76 posts categorized in

Economic Science Institute

  

The IFREE/ESI Lecture Series Presents John Roberts, Ph.D. – “Does Working From Home Work? Evidence from a Chinese Experiment”

March 18, 2013 by | Economic Science Institute

Mar. 15, John Roberts, Ph.D. – Does Working From Home Work?  Evidence from a Chinese experiment Abstract: About 10% of US employees now regularly work from home (WFH), but there are concerns this can lead to “shirking from home.” We report the results of a WFH experiment at CTrip, a 16,000- employee, NASDAQ-listed Chinese travel

The IFREE/ESI Lecture Series Presents Tony Kwasnica, Ph.D., “A Laboratory Comparison of Auctions and Sequential Mechanisms”

March 12, 2013 by | Economic Science Institute

Mar. 8, Tony Kwasnica, Ph.D. – A Laboratory Comparison of Auctions and Sequential Mechanisms Abstract: When bidders incur a cost to learn their valuations, bidder entry can impact auction performance. Two common selling mechanisms in this environment are an English auction, and a sequential bidding process. Bulow and Klemperer (2009) show, theoretically, that sellers should

The IFREE/ESI Lecture Series Presents Jordi Brandts Bernad, Ph.D. – “Let’s Talk: How communication affects contract design.”

February 25, 2013 by | Economic Science Institute

Feb. 22nd, Jordi Brandts Bernad, Ph.D. – Let’s Talk: How communication affects contract design. The IFREE/ESI Lecture Series is free and open to the public. For more information on future lectures, please visit our website. A video of the lecture will be posted here soon. Abstract: We study experimentally how the ability to communicate affects

IFREE/ESI Lecture Series Presents, Ron Siegel, Ph.D., “Large Contests”

February 4, 2013 by | Economic Science Institute

Feb. 1st, Ron Siegel, Ph.D. – Large Contests Abstract: We consider contests with many, possibly heterogeneous, prizes and players that include many existing contest models as special cases. We show that the outcome of such contests is approximated by an appropriately defined set of incentive-compatible individually-rational single-agent mechanisms. Bio: Ron Siegel is an assistant professor

Eighteenth Visiting Graduate Student Workshop in Experimental Economics Hosted at Chapman University

January 11, 2013 by | Economic Science Institute

Jan. 6th-10th, the Economic Science Institute, with a generous grant from the International Foundation for Research in Experimental Economics (IFREE), hosted 24 doctoral students from universities all over the world for the 18th Visiting Graduate Student Workshop in Experimental Economics. In a series of 10 sessions, the students first participated in an economic experiment as

Obama’s Mortgage Modification Program A Colossal Flop

December 20, 2012 by | Economic Science Institute

“If housing tends to lead economic recoveries, then we’re in trouble. This marks the worst post-recession home-buying market since the Great Depression. Nobel laureate Professor Vernon L. Smith, who delivered the keynote address at the Cato Institute’s 30th Annual Monetary Conference on Nov. 15, noted how housing leads both recession and recoveries.” Read the full

IFREE/ESI Lecture Series Presents Quazi Shahriar, Ph.D., “When Does Cheap-Talk (Fail to) Increase Efficient Coordination?”

December 7, 2012 by | Economic Science Institute

Dec. 7th, Quazi Shahriar, Ph.D. – When Does Cheap-Talk (Fail to) Increase Efficient Coordination? Abstract: Can cheap-talk always help achieve maximum efficiency in situations that require coordination? Utilizing a class of two-person two-action coordination games, we show experimentally that cheap-talk may or may not be informative, rending it helpful for or detrimental to efficiency (relative

The IFREE/ESI Lecture Series Presents Chew Soo Hong, Ph.D., “How does familiarity breed investment?”

November 30, 2012 by | Economic Science Institute

Nov. 30th, Chew Soo Hong, Ph.D. – How does familiarity breed investment? Abstract: In his 1921 Treatise on Probability, John Maynard Keynes offered a striking hypothesis about decision making under uncertainty: “… if two probabilities are equal in degree, ought we, in choosing our course of action, to prefer that one which is based on

IFREE/ESI Lecture Series Presents: Uri Gneezy, Ph.D. on “Incentives and Behavior Change”

November 9, 2012 by | Economic Science Institute

Nov. 9th, Uri Gneezy, Ph.D.– Incentives and Behavior Change Abstract: Economists often emphasize that “incentives matter.” The basic “law of behavior” is that higher incentives will lead to more effort and higher performance. Employers, for example, often use extrinsic incentives to motivate their employees. In recent years, the use of incentives in behavioral interventions has

The IFREE/ESI Lecture Series Presents Glenn Harrison, Ph.D., “Asset Integration and Attitudes to Risk”

November 2, 2012 by | Economic Science Institute

Nov. 2nd, Glenn Harrison, Ph.D.  – Asset Integration and Attitudes to Risk Abstract: Measures of risk attitudes derived from experiments are often questioned because they are based on small stakes bets and do not account for the extent to which the decision-maker integrates the prizes of the experimental tasks with personal wealth. We exploit the

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