The CCBI seminar series features monthly presentations by leaders in their respective research fields. The series covers issues concerning both behavioural insights as a policy tool and implications for specific areas of EU policy. It provides a platform for exchange between academics actively engaged in behavioural insights research and primarily staff of the European Commission. The seminars aim to address staffs' interest in the foundations and applications of behavioural insights relevant to their work.
The seminars are hosted online only. To sign up and receive invitations to the seminar series please email us at
Participants from other European Institutions and external policy-practitioners are welcome to express interest. Seperate registration for access to the videoconference platform may be required.
The opinions expressed by presenters in the CCBI seminar series are their own and should not be considered as representative of the European Commission’s official position. Presenters also have sole responsibility for the displayed biographical information, titles, abstracts, and, where relevant, presentations.
Next seminar |
Behaviour change for net zero
Thursday, 23 January, 14:00-15:00
Professor Lorraine Whitmarsh, MBE, is an environmental psychologist, specialising in perceptions and behaviour in relation to climate change, energy and transport, based in the Department of Psychology, University of Bath. She is Director of the ESRC-funded UK Centre for Climate Change and Social Transformations (CAST). She regularly advises governmental and other organisations on low-carbon behaviour change and climate change communication, was one of the expert leads for Climate Assembly UK, and Lead Author for IPCC’s Working Group II Sixth Assessment Report. Her research projects have included studies of meat consumption, energy efficiency behaviours, waste reduction and carrier bag reuse, perceptions of smart technologies and electric vehicles, low-carbon lifestyles, and responses to climate change.
University of Bath profile page
Seminar chaired by Kaloyan Mitev
In this talk, I will argue that most of the measures required to reach our climate change targets require at least some degree of behaviour change. And that more broadly, social transformation is required to reach ’net zero’ carbon targets in the coming years. In order to achieve this, we need public engagement and participation in decision-making about what a low-carbon future looks like, and how to reach it. We also need a wide range of measures to change people’s behaviour at home, work and elsewhere. I will present findings from polls and citizens assemblies on public concern about climate change, and support for net zero policies; and from behavioural science research on how to effectively change behaviour to cut emissions.
Other upcoming seminars |
Who’s afraid of policy experiments?
Thursday, 6 March, 14:00-15:00
Robert Dur is Professor of Economics at Erasmus University Rotterdam. His expertise lies in the fields of public economics, behavioral economics, and organizational economics. He has run numerous randomized experiments together with businesses and public sector organizations so as to learn about the effects of a great variety of policies. He is also president of the Royal Dutch Economic Association, columnist at De Correspondent, and expert member of the Policy Evaluation Committee at the Dutch Ministry of Finance.
Erasmus University Rotterdam profile page
Seminar chaired by Colin Kuehnhanss
In many public policy areas, randomized policy experiments can greatly contribute to our knowledge of the effects of policies and can thus help to improve public policy. However, policy experiments are not very common. This paper studies whether a lack of appreciation for policy experiments among voters may be the reason for this. Collecting survey data representative of the Dutch electorate, we find clear evidence contradicting this view. Voters strongly support policy experimentation and particularly so when they do not hold a strong opinion about the policy. In a subsequent survey experiment among a selected group of Dutch politicians, we find that politicians conform their expressed opinion about policy experiments to what we tell them the actual opinion of voters is.
Past seminars |
2024
10 December 2024
Speaker:Prof. Wouter Botzen (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)
Prof. Wouter Botzen is director of the Institute for Environmental Studies (IVM), Vrije Universiteit (VU), Amsterdam. IVM is the oldest multidisciplinary environmental research institute in the Netherlands, and one of the world's leading institutes in sustainability science. He is Professor of Economics of Climate Change and Natural Disasters at IVM. His previous positions include being a Professor of Economics of Global Environmental Change at the Utrecht University School of Economics, and a senior research fellow at the Risk Management and Decision Processes Center at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.
His main research interests are climate change economics with a particular focus on risk, natural disaster insurance, behavioural economics of decision making under risk, and natural disaster risk assessment and management. Wouter has done extensive behavioural research on individual decisions about adaptation to climate change risks, and how policy interventions can improve preparedness for natural disasters. He has published widely in international scientific journals on these themes. His research obtained various awards, such as from the Society of Risk Analysis in the USA and the Lloyd’s Science of Risk Prize. Wouter has contributed to various international high-level policy reports, such as the IPCC, the UN Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction [GAR], and the European Climate Risk Assessment.
