Current Challenges in Market Design

  • Date: Jan 15, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Axel Ockenfels
  • University of Cologne
  • Location: MPI

Fairness in Machine Decision Making

  • Date: Jan 29, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Krishna Gummadi
  • Max Planck Institute for Software Systems
  • Location: MPI
Machine (data-driven learning-based) decision making is increasingly being used to assist or replace human decision making in a variety of domains ranging from banking (rating user credit) and recruiting (ranking applicants) to judiciary (profiling criminals) and journalism (recommending news-stories). Recently concerns have been raised about the potential for discrimination and unfairness in such machine decisions. Against this background, in this talk, I will pose and attempt to answer the following high-level questions: (a) How do machines learn to make discriminatory or unfair decisions? (b) How can we quantify unfairness in machine decision making? (c) How can we control machine unfairness? i.e., can we design learning mechanisms that avoid unfair decision making? (d) Is there a cost to fair decision making? [more]

On Experimental Legal Philosophy

  • Date: Feb 19, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Stefan Magen
  • Ruhr-Universität Bochum
  • Location: MPI

The Geography of Legal Integration in Europe: Mapping and Predicting Subnational Disparities in Referral Activity

  • Date: Mar 12, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Arthur Dyevre
  • University of Leuven Law School
  • Location: MPI
We investigate subnational disparities in preliminary reference activity by locating national courts on maps of the EU territory. Spatial visualization reveals that involvement in the preliminary ruling procedure tends to be concentrated in a relatively small subset of regions within member states. Using a machine learning approach, we explore a wide range of possible predictors and the relations among them. Our data-driven analysis shows that regions that are the seat of a peak court and have a large cargo port are associated with higher referral rates. So too are regions that are the seat of the country's capital and regions exhibiting greater economic dynamism. Our ndings directly inform the theoretical discussion and suggest ways to reconcile varying strands of research on trade, courts, litigation and institutional change in the EU context. [more]

The inefficiency of efficient breach: Contract renegotiation under asymmetric Information

  • Date: Mar 19, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Andreas Engert
  • University of Mannheim
  • Location: MPI
Revisiting the longstanding debate about contract remedies and "efficient breach," we study experimentally whether expectation damages or specific performance better promote renegotiation of the contract when it matters-when the seller cannot be sure whether performing his obligation is efficient. We hypothesize that giving the buyer a right to specific performance enables her to disclose more private information about her valuation of the good, facilitating agreement between the parties. We test the hypothesis in a first experiment with one-sided asymmetric information: the seller's cost of performance is commonly known but the buyer's valuation is private information. The experimental design aims at insulating the incentive effect, stripping away the contractual context to neutralize the players' normative preconceptions. The results lend some support to the advantages of specific performance. They also suggest that those advantages will become more prominent under two-sided asymmetric information, which we intend to test in a second experiment. [more]

Revealed Privacy Preferences: Are Privacy Choices Rational? (with Yi-Shan Lee)

  • Date: Apr 4, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Roberto Weber
  • University of Zurich
  • Location: MPI
The development of effective privacy policies rests critically on the question of whether people are capable of engaging in rational tradeoffs regarding the use of their personal information. This study investigates the extent to which people's decisions in this domain exhibit consistency with an underlying rational preference for privacy. We develop a novel experiment in which people allocate privacy levels between different personal information items, allowing us to classify people depending on whether their choices are consistent with the Generalized Axiom of Revealed Preference. We find 63 percent of subjects act consistently with a rational preference ordering when allocating privacy levels, despite the substantial heterogeneity of privacy attitudes. We further investigate the extent to which these revealed privacy preferences can be measured by monetary equivalents and whether preferences elicited over choices in our experiment have any predictive power for explaining real-world privacy behavior. We find that the classification of rationality from choices is also predictive of monetary tradeoffs: irrational types, on average, squander 260 percent more money than rational types through inconsistencies in their monetary valuations. Despite the presence of noise, monetary valuations nevertheless capture some of the underlying privacy preferences, as more private types require significantly more compensation for sharing personal data. Finally, the measures of privacy preferences elicited in the laboratory are correlated with a widely-used question eliciting self-reported privacy concerns and with behavioral outcomes in real-world domains of personal information sharing. We conclude that, despite the fact that we study choices in a fairly simple decision environment, there is considerable heterogeneity in rationality that should be considered when designing future privacy policies. [more]

