PROGRAM
SEET workshop, Ibiza 2019
Venue:
“Antic edifici de la Comandància”
(ROOM: AVC03, first floor)
Universitat de les Illes Balears
Carrer del Calvari, 1 07800 Eivissa (Ibiza)
Wednesday, February 6th
15.30-16.00 Welcome
16.00-17.30 Session 1
Session chair: Ivan Ajdukovic
- Iñigo Hernández-Arenaz, Universitat de les Illes Balears (UIB), Spain
Gender Differences in Alternating-Offer Bargaining: An Experimental Study
- Katri Sieberg, University of Tampere, Finland
Bargaining with Conflict
- Giacomo Degli Antoni, University of Parma, Italy
Social responsibility in the Lab: the market effectiveness in favouring responsible behaviour by firms and consumers
- Ivan Ajdukovic, CEREN, EA 7477, Burgundy School of Business – UBFC, France
Selfish now, or altruistic (for) tomorrow? Inter vs. intra-generational strategies for the preservation of a common resource.
17.30-18.00 Coffee break
18.00-19.30 Session 2
Session chair: Guillermo Mateu
- Elisabetta Leni, University of Essex, U.K
Guilt Aversion and the Trust Game: An Analysis of Heterogeneous Factors
- Lara Ezquerra, Universitat de les Illes Balears (UIB), Spain
Deciding to delegate: on distributional consequences of Endogenous (and Compulsory) Delegation
- Silvester van Koten, Vysoká škola ekonomická, NF-KEKE, Prague, Czech Republic
The forward premium in electricity markets: an experimental study
- Guillermo Mateu, CEREN, EA 7477, Burgundy School of Business – UBFC, France
Salivary testosterone and cortisol in social dilemmas: effects of cooperation and punishment
Thursday, February 7th
9.00- 11.00 Session 3
Session chair: Antonio Filippin
- Marco Faillo, University of Trento, Italy
Peer approval concerns promote cooperation in public goods experiments
- Ewa Zawojska, University of Warsaw, Poland
Moving beyond the contingent valuation versus choice experiment debate
- Hannes Titeca, University of Exeter, UK
Exposure effects and beliefs in public goods games
- Lisette Ibanez, CEE-M, Univ. Montpellier, CNRS, INRA, Montpellier SupAgro, France
What did you do before? Moral (in)consistency in pro-environmental choice
- Antonio Filippin, University of Milan, Italy
Gambler's behavior: A field investigation
11.00-11.30 Coffee break
11.30- 13.00 Session 4
Session chair: Giuseppe Attanasi
- Matteo M. Marini, Universitá degli Studi de'll Insubria & UJI, Spain
20 years of emotions and risky choices in the lab. A Meta- analysis
- Vita Zhukova, Universidad Católica San Antonio de Murcia, Spain
The Role of Firms' Trustworthiness in Business Angels' Investment. Experimental Evidence from 3-player Trust Game.
- Andrea Martinangeli, Max Planck Institute for Tax Law and Public Finance, Germany
Last Word Not Yet Spoken: Last Place and Rank Reversal Aversion
- Giuseppe Attanasi, University of Nice, France
Intrinsic vs. extrinsic motivators on creative collaboration: The effect of sharing rewards
13.15-15.00 Lunch
15.00-16.30 Session 5
Session chair: Aihnoa Jaramillo-Gutierrez
- Eli Spiegelman, CEREN, EA 7477, Burgundy School of Business – UBFC, France
Flavors of regret: sour grapes counterfactual information in a binary lottery choice experiment.
- Marco Mantovani, Univ. of Milan- Bicocca, Italy
Electing Moderates
- Jose Maria Ortiz, Middlesex London, UK
Probabilistic Reward Schemes: Experimental Evidence
- Aihnoa Jaramillo-Gutierrez, Universitat Jaume I, Spain
Are credit-screening contracts designed for men?
17.00-18h30 Guided tour Ibiza town
20.00 Informal Dinner
Friday 8th February
9.30-11.00 Session 6
Session chair: Tomas Lejárraga
- Francesca Gioia, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy
Why Malus is not Used? Selection versus Incentives under Time Pressure
- Irene Comeig, Universidad de Valencia, Spain
Upside Versus Downside Risk: Gender, Stakes, and Probabilities
- John Smith, Rutgers University-Camden, USA
Judgments of length in the economics laboratory: Are there brains in choice?
- Tomas Lejárraga, UIB Decision Science Laboratory, Universitat de les Illes Balears and Center for Adaptive Rationality, Max Planck Institute for Human Development
The Intuitive Statistician Lives: How a Change in Methods Shifted Our View on Human Judgment
11.00-11.30 Closing act
*Presentations: 20min + comments