Abstract:
Economic losses from flooding are increasing around the world, which highlights the need to take measures that limit flood risk. However, many individuals in flood-prone areas do not invest in cost-effective flood risk mitigation measures and do not purchase flood insurance coverage. This has been explained by a variety of behavioural biases. In this talk, I will discuss these biases leading to suboptimal flood preparedness. Moreover, I will present behavioural economic studies that tested policy interventions designed to address these biases. These interventions can help individuals better prepare for future floods, such as nudges and financial incentives provided through insurance policies. Based on these findings, I will offer recommendations for flood risk management policies.
Presentation slides |
Seminar chaired by Colin Kuehnhanss
28 November 2024
Speakers:Mary MacLennan (Executive Office of the UN Secretary-General) and Dr. Malte Petersen (German Federal Chancellery)
Mary MacLennan is the Senior Advisor on Behavioural Science to the United Nations Executive Office of the Secretary-General where she leads behavioural science efforts. She is also the Lead of the UN Behavioural Science Group in the UN Innovation Network. In these roles she expands and supports behavioural science application across the UN.
As a behavioural scientist with over a decade of experience, Mary has worked in the foundational stages of government behavioural science teams and as an expert advisor to the OECD and UN Women, among other organisations. Mary is currently a Fellow at the El-Erian Institute of Behavioural Economics and Policy at the University of Cambridge and a Senior Visiting Fellow at the London School of Economics.
Dr Malte Petersen is a psychologist working as policy advisor on behavioural science and citizen-centred policies in the German Federal Chancellery. His work focuses on the integration of behavioural science findings into policy design and the promotion of exchange between the scientific community and policymakers.
Abstracts:
Behavioural Science at the United Nations
The UN Secretary-General released a policy brief on "UN 2.0" which highlights the importance of behavioural science in creating forward thinking culture and as one of five cutting edge skills for the 21st century. This commitment is reaffirmed in the Secretary-General’s 2021 Guidance Note on Behavioural Science and supported by the UN Behavioural Science Group , which brings together over 6,000 colleagues from 70+ UN Entities and 140+ countries.
This session will focus on how behavioural science is being applied in the UN to policy, programming and administration - and where the UN is headed next.
German Federal Chancellery
In this talk we will share initiatives and learnings from this legislative term to further embed expertise from behavioural and social sciences in our governmental processes: we will talk about consultations of draft bills, legal design and the citizen check. We hope to encourage a debate about learning from similar initiatives, such as the dutch Doenvermogentoets.
Seminar chaired by Emanuele Ciriolo
14 November 2024
Speaker: Dr. David De Coninck (KU Leuven)
David De Coninck (PhD) is a postdoctoral researcher and guest professor at the Centre for Sociological Research at KU Leuven (Belgium). His research interests revolve around intergroup relations, with special attention to migrant deservingness, media effects, and intergroup contact. He has published widely on these topics in highly ranked academic journals in various fields.
Abstract:
I will highlight the development of a new framework that provides a fresh perspective on public preferences regarding migrants, how it can be used to gain further insights into discriminatory behaviour towards migrants, and investigate the extent to which this framework is found in news media coverage of migrants. In the field of social policy, the CARIN criteria (Control, Attitude, Reciprocity, Identity, Need) have been used to assess public preferences with regards to the allocation of welfare benefits to different groups. I will apply these criteria to migrant deservingness: which ‘type’ of migrant does the public feel deserves to settle in a country? The framework of deservingness draws from a variety of academic perspectives, through the integration of multiple research disciplines: e.g. sociology, social policy, migration studies, communication sciences, and political communication. In a current project on the topic, I combine desk research of media content with a mixed-method approach to develop the theoretical framework and to deliver new insights for academia and policy makers: an online survey will gauge public opinion and experimental correspondence tests will be conducted to assess discriminatory behaviours towards migrants. Based on this developed theoretical framework, I formulate recommendations for policy and practice.
