9th Maastricht Behavioral and Experimental Economics Symposium

9th Maastricht Behavioral and Experimental Economics Symposium (M-BEES 2016) - Theory and Experiments
Program (page 1 of 2)
09:00 - 09:15
Opening Address (Aula)
09:15 - 10:15
Keynote Lecture (Aula) - Rachel Croson (University of Texas at Arlington)
Experimental Economics Imperialism
10:15 - 10:45
Coffee Break (Foyer)
Parallel Sessions 1
10:45 - 12:00
(Bounded)
Rationality
Markets
Preferences
Public Goods
H0.04
H0.06
A0.23
A0.24
10:45 -11:10
Peter Schwardmann
University of Munich
Competitive pricing and quality disclosure to cursed consumers
11:10 -11:35
Yves Le Yaouanq
Toulouse School of Economics
It's not my fault! Ego, excuses and perseverance
11:35 -12:00
Timo Vogelsang (*)
University of Cologne
Sooner or Larger: Compensating Disutility with Consumption
10:45 -11:10
Matthias Weber
Bank of Lithuania and Vilnius University
Monetary Policy under Behavioral Expectations: Theory and Experiment
11:10 -11:35
Frédéric Schneider
University of Zurich
Mental Capabilities and Asset Market Bubbles: Theory and Experiment
11:35 -12:00
Marco Mantovani (*)
University of Milan Bicocca
Cognitive Ability and Games of School Choice
10:45 -11:10
Nickolas Gagnon
Maastricht University
How Does Reciprocity Fare with Time?
11:10 -11:35
Cettolin Elena
Tilburg University
Taste-Based Discrimination in an Ethnically Diverse Society
11:35 -12:00
Lydia Geijtenbeek (*)
University of Amsterdam
Lottery winners and their neighbors
10:45 -11:10
Pedro Robalo
MPG
Institutional Endogeneity and Third-party Punishment in Social Dilemmas
11:10 -11:35
Peter Katuscak
Cerge-EI
Does Financing of Public Goods by Lotteries Crowd Out Pro-Social Incentives?
11:35 -12:00
Till Weber (*)
The University of Nottingham
Sustaining Cooperation: A Comparative Evaluation of Cooperative Preferences, Peer Pressure and Formal Punishment
Susanne Neckermann
Erasmus University Rotterdam, Tinbergen Institute, ZEW
Knowing that You Matter, Matters! The Interplay of Meaning, Monetary Incentives, and Worker Recognition
Sandro Ambuehl
Stanford University
An Offer You Can't Refuse? Incentives change how we think
Lukas Wenner
University College London and University of Cologne
More Effort with Less Pay: On Information Avoidance, Belief Design and Performance
Rosario Macera
Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile
Choking Meets the Labor Market: Do High-Powered Incentives Harm Performance?
Holger Rau
University of Göttingen
How Worker Participation affects Reciprocity under Minimum Remuneration Policies: Experimental Evidence
Boris van Leeuwen (*)
Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse & Toulouse School of Economics Fight or Flight
10:45 -11:10
Incentives
Aula
11:10 -11:35
11:35 -12:00
Lunch Break (Foyer)
12:00 - 13:30
Parallel Sessions 2
13:30 - 14:45
Cognitive Skills
Communication
Finance
Gender
H0.04
H0.06
A0.23
A0.24
13:30 - 13:55
Patricio Dalton
Tilburg University
The Right Amount of Income Variability: Evidence from Small Retailers in Vietnam
13:55 - 14:20
Benedikt Vogt
CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis
An economic approach to measuring and understanding problem solving
14:20 - 14:45
Aljaz Ule (*)
CREED, University of Amsterdam
On economic foundation of meaning
13:30 - 13:55
Jeanne Hagenbach
CNRS – Ecole Polytechnique
Communication with Evidence in the Lab
13:55 - 14:20
Silvia Dominguez Martinez
University of Amsterdam
Communication versus (restricted) delegation: An experimental comparison
14:20 - 14:45
Christian Koch (*)
NYU Abu Dhabi
Let’s talk it over: In the long run sanctions are not necessary for selfgovernance
13:30 - 13:55
Santiago Sautua
Universidad del Rosario
Risk, Ambiguity, And Diversification
13:55 - 14:20
Olga Goldfayn
Goethe University Frankfurt
Personality traits and financial decisions of the households
14:20 - 14:45
Patrick Gerhard (*)
Maastricht University
When Do Investors Benefit from Long-term Return Horizons? Past Performance Framing and its Impact on Investors’ Belief Updating
13:30 - 13:55
Lilia Zhurakhovska
University of Duisburg-Essen
Do I Care if You Are Paid? A Field Experiment on Charitable Donations
13:55 - 14:20
Thomas Buser
University of Amsterdam
How does the Gender Difference in Willingness to Compete evolve with Experience?
