Experimental Economics, Accounting and Society: A Conference in Memory of John Dickhaut
Chapman University
January 13-14, 2012
Keynote Speaker: Professor Vernon Smith of Chapman University, the 2002 recipient of the Nobel Prize in Economic Science.
Papers Presented:
- Framing Sticks as Carrots: An Experimental Investigation of Contract Frame and Effort in Agency Relationships
- Reputation Effects Of Disclosure: An Experimental Investigation
- Managers’ Green Investment and Related Disclosures Decisions
- Strategies for Long-run Cooperation: Experiments with Students and Workers
- Inducing Risk Neutral Preferences with Binary Lotteries: A Reconsideration
- A Neuronal Theory of Human Economic Choice
- Examination of Decision-making under Risk and Ambiguity across the Lifespan
- Trust, Reciprocity, And Interpersonal History: Fool Me Once, Shame on You, Fool Me Twice, Shame on Me
- Do Liars Believe? Beliefs and Other-Regarding Preferences in Sender-Receiver Games
- Economic Probes of Mental Function and the Extraction of Computational Phenotypes
- You Can't Gamble on Others: Dissociable Systems for Strategic Uncertainty and Risk
- High Stakes Behavior with Low Payoffs: Inducing Preferences with Holt-Laury Gambles
- Preference Reversals and Keeping Score without Monetary Incentives: Evidence for Noisy Maximization
- Marshall and Walras, Disequilibrium Trades and the Dynamics of Equilibration in the Continuous Double Auction Market
- Transparency, Efficiency and the Distribution of Economic Welfare in Pass-Through Investment Trust Games
- Rebuilding Damaged Trust with Apology, Promises, and Atonement