The Competitive Woman (joint work with Y. Jane Zhang)

  • Date: Apr 17, 2018
  • Time: 02:30 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Alessandra Cassar
  • University of San Francisco
  • Location: MPI
A large body of experimental evidence suggests that women have a lower desire to compete than men. Here, we advance the hypothesis that this gap may depend on how we elicit such preferences, as different incentives could activate competition in different spheres, depending on culture. This hypothesis is tested through a series of experiments using vouchers (in-kind restricted use of cash) in China, Colombia, Bosnia and Togo. Data on parents show that, once the incentives are switched from monetary to child-benefitting, gender differences disappear; data on young adult without children show that once cash is substituted by gender stereotypical vouchers (make-up or sporting good vouchers) gender differences decrease. Cultural elements in each society matter, as not all societies exhibit a gender gap. As expected, competitiveness is higher where resources are more scares, as among the displaced women in Colombia and the women in polygyny arrangements in Togo. These results suggest that female competitiveness can be just as intense as male competitiveness, given the right goals and considering the differential constraints that societies put on women and men, indicating important implications for policies designed to promote gender equality. [more]

Learning from realized versus unrealized prices

  • Date: Apr 25, 2018
  • Time: 10:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Georg Weizsäcker
  • Humboldt University Berlin
  • Location: MPI

A meritocratic origin of egalitarian behavior

  • Date: Apr 25, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Johanna Mollerstrom
  • Humboldt University Berlin / DIW
  • Location: MPI

The Just World at Work: Theory and a Natural Field Experiment

  • Date: May 15, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: James Konow
  • University of Kiel
  • Location: MPI
Two rules have figured prominently in both the descriptive and prescriptive literatures on distributive justice, viz., equality and equity. The former refers to equal shares, whereas the latter refers to allocations that are in proportion to some variable, such as hours worked or effort. We consider the possibility that worker experience with equal or equitable compensation schemes affects their beliefs about which rule applies. We formulate a simple model of fairness preferences that incorporates the claim of the Just World Hypothesis that people are motivated to rationalize their actual rewards, that is, to adjust their beliefs about what is fair in the direction of their actual allocations. A theory is formulated in conjunction with a natural field experiment in which Ethiopian workers complete a piecemeal task over a two week period. The theory predicts that high and low productivity workers, whose beliefs are affected by their actual pay, will respond in their work effort to changes in compensation schemes depending on whether they have initially been paid equally or equitably. The results of the experiment on worker effort are consistent with the changes predicted by the theory. [more]

The effects of a self-regulation training in primary schools: Evidence from a randomized controlled trial

  • Date: May 16, 2018
  • Time: 06:30 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Daniel Schunk
  • University of Mainz
  • Location: MPI
Self-regulation abilities are known to be a central determinant of educational success and a wide range of other important life outcomes. We conducted a randomized-controlled trial with about 600 first graders to identify the causal effect of a targeted self-regulation training on self-regulation abilities, concentration, and educational outcomes. Results demonstrate that our self-regulation training increases long-term outcomes 12 months after treatment for attention and inhibition abilities, self-regulation behavior, as well as reading abilities. There is no treatment effect on math abilities, fluid IQ, and on one of our concentration tasks. We conclude that targeted training of self-control abilities in early years can substantially improve these self-regulation abilities in the long run, that these improvements potentially serve as a multiplier for the promotion of schooling abilities, and thus that this kind of training might be an effective tool to foster the skill formation process. [more]

The Impact of Peer Personality on Academic Achievement

  • Date: Jun 5, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Bart Golsteyn
  • Maastricht University
  • Location: MPI

Moral Values and Voting

  • Date: Jul 4, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Benjamin Enke
  • Harvard University
  • Location: MPI

How lotteries in school choice help leveling the playing field

  • Date: Jul 4, 2018
  • Time: 06:30 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Dorothea Kübler
  • Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (WZB)
  • Location: MPI

Money is more than memory

  • Date: Jul 20, 2018
  • Time: 10:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Maria Bigoni
  • University of Bologna
  • Location: MPI

What Do Employee Referral Programs Do?

