoia B: Risk Preference: Social Effects
- Benjamin Enke, Cultural Persistence: The Ancient Origins of Risk Preferences
- Rudy Santore, Other Regarding Preferences and Risk Taking
- Jason Aimone, Following the Followers: The Dynamics of Risky Preferences and the Decisions of Leaders
- Luke Jones, How does origin of leadership influence risk-taking behavior of representative decision makers?
Session 3, Sequoia C: Industrial Organization 2
- Tobias Wenzel, Shrouding add-on information: an experimental study
- Xiangdong Qin, Buy-sell clause with an investigation cost
Session 4, Sequoia D: Norms
- Carrie Wenjing Xu, Harnessing the Power of Norm
- Albena Neschen, Ignorance and Ethical Behavior: Lessons from the Lab
- Meng-Chien Su, Countering Manipulation in Prediction Markets? The Role of Incentives
- Michael Kurschilgen, Follow the Crowd or Your Conscience: an Experimental Study of Norms and Social Preferences
Session 5, Grove: Labor 2
- Tai-Sen He, Overreaction or Under-reaction: How Do People Respond to Wage Changes?
- Frederic Schneider, Job Tenure as a Signal of Effort in Labor Markets with Incomplete Contracts
Session 6, Cypress: Charitable Contributions 1
- Robert Slonim, The Price of Warm Glow
- Edward Millner, Taking, Giving, and Impure Altruism in Dictator Games
- Maros Servatka, Transaction Costs and Inertia in Charitable Giving
- Wei Zhan, The Role of Volunteer Leaders in Fundraising
Session 7, Fitness Center: Voting Behavior
- Cortney Rodet, Are Political Statements Only Expressive? A Laboratory Experiment
- Anna Bassi, Weather, mood, and voting: An experimental analysis of the effect of weather beyond turnout
- Yi-Yi Chen, Getting Out the Vote: Information and Voting Behavior
- Darryl Seale, Sequential Search by Committees with Rank-dependent Payoffs: An Experimental Study
Saturday, October 26, 8:00am - 9:00am
Plenary Session:
Welcome: Sheldon Kamieniecki, Dean of Social Sciences, UCSC
Speaker: Al Roth, Stanford University, "Market Design" [tentative]
Chair: Dan Friedman
Welcome: Sheldon Kamieniecki, Dean of Social Sciences, UCSC
Speaker: Al Roth, Stanford University, "Market Design" [tentative]
Chair: Dan Friedman
Saturday, October 26, 8:00 am - 10:00 am
Registration Desk Open, Hotel Paradox
Paradox Breakfast Buffet, Solaire Restaurant, 6:30 - 8:30 am
Paradox Lunch Buffet, Solaire Restaurant, 12:00 - 1:20 pm
Paradox Breakfast Buffet, Solaire Restaurant, 6:30 - 8:30 am
Paradox Lunch Buffet, Solaire Restaurant, 12:00 - 1:20 pm
Saturday, October 26, 9am - 6:00 pm
Experimental Software and Hardware Demos, Hotel Paradox
- Table 1: Driving Simulator, Lisa Rutstrom
- Table 2: MobLab: interactive markets and games on mobile devices, Walter Yuan and Rachel Bodsky
Saturday, October 26, 9:20am - 10:20am
Session 1, Sequoia A: Learning
- Zhijian Wang, Cycle frequency in standard Rock-Paper-Scissors games: Evidence from experimental economics
- Shu Heng Chen, Heterogeneity in Experienced-Weighted Attraction Learning and Its Relation to Cognitive Ability
- John Duffy, Lone Wolf or Herd Animal? An Experiment on Choice of Information and Social Learning
Session 2, Sequoia B: Social Information 1
- Linnea Wickstrom Ostervall, Nudge nudge and say no more: How do reminders in the waiting room affect antibiotics use?