Presentation slides |
Seminar chaired by Michal Krawczyk
24 October 2024
Speakers: Dr. Stephen Wendel (sistemaFutura) and Wendy Chamberlin (independent consultant)
Dr. Wendel is an applied behavioral scientist who helps organizations effectively use behavioral science to the benefit of their customers. Before co-founding sistemaFutura, he led the behavioral science efforts at Morningstar, HelloWallet and Busara, developing and field-testing hundreds of interventions, and he founded the international non-profit organization Bescy. He has authored three books on applied behavioral science, including the broadly-used textbook, Designing for Behavior Change, now in its second edition.
Ms. Chamberlain is a development professional with over 18 years’ experience working in the philanthropic sector, research, in direct implementation. She focuses on solutions to drive financial inclusion in emerging markets, especially for climate adaptive solutions, women's economic empowerment, locally led adaptation, and arid/semi-arid land markets.
Abstract:
In order for climate adaptation policy to be effective, individuals and the institutions in which they are embedded need to take action: from government employees, to businesses, to consumers. Well-intentioned and well-crafted policies that seek to ameliorate the effects of climate risks are wasted if they are not implemented, if people do not comply with them, or if vital feedback on their effects is not gathered and utilised in further policy development. In each of these areas, behavioural science can help.
In this discussion, we share a framework to understand the various ways in which behavioural science can help support climate adaptation policy. Specifically, it employs a behavioural systems analysis, an emerging technique that seeks to drive meaningful behavioural change at both the individual level and the system level. We’ll share a concrete example of climate adaptation among Kenyan pastoralists, and then demonstrate how the framework can be for other multi-level policy challenges
Presentation slides |
Seminar chaired by Marion Dupoux
02 October 2024
Speaker: Prof. Balázs Bodó (University of Amsterdam)
Dr. Balazs Bodo is Associate Professor, socio-legal researcher at the Institute for Information Law (IViR) at the University of Amsterdam. He was a Fulbright Visiting Researcher at Stanford University’s Center for Internet and Society in 2006/7. In 2012/13 he was a Fulbright Fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University. In 2013 he moved to Amsterdam as a Marie Curie Fellow at the Institute for Information Law (IViR) at the University of Amsterdam.
In 2018 he received an ERC Starting Grant to study the legal, and political implications of blockchain based technologies, and started the Blockchain & Society Policy Research Lab. In 2019 he has been a senior visiting fellow at the Weizenbaum-Institut für die vernetzte Gesellschaft, Berlin. He is the founding (co)director of the University of Amsterdam’s interdisciplinary research area on Trust in the digital society. He is the Program Director of a new interdisciplinary Advanced LLM program in Technology Governance. His academic interests include digital piracy, decentralized techno-social systems, shadow libraries, informal media economies, regulatory conflicts around new technological architectures, and trust.
University of Amsterdam profile page
Abstract:
The Trust in the Digital Society Research Priority Area at the University of Amsterdam is an interdisciplinary research effort to better understand trust dynamics in the digital society. Platforms, social media, AI systems, e-commerce systems, search engines, algorithmic recommenders and filtering systems, blockchains, reputation management systems, dating apps and app marketplaces, welfare and predictive policing systems are just a few of those info-communication technologies which either produce new forms of (dis)trust, replace, remediate, or disrupt existing mechanisms of trust formation.
Our project focuses on four major questions:
- What are the new digital infrastructures we increasingly rely on to build trust in our social, political, economic, and interpersonal relations in society?
- What kind of societal trust dynamics emerge by this increased reliance of trust through technology?
- Are these infrastructures trustworthy? And if, as we have every reason to believe, they aren’t,
- What combination of regulation, design, competition, economic incentives, public oversight, and political accountability makes these infrastructures (more) trustworthy?
In this talk UvA researchers will discuss how they operationalized these questions, and what research projects are in the making. The goal of this meeting is to explore building research networks, sharing resource, starting collaborative efforts on empirical, theoretical and legal/policy work.
In particular, we’ll touch upon how social media facilitates the circulation of (dis)trust narratives; what platforms’ trust and safety units are doing; how the emerging EU tech regulation framework can and cannot contribute to the trustworthiness of digital technologies; and how we can better understand the psychological processes of (dis)trust formation in the digital environment.