What Do Employee Referral Programs Do?
  • Date: Sep 27, 2018
  • Time: 11:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Matthias Heinz
  • University of Cologne
  • Location: MPI
In an RCT covering all grocery store jobs at a European grocery chain, 238 stores were randomized to give information to employees or pay them different bonuses for making referrals. Larger bonuses increase referrals and decrease referral quality, though the increase in referrals is fairly modest. Still, the employee referral programs (ERPs) are highly profitable. This reflects in part that referred workers are substantially more likely to stay than non-referrals, but primarily that non-referrals have higher retention in stores treated with ERPs relative to control stores. The firm rolled out an ERP across the entire firm and increased bonuses. In the post-RCT rollout, referral rates remain low for grocery jobs, but are high for non-grocery jobs, which are perceived as much more attractive. Our results (1) are consistent with a model where referrals are driven by both monetary incentives and altruism toward friends and (2) show that ERPs can have substantial benefits beyond the people who are referred. [more]

Motives in Economic Interactions: An (interactive) eye-tracking study

Motives in Economic Interactions: An (interactive) eye-tracking study
  • Date: Oct 10, 2018
  • Time: 02:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Jan Hausfeld
  • University of Konstanz
  • Location: MPI
When people make choices, their gaze patterns can reveal the motives underlying the decision process, because they spend more time on items particularly relevant for these motives. We investigate how untrained people use gaze patterns to uncover the motives behind others' decisions. We display recorded or real-time gaze patterns of one subject to another, and let the latter subject infer the former's prosociality. While the recorded gaze patterns provide strategically undisturbed information, the real-time gaze patterns require taking the strategic component of the interaction into account. When gazing is non-strategic, observers can recognize the more prosocial or generous decision makers. In contrast, when gaze is transmitted real-time, the eye-tracked decision makers successfully alter their gaze to appear more prosocial. [more]

Safe Spaces for Women: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Sierra Leone During the Ebola Epidemic

  • Date: Oct 10, 2018
  • Time: 04:15 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Imran Rasul
  • University College London
  • Location: MPI
The condition of women in developing countries is characterized by low economic empowerment and limited agency over their body. This paper evaluates a policy intervention aimed at relaxing these constraints for adolescent girls in Sierra Leone, a setting in which women experience high levels of sexual violence and face numerous other economic disadvantages. The intervention provides young women with a safe space (a club) where they can find support, access vocational training and information on reproductive health. Unexpectedly, the post-baseline period coincided with the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa, the most severe ever recorded. Compounding the epidemic's health costs, the closure of all schools and mobility restrictions resulted in acute disruptions to socioeconomic life. Our analysis leverages the cross-village variation in severity of village-level disruptions and random assignment of villages to the intervention to document the impact of the Ebola outbreak on 4700 women tracked in 200 villages, and the ameliorating role played by the intervention. In control villages, over the crisis, women spend significantly more time with men, out-of-wedlock pregnancy rates rise, and those exposed to severe Ebola-related disruption have a 16pp drop in school enrolment post-crisis. These adverse effects are significantly reversed in treated villages. The intervention thus fosters a range of basic skills, as well as entrepreneurial skills and health knowledge gained from intervention clubs. The results show how policy interventions can be effective even in times of aggregate shocks, and highlights the lack of safe spaces in low-empowerment contexts such as Sierra Leone, is a key channel through which an aggregate crisis damages the economic lives of young women. [more]

The Rule of Law and Voluntary Cooperation: Experimental Evidence from 43 Societies

tba
  • Date: Oct 17, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Simon Gächter
  • School of Economics, University of Nottingham
  • Location: MPI

Ethical free-riding: When honest people find dishonest partners

  • Date: Oct 22, 2018
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Shaul Shalvi
  • University of Amsterdam
  • Location: MPI
Corruption is often the product of coordinated rule-violations. We investigate how such corrupt collaboration emerges and spreads when people can choose their partners (vs. not). Participants were assigned a partner and could increase their payoff by coordinated lying. After several interactions, they were either free to choose whether to stay or switch partners, or forced to stay with (or switch) their partner. Results reveal both dishonest and honest people exploit the freedom to choose a partner. Dishonest people seek and find a partner that will also lie—a “partner in crime.” Honest people, by contrast, engage in ethical free-riding: they refrain from lying but also from leaving dishonest partners, taking advantage of their partners’ lies. We conclude that to curb collaborative corruption, relying on people’s honesty is insufficient. Encouraging honest individuals not to engage in ethical free-riding is essential. [more]