- Joseph Wang, Confucianism and Preferences: Evidence from Lab Experiments in Taiwan and China
- Carmen Wang, Blood donation registry one year on: Long term effects and the role of social information
Session 3, Sequoia C: Survey Methods: Characterizing Behavior
- Morten Lau, Characterizing Financial and Statistical Literacy
- Katherine Baldiga, The Size of the LGBT Population and the Magnitude of Anti-Gay Sentiment are Substantially Underestimated
- Andreas Blume, Eliciting Private Information with Noise: The Case of Randomized Response
Session 4, Sequoia D: Gender 1
- Siyu Wang, Demanding or Deferring : Cross-cultural Gender Differences in Communication
- Jonathan Woon, Fact or Fiction? Gender and the Truthfulness of Campaign Messages
- Muriel Niederle, Gender differences in negotiation
Session 5, Grove: Market Design 2
- Daniel Fragiadakis, Behavioral Market Design: Improving Welfare on Focal--Rather than Equilibrium--Paths
- Tingting Ding, Matching and Chatting: An Experimental Study of the Impact of Network Communication on School-Matching Mechanisms
- Pablo Guillen, Lying through Their Teeth: Third Party Advice and Truth Telling in a Strategy Proof Mechanism
Session 6, Cypress: Charity 2
- Luigi Butera, Good News, Bad News, and Social Image: The Market for Charitable Giving
- Zach Grossman, Dual-Process Reasoning and Giving Behavior
- Alexander Brown, Substitutes vs. Compliments in Charitable Donations
Session 7, Fitness Center: Dynamic Choice
- Linda Thunstrom, Strategic Self-Ignorance
- Ryan Oprea, Time and State Dependence in an Ss Decision Experiment
- Emanuel Vespa, Markov Strategies: An Experimental Test
Saturday, October 26, 10:40am - 12:00pm
Session 1, Sequoia A: Spatial Interactions
- Curtis Kephart, Hotelling in Continuous Time and Action Spaces
- Laurent Denant-Boemont, Why Central Paris is Rich and Downtown Detroit is Poor: A Laboratory Experiment
- Sabrina Hammiche, Urban Costs and the Spatial Structure of Cities: A Laboratory Experiment
Session 2, Sequoia B: Social Information 2
- Sara Elisa Kettner, Social Information and Contribution Behavior: On the Malleability of Climate Change Mitigation Preferences
- Clayton Featherstone, Can Subtle Provision of Social Information Affect What Job You Choose (and Keep)? Experimental Evidence from Teach For America
- Oliver Himmler, Tax Evasion Spillovers
- Tanya Rosenblat, Social Coupons: Mechanism Design for Social Media
Session 3, Sequoia C: Lab to Field 1
- Chenna Reddy Cotla, On Measuring the Preferences of the Poor
- Ellen Green, Counterfactual Simulations in Experimental Economics: A Study of Blended Physician Payment Structures
- Urmimala Sen, Caste, Efficiency and Fairness with Public Goods and Common Pool Resources
Session 4, Sequoia D: Gender 2
- Qiyan Ong, When do Women Compete with Men? Gender Differences in Competitive Behaviour in an Investment Decision Experiment
- Mariah Ehmke, Young Consumer's Demand for Natural Sweeteners
- Anne Preston, Do Differences in Willingness to Compete in Laboratory Experiments Explain Gender Differences in Labor Market Outcomes
- John Ifcher, Exploring gender differences in preferences over competition using switch points and relative payoffs
Session 5, Grove: Firm Behavior 1
- Giuseppe Danese, Trustees and agents in corporate governance
- Enrique Fatas, Money Illusion and Price Competition
- Miguel Martinez, Optimal Organizational Response: An Experimental Study of Firm Structure
Session 6, Cypress: Lies and Deception
- Lilia Zhurakhovska, Truth or Guilt: Theory and Experiments on Lying in Games
- Jingnan Chen, Broken Promises and Hidden Partnership: Theory and Experiment
- Merve Akbas, An experimental study on dishonesty: The effect of ambiguity and framing
- Quoc Tran, Lying to catch up, or lying to keep up
Session 7, Fitness Center: Tournaments and Contests 1
- Annika Mueller, Incentive Substitutability and Heterogenous Motives in an Innovation Contest - Field Experimental Evidence
- Lian Jian, Competing Openly or Blindly in Crowdsourcing Contests?
- Tim Salmon, Managing Sabotage in Promotion Tournaments
Saturday, October 26, 1:20pm - 2:40pm
Session 1, Sequoia A: Cooperation and Institutions 5
- Malcolm Kass, Effects of Endogenous Selection of Nested PD games on Pro-social behavior and outcomes
- Anna Lou Abatayo, Does external regulation crowd out cooperation?