14:20 - 14:45
Roel van Veldhuizen (*)
WZB Berlin
Gender Differences in Tournament Choices: Risk Preferences, Overconfidence, or Competitiveness?
Mark Koetse
VU Amsterdam University
Social Anchoring in Donating to a Public Environmental Good
Andis Sofianos
University of Warwick
Trusting in an Infinitely Repeated Trust Game
Felix Kölle
University of Cologne
Different Frames or different Games? Comparing Give-some and Take-some Social Dilemmas
Jörg Gross
University of Amsterdam
The moral hazard of self-imposed job rotation
Hande Erkut (*)
Maastricht University
Individual preferences across contexts
13:30 - 13:55
Cooperation
Aula
13:55 - 14:20
14:20 - 14:45
9th Maastricht Behavioral and Experimental Economics Symposium (M-BEES 2016) - Theory and Experiments
Program (page 2 of 2)
Coffee Break (Foyer)
14:45 - 15:15
Parallel Sessions 3
15:15 - 16:30
Ambiguity
Beliefs
Charitable Giving
and Helping
Diverse
H0.04
H0.06
A0.23
A0.24
15:15 - 15:40
Li King King
City University of Hong Kong
Testing Theories of Ambiguity Aversion and the Relative Importance of Ambiguity Aversion, Loss Aversion, and Long Shot Preference in Portfolio Choice
15:40 - 16:05
Giorgia Romagnoli
New York University
Testing Biseparable Preferences
16:05 - 16:30
Peter Wakker (*)
Erasmus University Rotterdam
The Rich Domain of Ambiguity Explored
15:15 - 15:40
Joël van der Weele
University of Amsterdam
Deception and Self-Deception
15:40 - 16:05
Peiran Jiao
University of Oxford
The Double-Channeled Effects of Experience in Individual Decisions: Experimental Evidence
16:05 - 16:30
Julian Hackinger (*)
Technical University of Munich
Not All Income is the Same to Everyone: Cognitive Ability and the House Money Effect in Public Goods Games
15:15 - 15:40
Steffen Altmann
University of Copenhagen
Defaults and Donations: Evidence from a Field Experiment
15:40 - 16:05
Pol Campos-Mercade
Lund University
An Economic Study on helping Behavior and Group Size
16:05 - 16:30
Adriaan Soetevent (*)
University of Groningen, Tinbergen Institute
A Commercial Gift for Charity
15:15 - 15:40
Nobuyuki Hanaki
University of Nice, Sophia-Antipolis and GREDEG
The strategic environment effect in beauty contest games
15:40 - 16:05
Andrea Martinangeli
University of Gothenburg
The coordinating power of transfers
16:05 - 16:30
Maria Jose Boccardi (*)
Brown University
Predictive Ability and the Fit-Power Trade-Off in Theories of Consumer Behavior
Piero Ronzani
University of Trento
Poverty induces loss insensitivity in decision-making under risk
Palab Mozumder
Florida International University
Status, Risk and Catching Up
Friederike Lenel
German Institute for Economic Research
Insurance and Solidarity
Frederik Schwerter
University of Bonn
Concentration Bias in Intertemporal Choice
Severine Toussaert
New York University
Connecting commitment to self-control problems: evidence from a weight loss challenge
Lasse Jessen (*)
Copenhagen Business School
15:15 - 15:40
Risk Preferences
and Intertemporal
Choice
Aula
15:40 - 16:05
16:05 - 16:30
Wealth, Liquidity, and Experimental Measures of Time Preference
16:30 - 17:00
Coffee Break (Foyer)
17:00 - 18:00
Keynote Lecture (Aula) - Andrew Caplin (New York University)
Economic Data Engineering
18:00 - 18:05
Closing Address (Aula)
19:00 - 22:00
Social Dinner (Restaurant Petit Bonheur)
(*) The last presenter of a session is also the chair of the respective session.
This event is supported by the Maastricht University (Department of Economics and GBSE).
Organizers
Arno M. Riedl ([email protected])
Christina Rott ([email protected])