Parochial Altruism: Measurement Issues

  • Date: Oct 24, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Robert Böhm
  • RWTH Aachen University
  • Location: MPI

How institutions shape culture: evidence from a large-scale land tenure reform implemented as randomized control-trial

  • Date: Nov 5, 2018
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Marco Fabri
  • University of Amsterdam
  • Location: MPI

Poverty negates the impact of social norms on cheating (co-authored with Suparee Boonmanunt and Stephan Meier)

  • Date: Nov 14, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Agne Kajackaite
  • WZB Berlin Social Science Center
  • Location: MPI

Advancing Evolutionary and Cultural Perspectives on Interdependence and Cooperation

  • Date: Nov 19, 2018
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Daniel Balliet
  • University of Amsterdam
  • Location: MPI

Dispelling misconceived beliefs: the case of rent control

  • Date: Nov 21, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Jordi Brandts
  • Barcelona Graduate School of Economics
  • Location: MPI

Methods of complexity reduction and their effects in social, economic, and computational environments

  • Date: Nov 26, 2018
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Jürgen Jost
  • Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences, Leipzig
  • Location: MPI

CREED Workshop

  • Date: Nov 28, 2018
  • Location: MPI

Civic Honesty Around the Globe

  • Date: Dec 12, 2018
  • Time: 10:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Michel Maréchal
  • University of Zurich
  • Location: MPI

Who should benefit from affirmative action? Ability, effort and discrimination as justifications for quota rules

  • Date: Dec 12, 2018
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Hannah Schildberg-Hörisch
  • Düsseldorf Institute for Competition Economics (DICE)
  • Location: MPI

The ICTY Experiment: A Triple-Use Study on Legal Reasoning

  • Date: Dec 17, 2018
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Holger Spamann
  • Harvard Law School
  • Location: MPI

Aspirational Goals, Overpromising, and Negative Spillovers (with A. Leibovitch and M. Versteeg)

Exploiting Uncertainty about the Number of Competitors in Procurement Auctions

  • Date: Jan 16, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Achim Wambach
  • ZEW
  • Location: MPI

Guilty Minds and Biased Minds

  • Date: Jan 21, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Markus Kneer
  • University of Zurich (UZH)
  • Location: MPI

Determinants and malleability of truth-telling preferences

  • Date: Jan 23, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Johannes Abeler
  • University of Oxford
  • Location: MPI

Prosociality: Hard to build but easy to destroy (with Michela Tincani)

  • Date: Jan 30, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Fabian Kosse
  • LMU Munich & briq
  • Location: MPI

Delegation and team selection

  • Date: Feb 4, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: John Hamman
  • Florida State University
  • Location: MPI

Power, Knowledge and Justice: Experiments on Distributive Decisions in Networks

  • Date: Feb 11, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Bernhard Kittel
  • University of Kiel
  • Location: MPI

The Value of an Attorney: Evidence from Changes to the Collateral Source Rule

  • Date: Feb 18, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Eric Helland
  • Claremont McKenna College
  • Location: MPI

Substituting Invalid Contract Terms: Theory and Empirics (with Ori Katz)

  • Date: Feb 25, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Eyal Zamir
  • Center for Empirical Studies of Decision Making and the Law, University of Jerusalem
  • Location: MPI

Determinants of fair behavior. An evolutionary perspective and some experimental evidence from Guinea

  • Date: Mar 11, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Roger Berger
  • University of Leipzig
  • Location: MPI

Das Öffentliche Recht und die Kunst der Prognose

  • Date: Mar 25, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Michael Goldhammer
  • University of Bayreuth
  • Location: MPI

Get Real! Individuals Prefer More Sustainable Investments

  • Date: Apr 2, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Paul Smeets
  • Maastricht University
  • Location: MPI