Presentation slides |
Seminar chaired by Andrea Blasco
03 September 2024
Speaker: Prof. Robert Metcalfe (Columbia University)
Robert Metcalfe is a Professor of International and Public Affairs and holds the SIPA Professorship of Energy Policy at Columbia University. His research covers environmental and energy economics, behavioral economics, and public economics. He has published over 25 academic peer-reviewed papers in journals such as the American Economic Review, Journal of Political Economy, and the Journal of Public Economics. He is a co-editor at the Journal of Public Economics and an associate editor at the Journal of Political Economy: Microeconomics, and is the chief economist at the Centre for Net Zero (part of the Octopus Energy Group). He has previously worked at University of Southern California, Boston University, University of Chicago, and University of Oxford. He has also previously worked in the U.K. Government and the Social and Behavioral Sciences Team at the Office of Science and Technology Policy, Office of the U.S. President.
Abstract:
What are the most effective ways to address climate change? This seminar presents a research paper that extends and applies the marginal value of public funds (MVPF) framework to help answer this question. We examine 96 US environmental policy changes studied over the past 25 years. These policies span subsidies (wind, residential solar, electric and hybrid vehicles, vehicle retirement, appliance rebates, weatherization), nudges (marketing and energy conservation), and revenue raisers (fuel taxes, cap and trade). For each policy, we draw upon quasi-experimental or experimental evaluations of causal effects and translate those estimates into an MVPF. We apply a consistent translation of these behavioral responses into measures of their associated externalities and valuations of those externalities. We also provide a new method for incorporating learning-by-doing spillovers.
The analysis yields three main results:
- First, subsidies for investments that directly displace the dirty production of electricity, such as production tax credits for wind power and subsidies for residential solar panels, have higher MVPFs (generally exceeding 2) than all other subsidies in our sample (with MVPFs generally around 1).
- Second, nudges to reduce energy consumption have large MVPFs, with values above 5, when targeted to regions of the US with a dirty electric grid. By contrast, policies targeting areas with cleaner grids such as California and the Northeast have substantially smaller MVPFs (often below 1), despite larger treatment effects in those areas.
- Third, gas taxes and cap-and-trade policies are highly efficient means of raising revenue (with MVPFs below 0.7) due to the presence of large environmental externalities.
We contrast these conclusions with those derived from more traditional cost per ton metrics used in previous literature.
Working paper |
Seminar chaired by Andrea Blasco
27 June 2024
Speaker: Prof. Kristian S. Nielsen (Copenhagen Business School)
Kristian S. Nielsen is an Assistant Professor at Copenhagen Business School, Department of Management, Society and Communication. Kristian’s research focuses on the role of behavior change in mitigating climate change and conserving biodiversity. He is particularly interested in identifying effective and scalable initiatives to change behavior, understanding how individual behavior changes can contribute to reducing environmental impacts, and understanding how to increase the feasibility of transformative climate and biodiversity initiatives. His research is rooted in quantitative environmental psychology and behavioral science but with an interdisciplinary outlook. Before joining Copenhagen Business School, he was a postdoc in the Department of Psychology and Department of Zoology at the University of Cambridge.
Copenhagen Business School profile page
Abstract:
Addressing the biodiversity crisis requires unprecedented societal transformations within a short time frame. Behavioral science has an important role in informing this transformation, but so far, it has only had a relatively minor role in informing biodiversity conservation strategies. In my talk, I will first discuss how to think about conservation-relevant behavior and its determinants. I will then characterize the typical behavioral science approach to studying conservation-relevant behaviors and pinpoint pertinent limitations and blind spots. I will close by offering suggestions for developing behavior change interventions.
Presentation slides |
Seminar chaired by Marion Dupoux
28 May 2024
Speaker: Prof. Sergei Guriev (Sciences Po, Paris)
Sergei Guriev joined Sciences Po as a tenured professor of economics in 2013 after serving as the Rector of the New Economic School in Moscow in 2004-13. In 2016-19, he was on leave from Sciences Po serving as the Chief Economist and Member of the Executive Committee of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD). In 2022, Sergei Guriev was appointed Provost at Sciences Po. Professor Guriev’s research interests include political economics of populism and autocracy. He has published in the leading economics and political science journals including American Economic Review, Quarterly Journal of Economics, Review of Economic Studies, and American Political Science Review. His 2022 book “Spin Dictators: The Changing Face of Tyranny in the 21st Century” (Princeton University Press) has been translated into 13 languages. Professor Guriev is also a member of the Executive Committee of the International Economic Association and a Global Member of the Trilateral Commission. He is also a Research Fellow at the Centre for Economic Policy Research, London (where he has also served as a founding Leader of the Research and Policy Network on Populism). He is a Senior Member of the Institut Universitaire de France, an Ordinary Member of Academia Europeae, and an Honorary Foreign Member of the American Economic Association.
