Andrea Fariña - Partner Selection and Reputation Signaling Escalate Coalitionary Conflict Luuk Snijder - Fight or flight? Defense participation is driven by the economic and social costs of leaving Laura Carlotta Hoenig - Intergroup Conflict as a By-Product of Parochial Prosociality Jordan Adamson - Territory in the State of Nature
Arif Anindita - Time Preference and Fertility: A Causal Evidence from Indonesia Ferdinand Vieider - Noisy coding of time and discounting for money Agnieszka Tymula - Quasi-hyperbolic present bias: a meta-analysis
Diego Marino Fages - Migration and Trust: Evidence on Assimilation from Internal Migrants Joshua Hellyer - Can Physical Attractiveness Close the Immigrant-Native Trust Gap? William Allen - Migration policy preferences and political trust: Evidence from Colombia and Peru
Lisa Spantig - Can you spot a scam? Measuring and improving scam identification ability Anita Kopányi-Peuker - Bank choice, bank runs, and coordination in the presence of two banks Lukas von Flüe - Heterogeneity in frequency-dependent social learning under cognitive load
Lucas De Abreu Maia - The Substantive Basis of Ideological Identification and its Behavioral Consequences in the United States Alvaro Forteza - Can political gridlock undermine checks and balances? A lab experiment. Arthur Schram - The Role of Opinion Polls in Coordination Amongst Protest Voters: An Experimental Study Lauri Sääksvuori - Who is mobilized to vote by short text messages? Evidence from a nationwide
Astrid Hopfensitz - SMILES BEHIND A MASK ARE DETECTABLE AND AFFECT JUDGMENTS OF ATTRACTIVENESS, TRUSTWORTHINESS, AND COMPETENCE Michael Rojek-Giffin - Experience-based Learning of Whom to Trust Ana Macanovic - The Moral Embeddedness of Cryptomarkets: Text Mining Feedback on Economic Exchanges on the Dark Web
Theresa Wieland - Unequal Climate Change – Which factors affect the motivation for climate-friendly behavior? Stefania Innocenti - The roles of social norms and economic reasoning in shaping support for carbon pricing Nicola Campigotto - Curbing Energy Consumption through Voluntary Quotas: Experimental Evidence
Presentation Title: "The behavioural foundations of international anti-bribery law: Results from an incentivised, on-line, cross-country experiment"
Abigail Barr joined the University of Nottingham in the summer of 2011. Before coming to Nottingham, she was a researcher at the Centre for the Study of African Economies (CSAE) and the Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford. She is also an associate of the Nuffield Centre for Experimental Social Science and the Institute of Fiscal Studies.
Abigail's research focuses on the socially embedded decision-maker. She has designed and implemented a variety of lab and lab-type experiments involving students in several countries, villagers in Zimbabwe, Colombia, Uganda, Nigeria, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan, private-sector waged workers and unemployed people in the UK, Chile, Peru, Ghana, South Africa, and Spain and health workers and teachers in Ethiopia, Uganda, and Albania. Four themes have dominated her work to date: the role of other-regarding preferences in individual decision-making; how people set up and hold each other to mutually beneficial agreements; citizens' willingness and ability to hold public service providers to account; and the factors and mechanisms determining individual preferences and values.