Noise, Cognitive Function, and Worker Productivity

  • Date: Apr 2, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Joshua Dean
  • briq Institute
  • Location: MPI

Socio-Economic Gaps in University Enrollment: The Role of Perceived Pecuniary and Non-Pecuniary Returns

  • Date: Apr 3, 2019
  • Time: 10:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Teodora Boneva
  • University of Oxford
  • Location: MPI

Inequality and moral behavior

  • Date: Apr 3, 2019
  • Time: 11:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Stefan Trautmann
  • University of Heidelberg
  • Location: MPI

Workshop

  • Date: Apr 4, 2019
  • Location: MPI

Cognitive Skills and Economic Preferences in the Fund Industry

  • Date: Apr 10, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Michael Kirchler
  • Universität Innsbruck
  • Location: MPI

Should Humans be Users or Slaves of AI? An Experiment on the Future of Work

  • Date: May 6, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Wolfgang Ketter
  • University of Cologne
  • Location: MPI

Scapegoating: Experimental Evidence

  • Date: May 8, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Michal Bauer
  • CERGE-EI
  • Location: MPI

Regulating hybrid intelligence

  • Date: May 13, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Gerrit Hornung
  • University of Kassel
  • Location: MPI

How do adults handle distributive conflicts among children? Experimental evidence from China and Norway

  • Date: May 22, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Alexander Cappelen
  • NHH Norwegian School of Economics
  • Location: MPI

Workshop on Experimental Comparative Law

  • Start: May 23, 2019
  • End: May 24, 2019
  • Location: MPI

Using Corpus Linguistics in Legal Research

  • Date: May 27, 2019
  • Time: 11:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Karen McAuliffe
  • University of Birmingham Law School
  • Location: MPI

Using Genetic Data to Estimate Causal Influences in the Obesity-SES Relationship

  • Date: May 27, 2019
  • Time: 02:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Michael A. Livermore
  • University of Virginia Law School
  • Location: MPI

The Future of IT-Security: Usability, Empiricism and AI

  • Date: May 27, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Matthew Smith
  • University of Bonn, Computer Science
  • Location: MPI

What can we learn about the homo sapiens from computer games?

  • Date: Jun 3, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Stefan Thurner
  • Medical University of Vienna
  • Location: MPI

Experimental Finance Workshop

  • Date: Jun 4, 2019
  • Time: 09:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
  • Location: MPI

Patience, Accumulation, and Comparative Development

  • Date: Jun 5, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Uwe Sunde
  • LMU
  • Location: MPI

Financial Incentives to Support Statin Adherence and Lipid Control (Habit Formation): A Randomized Clinical Trial

  • Date: Jun 12, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Iwan Barankay
  • Wharton University of Pennsylvania
  • Location: MPI

Three is more than two in more ways then one

  • Date: Jul 1, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Ilja van Beest
  • Tilburg University
  • Location: MPI

Psychology and Behavioral Economics of Poverty

  • Date: Jul 3, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Johannes Haushofer
  • Princeton University
  • Location: MPI

Rank-order tournaments with safeguards: Experimental evidence on workplace (de-)motivation

  • Date: Jul 10, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Andreas Leibbrandt
  • Monash University
  • Location: MPI

Ownership, Learning and Beliefs

  • Date: Jul 11, 2019
  • Time: 11:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Alex Imas
  • Carnegie Mellon University
  • Location: MPI

Die EU „Whistleblower“-Richtlinie

  • Date: Jul 17, 2019
  • Time: 10:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Michael Wiedmann
  • Norton Rose Fulbright LLP
  • Location: MPI

If you could read my mind – An Experimental Beauty-Contest Game with Children (with Daniel Schunk)

  • Date: Sep 26, 2019
  • Time: 11:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Henning Hermes
  • NHH Norwegian School of Economics
  • Location: MPI

Promoting Best Practices in a Multitask Workplace: Experimental Evidence on Checklists

  • Date: Sep 26, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Henry Schneider
  • Queens University at Kingston
  • Location: MPI

Deconstructing Group Bias: Social Preferences and Groupy vs. Non-Groupy Behavior

  • Date: Oct 2, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Rachel Kranton
  • Duke University
  • Location: MPI