Abstract:
We develop a comprehensive framework to assess policy measures aimed at curbing false news dissemination on social media. A randomized experiment on Twitter during the 2022 U.S. mid-term elections evaluates such policies as priming the awareness of misinformation, fact-checking, confirmation clicks, and prompting careful consideration of content. Priming is the most effective policy in reducing sharing of false news while increasing sharing of true content. A model of sharing decisions, motivated by persuasion, partisan signaling, and reputation concerns, predicts that policies affect sharing through three channels: (i) updating perceived veracity and partisanship of content, (ii) raising the salience of reputation, and (iii) increasing sharing frictions. Structural estimation shows that all policies impact sharing via the salience of reputation and cost of friction. Affecting perceived veracity plays a negligible role as a mechanism in all policies, including fact-checking. The priming intervention performs best in enhancing reputation salience with minimal added friction.
Joint work with Emeric Henry, Théo Marquis and Ekaterina Zhuravskaya
Working paper |
Seminar chaired by Hendrik Bruns
11 April 2024
Speaker: Dr. Sophie Attwood (World Resources Institute)
Dr Sophie Attwood is Senior Behavioral Scientist at the World Resources Institute (WRI) and her work focusses on helping people to switch to healthier and more sustainable diets and reduce food waste. Sophie is a Chartered Health Psychologist and Doctor of Behavioral Science from the University of Cambridge. She has researched and published extensively on the science of behavior change for health and sustainability, covering the areas of diet, physical activity, wellbeing, smoking cessation, and alcohol reduction. Her work has featured in a range of international media outlets including Reuters, Forbes, The Guardian, and the World Economic Forum.
Abstract:
Think of the words ‘food waste’, and chances are that your mind conjures up an image of a rotting, mouldy, smelly pile of food, landfill with flies buzzing around it, or a half-eaten plate leftovers.
For those of us working to reduce the amount of food that households waste in the European Union, the fact that this problem is ugly, boring and gross, makes it all the more difficult to create change at the scale we need. We must first overcome implicit negative associations in order to engage consumers, and work hard to correct misperceptions that food waste is only post-consumption scraps, rather than uneaten, edible food. In this presentation, I will review research on consumer perceptions of food waste and how these influence consumer motivations to engage with the issue and take action. Subsequently, I will explore how behavioral science can be applied to change consumer perceptions, presenting a series of studies exploring social norms interventions to make food waste socially unacceptable, and subsequently outline suggestions for how to reframe consumer perceptions of food waste, so that tackling this problem is seen as innovative, creative and altruistic instead.
Presentation slides |
Seminar chaired by Hendrik Bruns
12 March 2024
Speaker: Dr. Renos Vakis (World Bank - Mind, Behavior, and Development Unit)
Renos Vakis leads the Mind, Behavior, and Development Unit (eMBeD), which integrates behavioral science in the design of anti-poverty policies in a wide range of issues such as financial inclusion, social cohesion, human development and employment. He has written extensively on issues related to poverty dynamics and mobility, aspirations, mental well-being and social protection and has led numerous randomized trials on a range of anti-poverty interventions in various settings. Renos has also taught at Johns Hopkins University (SAIS) and the University of Cyprus. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley.