- Fangfang Tan, Justification and Legitimate Punishment
- Tatsuyoshi Saijo, Second Thought: Theory and Experiment in Social Dilemma
Session 2, Sequoia B: Experimental Methodology
- Kory Garner, Game Form Representation and Knowledge Spillovers
- Linda Kamas, Capture vs. Recruitment of Subjects in Experiments Measuring Social Preferences
- Tamas Csermely, A Comprehensive Comparison of Risk Elicitation Methods
- Elisabet Rutstrom, Measuring Risk Aversion to Guide Policy Naturalistic Tasks and Respondents
Session 3, Sequoia C: Social Preferences 1
- Xiaofei (Sophia) Pan, It's Not just the thought that counts --- An experimental study on hidden cost of giving
- Gustavo Caballero, Inequality of Opportunities and Redistribution: an Experiment
- Cheng-Tse Lin, Other-regarding Preferences in Experimental Dynamic Volunteer's Dilemmas
- Garret Ridinger, Benefit of the doubt: the importance of intentions and control in cooperation
Session 4, Sequoia D: Time Preferences
- Younjun Kim, Testing time preference elicitation methods with multiple-price-list format
- Geoffrey Fisher, The Role of Attention in Intertemporal Choices
- Jeffrey Naecker, Demand for Commitment: Time Inconsistency or Signaling?
- Michael Kuhn, The Unforeseen Benefits of EBT: What Can They Tell Us About Dynamic Inconsistency?
Session 5, Grove: Strategic Sophistication
- Qiqi Cheng, An attention-based stationary concepts for Experimental 2x2-Games
- Ryan Kendall, Decomposing Bounded Rationality and Behavioral Models
- Daniel Martin, Failures of Unraveling in Disclosure Experiments: A Level-K Analysis
Session 6, Cypress: Gender and Stereotypes
- Teodora Boneva, Parental socialisation effort and the intergenerational transmission of risk preferences
- Anat Bracha, Affirmative Action and Stereotype Threat
- Jue Wang, Income attraction: An online dating field experiment
- Edward Asiedu, Gender, Age and Norm Enforcement: Evidence From a Matrilineal and a Patriarchal Society
Session 7, Fitness Center: Tournaments and Contests 2
- Zhengzheng Wang, Externalities in the Colonel Blotto Game
- Glenn Dutcher, Do contests bring out the worst in us or the worst among us?
- Cary Deck, An Experimental Investigation of Simultaneous Multi-battle Contests with Complementarities
Session 8, Poolside: Preferences and Behavior
- Klajdi Bregu, The Impact of Overconfidence in Acquiring Information
- Erin Fairweather, Small Stakes Risk Aversion and the Endowment Effect
- Sean Crockett, Eliciting Preferences with Rank-ordered? Choices
- Ben Greiner, How individual preferences get aggregated in groups - An experimental study
Saturday, October 26, 3:00pm - 4:20pm
Session 1, Sequoia A: Coordination
- Daniel Saunders, Noisy best response in coordination games: strategic vs. payoff uncertainty
- Ulrich Glogowsky, Cooperation and Trustworthiness in a repeated Interaction
- Doru Cojoc, Prominence and Leadership in a Minimum Effort Game
- Ernesto Reuben, Competition, cooperation, and collective choice
Session 2, Sequoia B: Lab to Field 2
- Catherine Porter, Charitable Dictators? Elite Attitudes in a Developing Country Context
- Tushi Baul, Social norms about bribe-giving and bribe-taking in India
- Angelino Viceisza, Coordination games with farmer groups: Experimental evidence from Senegal
- Natalia Candelo Londono, Advice and Herding: An Artefactual Field Experiment with Current and Potential Immigrants
Session 3, Sequoia C: Social Preferences 2
- Clay McManus, Signaling Smarts: Revealed Preferences for Self and Social Perceptions of Intelligence
- Erik Kimbrough, Norms Make Preferences Social
- Johanna Mollerstrom, Luck, choice and responsibility - an experimental investigation of distributive justice
- Severine Toussaert, Costly Signalling of Intentions in the Trust Game
Session 4, Sequoia D: Charitable Contributions 2
- Ericka Scherenberg Farret, A Finite Mixture of Behaviors in the Care Game
- Svetlana Pevnitskaya, The effect of feedback on performance of charity auctions.