The potential of virtual reality to study criminal and unethical behavior

  • Date: Oct 7, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Jean-Louis van Gelder
  • University of Twente
  • Location: MPI

The role of social sciences in the application of law

  • Date: Oct 14, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Thomas Möllers
  • University of Augsburg
  • Location: MPI

The Hand-Formula Debate: A Behavioral Analysis

  • Date: Nov 11, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Alon Harel
  • Hebrew University Jerusalem
  • Location: MPI

Scaring or scarring? Labour market effects of criminal victimization

  • Date: Nov 13, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Anna Bindler
  • University of Gothenburg
  • Location: MPI

The Role of Preferences, Beliefs and Decision Making for Child Development: New measures for a Structural Approach

  • Date: Nov 13, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Ingvild Almas
  • Stockholm University, Institute for International Economic Studies (IIES)
  • Location: MPI

tba

  • Date: Nov 20, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Sule Alan
  • EUI
  • Location: MPI

Correlated beliefs: Predicting outcomes in 2×2 games

  • Date: Nov 27, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Tim Cason
  • Purdue
  • Location: MPI

Moral und Rechtsgefühl in unternehmerischen Vertragsverhandlungen

Say when! Understanding waste separation through a field experiment in Argentina

  • Date: Dec 4, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Anna Pegels
  • German Development Institute (DIE)
  • Location: MPI

The Evolutionary Origins of Human Virtue and Vice

  • Date: Dec 9, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Peter Richerson
  • University of California Davis
  • Location: MPI

Fiscal and Education Spillovers from Charter School Expansion

  • Date: Dec 11, 2019
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Camille Terrier
  • University of Lausanne
  • Location: MPI

Stereotypes in High Stake Decisions: Evidence from U.S. Circuit Courts

  • Date: Dec 11, 2019
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Daniel Chen
  • Toulouse School of Economics
  • Location: MPI

Fee-Shifting Bylaws and Shareholder Wealth. An Empirical Analysis

  • Date: Jan 7, 2020
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Jens Dammann
  • University of Texas at Austin
  • Location: MPI

Risk in Time: The Intertwined Nature of Risk Taking and Time Discounting

  • Date: Jan 8, 2020
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Helga Fehr-Duda
  • Universität Zürich
  • Location: MPI

Teaching norms in the street

What does brain science tell us about free will?

  • Date: Jan 13, 2020
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: John Haynes
  • Charité Berlin and Humboldt University Berlin
  • Location: MPI

Journalistenworkshop

  • Date: Jan 16, 2020
  • Location: MPI

Responsible A.I. Credit Scoring

  • Date: Jan 20, 2020
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Katja Langenbucher
  • University of Frankfurt
  • Location: MPI

Cooperation, Bribery, and the Rule of Law

  • Date: Jan 22, 2020
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Urs Fischbacher
  • Uni Konstanz
  • Location: MPI

Aufgaben und Herausforderungen einer Theorie des Umweltrechts

  • Date: Jan 27, 2020
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Franz Reimer
  • University of Giessen
  • Location: MPI

Increase children’s interest in STEM – a field experiment in Austria

  • Date: Feb 5, 2020
  • Time: 11:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Martin Kocher
  • IHS Wien
  • Location: MPI

Law and Norms: Empirical Evidence (with Tom Lane)

  • Date: Feb 5, 2020
  • Time: 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Daniele Nosenzo
  • University of Nottingham
  • Location: MPI

Toward Explainable AI

  • Date: Feb 17, 2020
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Klaus-Robert Müller
  • TU Berlin and Max Planck School of Cognition
  • Location: MPI

Thought Experiments in Ethics and Law

  • Date: Mar 2, 2020
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Norbert Paulo
  • University of Salzburg
  • Location: MPI

The problem of testimony

  • Date: Apr 20, 2020
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Ulrike Hahn
  • Birkbeck University of London
  • Location: Zoom meeting

How the brain represents the world to guide (adaptive?) decisions

  • Date: May 11, 2020
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Mona Garvert
  • Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
  • Location: Zoom meeting

Spite vs. Risk: Explaining overbidding

Renegotiation Behavior and Promise-keeping Norms (with Steve Leider, Ming Jiang)

