
2025 Advanced Behavioral and Experimental economics Workshop.
Keynote speakers
-
I am the Herbert A. Simon University Professor of Economics and Psychology at Carnegie Mellon University, and currently hold visiting professor positions at the London School of Economics and Political Science, the Arctic University of Norway (in Tromsø, Norway), and at the BRIQ Institute on Behavior and Inequality, at the University of Bonn, Germany. I received my Ph.D. from Yale University in 1985 and since then have held academic positions at The University of Chicago and Carnegie Mellon University, and fellowships at Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, The Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, The Russell Sage Foundation, the Institute for Advanced Study (Wissenschaftskolleg) in Berlin and the London School of Economics. I am past president of the Society for Judgment and Decision Making, and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. My research focuses on applications of psychology to economics and, more recently, applications of economics to psychology (e.g., economic analyses of boredom, insecure self-esteem, and of the reluctance to thank and apologize). Specific interests include belief-based utility, the psychology and economics of attention, learning and forgetting, motivational feeling states associated with cognition (e.g., boredom, curiosity and mental effort), intertemporal choice, bargaining and negotiations, psychology and health, law and economics, the psychology of adaptation, the role of emotion in decision making, the psychology of curiosity, conflict of interest, various aspects of sex, unethical behavior, and issues involving research ethics. Links that will enable you to download my papers dealing with all of these topics are in my CV, which is organized by topic area. You can also access my publications on Google Scholar.
I helped to found the field of behavioral economics, the field of neuroeconomics, and was one of the early proponents of a new approach to public policy called, variously, ‘asymmetric’ or ‘libertarian’ paternalism. I have published over 300 journal articles in journals in economics, psychology, law, medicine and other fields, numerous book chapters, have written or edited 6 books on topics ranging from intertemporal choice to behavioral economics and emotions, and have served on the editorial boards of numerous journals in different fields. I have served on multiple National Academy of Science and Institute of Medicine Panels, and have advised numerous corporations and governmental organizations, including the NIH, USDA, U.K. Behavioural Insights Team, CVS Caremark, Ascension Health, McKinsey, NPD, Aramark and many others. I have served on and chaired over 40 doctoral committees and taught intensive courses in behavioral economics at universities around the world. I have received numerous grants and awards, from government agencies such as the NIH, NSF, USDA, and from foundations, such as the John D. and Catherine T. McArthur Foundation, the Hewlett Foundation, the Russell Sage Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, and many others.
-
Drazen Prelec is the Digital Equipment Corp. Leaders for Global Operations Professor of Management and a Professor of Management Science and Economics at the MIT Sloan School of Management.
Prelec holds appointments in the Department of Economics and in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences. His research deals with the psychology and neuroscience of decision-making, including behavioral economics and neuroeconomics, risky choice, time discounting, self-control, and consumer behavior. He works on both the development of normative decision theory and the exploration of the empirical failures of that theory, using behavioral and fMRI methods. A current project on “self-signaling” tries to understand the strange power of non-causal motivation—when individuals favor actions that are diagnostic of good outcomes, even though these actions have little or no causal force. Diagnostic motivation is real, and is probably essential for human self-control. Its cognitive and neural mechanisms are not well understood, however. A second “Bayesian truth serum” project deals with scoring systems for evaluating individual and collective judgment in knowledge domains where no external truth criterion is available. Examples would be long-range forecasts, political or historical inferences, and artistic or legal interpretations. Prelece is developing scoring systems that reward honest judgments and that can identify truth even when majority opinion is wrong.
He was a Junior Fellow in the Harvard Society of Fellows, and has received a number of distinguished research awards, including the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship.
Prelec holds an AB in applied mathematics from Harvard College and a PhD in experimental psychology from Harvard University.
Important dates:
Conference Start Date: November 24th, 2025 Conference End Date: November 25th, 2025
Deadline to submit papers: Augst 15th, 2025 Papers confirmation: September 7th, 2025 Conference site: Universidad Torcuato Di Tella
The University of Chicago | UCEMA Joint Initiative for Latin American Experimental Economics (JILAEE) in association with Universidad Torcuato Di Tella, are inviting submissions for the “2025 Advanced Behavioral and Experimental Economics workshop” on November 24th and 25th, 2025. We are excited for you to join us on site in Buenos Aires. While we encourage submissions of papers focusing on field experiments in Latin America, all papers including lab and field experiments - conducted anywhere - are welcome.
The workshop:
The workshop’s scientific comettee will select 10 papers that will be presented during the 1 1/2 days workshop. Each presenter will have 45 minutes to present the paper and adjurn questions.
On each day there will be a 1.5 hours lecture from top keynote speakers. On November 24th George Loewenstein (Carnegie Mellon University) will lecture on …….. On November 25th, Drazen Prelec (MIT) will lecture on ……..
Schedule:
Monday, Nov 24th: 9 am registration. 10 am Sessions. 13 pm lunch break. 14.30 Keynote speaker. 16 pm to 19pm sessions. 20 pm to 22 pm cocktail dinner
Tuesday, Nov 25th: 10 am First session. 11.30 am Keynote speaker. 13.00 pm end of the workshop
Organizing Committee:
-
Julio J. Elias is professor in the Department of Economics and Business School of the University of CEMA (UCEMA), Argentina and Executive Director at JILAEE. His research focuses on health economics, economic development, the economics of education and labor economics.
-
I am an Assistant Professor at Universidad Torcuato Di Tella Business School.
My research interests lie both in the fields of behavioral economics and political economy.
I did my PhD at CEMFI, and I am an afiliated researcher at the Joint Initiative for Latin American Experimental Economics (JILAEE).
-
I am Associate Professor at the Business School at Universidad Torcuato Di Tella where I direct a research center called the "Neuroscience Lab". I am also a tenured researcher at the National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET) of Argentina. With a background in Physics (University of Buenos Aires) and a PhD in Neuroscience (University of Leicester), I have worked in several lines of research related to cognitive sciences, experimental psychology, and human behavioral sciences. Lately, I have been focused on understanding how people make judgements and decisions in social settings, how they change their minds following social influence, and how these processes relate to political polarization. To study these topics, I perform and analyze experiments conducted in large-scale public engagement events, online platforms, and in the lab.