- Adrian Stoian, You Think You Are Bad? That's (Also) An Asset
Session 5, Grove: Experiments in Development
- Urmimala Sen, Dictates, Ultimatums and Spousal Empowerment in Rural India
- Laura Munro, Insurance structure, risk-sharing and investment choices: an empirical investigation
Session 6, Cypress: Macroeconomics
- Ciril Bosch-Rosa, Banking Networks and Information Processing
- Andreas Markstaedter, Informational Asymmetries in Laboratory Asset Markets with State Dependent Fundamentals
- Jack Rogers, How Does Transparency Affect Emergent Equilibria in Large Online Macroeconomic Environments?
- Luba Petersen, Asset Trading and Monetary Policy in Production Economies
Session 7, Fitness Center: Auctions: Institutions
- Michael Caldara, Auctions with Tokens
- Joshua Foster, Theory and Experiments on Bidding Behavior in the Bucket Auction
- Katerina Sherstyuk, Auctions or Contests? Resource allocation under strategic uncertainty
Saturday, October 26, 4:40pm - 6:00pm
Session 1, Sequoia A: Communication and Cooperation
- David Goldbaum, Follow the leader with a 2-stage decision model
- Simon Gaechter, The ABC of Cooperation and Framing Effects in Social Dilemmas
- Orsola Garofalo, Spokesperson - to be or not to be?
- Tim Cason, Participation and Spatial Coordination in Conservation Incentive Schemes: The Role of Transaction Costs and Communication
Session 2, Sequoia B: Lab to Field 3
- Catherine Weinberger, Dictator Game Generosity and Real World Outcomes
- Danila Serra, Does competition among public officials reduce corruption? An experiment
- Sheheryar Banuri, Intrinsic Motivation, Effort, and the Call to Public Service
- Alessandra Cassar, Monetary Incentives and Support Groups Help People Help Themselves: A Field Experiment
Session 3, Sequoia C: Social Preferences 3
- Seung Ginny Choi, Markets and the emergence of social relationships: A Laboratory Experiment
- Sevgi Yuksel, When is inequality Fair? An experiment on the effect of procedural justice and agency
- Xiaoyuan Wang, Social Preferences in Exploding Offers
- Brit Grosskopf, The Effects of Anger and Happiness on Pro-Social Behaviour
Session 4, Sequoia D: New Data: Inference from Decision Times
- David Dickinson, The impact of glucose administration on Bayesian v. heuristic based choice
- Maria Recalde, Intuitive generosity and error prone inference from decision time
- John Clithero, Combining Response Times and Choice Data Using a Neuroeconomic Model of the Decision Process Improves Out-of-Sample Predictions
- Ryan Webb, Rationalizing Context-Dependent Preferences: Divisive Normalization and Neural Constraints on Decision-Making
Session 5, Grove: Reference Dependent Preferences
- Sally Sadoff, Do people anticipate loss aversion
- Jens Schubert, Uncertainty and the WTA-WTP Disparity for Private and Public Goods
- Erik Wengstrom, Deciding for Others Reduces Loss Aversion
- Christine Exley, Examining when Reference Points Lead to Negative Wage Elasticities in Work and Volunteer Tasks
Session 6, Cypress: Trust and Trustworthiness
- Walter Theseira, Is a Picture Really Worth a Thousand Words? Investigating the Relative Value of Appearances in an Investment Experiment
- Eric Schniter, Ageism & Cooperation
- Markus Noth, Financial Information and Advice
- Benjamin Ho, Trust and Contracts: An Experimental Study
Session 7, Fitness Center: Auctions: Incentives
- Daniel Stephenson, Social Learning in Continuous-Time All-Pay Auctions
- Andrew Brownback, Curved or Twisted: Incentive Effects of Proportional Grading, and Other Consequences of All-Pay Auctions
- Marco Palma, Modeling Unobserved Consumer Heterogeneity in Experimental Auctions: A Censored Random Parameters Approach
- Li Hao, An Experimental Investigation of Procurement Auctions with Asymmetric Sellers
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