  • Date: Jul 13, 2020
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Erin Krupka
  • University of Michigan
  • Location: Zoom meeting

Proficiency testing (or the lack thereof) in the forensic sciences

  • Date: Oct 19, 2020
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Jonathan Koehler
  • Northwestern Pritzker School of Law
  • Location: Zoom meeting

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Property as a Complex System

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Norm Nudges and Social Inferences

Expectations and Trust in Government during COVID-19

Gender Differences Across Economic Games: Expectations, Norms, and Behavior

Personalized Law

Statutory Interpretation from the Outside

Leadership, Social Networks and Corporate Climate Through a Gender Lens

How to Trust a Machine?

Workshop with FAIR from NHH Bergen

  • Date: Apr 27, 2021
  • Time: 01:00 PM - 05:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Location: Zoom meeting

Workshop with UCSD (Rady School of Management)

  • Date: May 5, 2021
  • Time: 06:00 PM - 09:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Location: Zoom meeting

Workshop with Lyon/Göteborg/Vienna

  • Date: May 19, 2021
  • Time: 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Location: Zoom meeting

An Institutional View of Algorithmic Impact Assessments

IMPRS Summer School

  • Start: Aug 16, 2021
  • End: Aug 24, 2021
  • Location: MPI

The long run impacts of psychotherapy on depression, beliefs and preferences

Worker Beliefs about Rents and Outside Options

Does Identity Affect Labor Supply?

Behavioral advertising and consumer welfare: An empirical investigation (joint with Eduardo Mustri and Idris Adjerid)

  • Date: Dec 2, 2021
  • Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Alessandro Acquisti, Carnegie Mellon University
  • Alessandro Acquisti is a Professor of Information Technology and Public Policy at the Heinz College, Carnegie Mellon University. He is the director of the Privacy Economics Experiments (PeeX) Lab and the co-director of the Centre for Behavioural and Decision Research (CBDR) at CMU. His research combines economics, decision research, and data mining to investigate the role of privacy in a digital society. His studies have spearheaded the economic analysis of privacy, the application of behavioral economics to the understanding of consumer privacy valuations and decision-making, and the investigation of privacy and personal disclosures in online social networks. Alessandro has been the recipient of the PET Award for Outstanding Research in Privacy Enhancing Technologies, the IBM Best Academic Privacy Faculty Award, and numerous Best Paper awards. His studies have been published in journals across multiple disciplines, including Science, Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, Journal of Economic Literature, Management Science, Marketing Science, Journal of Consumer Research, and Journal of Experimental Psychology. His research has been featured in media outlets around the world, including The Economist, The New Yorker, The New York Times and New York Times Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Wired, and 60 Minutes. His TED talks on privacy and human behaviour have been viewed over a million times. He has received a PhD from UC Berkeley and Master degrees from UC Berkeley, the London School of Economics, and Trinity College Dublin. He has held visiting positions at the Universities of Rome, Paris, and Freiburg (visiting professor); Harvard University (visiting scholar); University of Chicago (visiting fellow); Microsoft Research (visiting researcher); and Google (visiting scientist).
  • Location: Zoom meeting

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Workshop with WZB Berlin

  • Date: Dec 9, 2021
  • Time: 09:30 AM - 01:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Location: Zoom meeting

The Gender Gap in Self-Promotion

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Sharing money with humans versus computers

On the Complexity of Forming Mental Models

The Millennial Corporation: Strong Stakeholders, Weak Managers

Humans in the Loop

Workshop with University of Stockholm

  • Date: Mar 30, 2022
  • Time: 09:00 AM - 12:30 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Location: Zoom meeting

Digital addiction

Workshop with NHH-Bergen

  • Date: Apr 27, 2022
  • Time: 01:00 PM - 04:30 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Location: Zoom meeting

Computational Corpus Linguistics

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Equity Concerns are Narrowly Framed

AI Trust and Transparency

A Statistical Test for Legal Interpretation: Theory and Applications

Why people follow rules

Dynamic Preference “Reversals” and Time Inconsistency

Status, Control Beliefs, and Risk Taking

Stories, Statistics, and Memory

Beliefs about Maternal Labor Supply

Anticipatory Anxiety and Wishful Thinking

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