Mind, Behavior, and Development Unit (eMBeD)
Abstract:
The proliferation of mis- and disinformation threatens to erode the credibility of public institutions and limit their capacity to implement policies that enhance public well-being. While misinformation represents an urgent global challenge, relatively little research has examined solutions in low- and middle-income countries. We experimentally test the impact of a novel WhatsApp chatbot game intervention in Jordan to boost capacity to identify common misinformation techniques and reduce the likelihood of sharing misleading headlines with others -effectively 'inoculating' them against misinformation. A sample of 2,851 participants was recruited online and randomly assigned to five study arms: (1) comprehensive game-based inoculation that highlighted examples of misinformation and non-misinformation, (2) brief game-based inoculation that highlighted examples of only misinformation, (3) infographics-based inoculation, (4) exposure to placebo infographics unrelated to misinformation, and (5) pure control. To evaluate the impact of our intervention, we assess two main outcomes: (i) ability to accurately discern headlines using misinformation techniques and headlines that do not use misinformation techniques, and (ii) discernment in sharing the two types of headlines. Compared to the control group, the comprehensive version of the game significantly improved discernment of misinformation and reduced likelihood of sharing misleading headlines. A brief version of the game yielded weaker effects on discernment of misinformation and likelihood of sharing misleading headlines. In contrast, exposure to infographics teaching similar techniques or a set of placebo infographics on an unrelated topic showed no significant impacts on discernment of misinformation and sharing intentions. These findings suggest that games can be highly effective mechanisms for inoculating the public against misinformation in the context of a middle-income country in the short term. Future research is also needed to explore the boundary conditions of our findings including assessment of medium- and long-term effects.
Presentation slides |
Seminar chaired by Hendrik Bruns
27 February 2024
Speaker: Prof. Axel Ockenfels, Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods
Axel Ockenfels is Professor of Economics at the University of Cologne and Director at the Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods in Bonn. He combines tools from market design and the behavioral sciences to find solutions in the electricity, climate, finance, transportation, telecommunications, Internet, and other sectors. Ockenfels is a member of the Advisory Board of the German Federal Ministry of Economics and Climate Action, an advisor to the German Chancellor's Office, and a member of several German academies of science. His research has been honored with the highest German and European research distinctions.
Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods
Abstract:
Human behavior shapes nearly every aspect of our lives. It affects the success of societies, markets, organizations and individuals. Indeed, many economic and social challenges, such as pandemics, climate change, and energy crises, require behavioral change. In this talk, I will use case studies, mostly from my own research, to show how research in market design and behavioral economics can be used to design mechanisms that align incentives and behavior with underlying goals.
Seminar chaired by Colin Kuehnhanss
25 January 2024
Speaker: Dr. Michael Pahle, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)
Dr Michael Pahle is head of the working group “Climate and Energy Policy” at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK). He holds a PhD in economics from TU Berlin. His research focuses on emission trading systems, public support for carbon pricing, and regulatory frameworks to achieve net-zero. He is Principle Investigator on “European Climate and Energy Policy” in the BMBF Ariadne Project , Germany’s largest social science Energiewende research project. Based on his research, Michael advises the German government and parliament, the EU Commission and the EU Parliament on the development, reform and extension of emission trading. He is also a member of the consultative working group for ESMA's Risk Comittee .
Michael Pahle - Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
Abstract:
National environmental protection policies are coming under pressure despite increasingly dramatic climate realities. At the same time, global cooperation in achieving fast enough emission reduction to fulfil the Paris Agreement is lacking. Knowledge of this lack of international cooperation may further reduce citizens’ willingness to support climate policies at home, potentially leading to a viscious circle of lower ambitions in national politics undermining global commitments. In this context, we present experimental survey evidence from all major EU countries with more than 50,000 participants, investigating links between individual attitudes on climate, moralisation and donation behaviour, and evaluating the effects of an information treatment showing international failure to cooperate. We analyse participants’ preferences for action at the national, EU and global level. We show that many people are committed to spending their own money on reducing emissions, and that this relates strongly to climate policy moralisation. Negative information on global cooperation has no negative effect on peoples’ support for climate policies, offering an optimistic take on future policies. We further explore country differences in attitudes, behaviours and knowledge about climate-related policies.
Presentation slides |
Seminar chaired by Marion Dupoux
2023
5 December 2023
Speakers: Prof. Mike Luca, Stefan Hunt and Kush Amlani
Prof. Mike Luca is the Lee J. Styslinger III Associate Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School, and a faculty research fellow at the NBER. His research, teaching, and advisory work focuses on the design of online platforms, and on the ways in which data can inform managerial and policy decisions. His research has been published in academic journals including the Journal of Economic Perspectives, Management Science, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, American Economic Review: Papers and Proceeding, the American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, and the American Economic Journal: Microeconomics. He has also written about behavioral economics and online platforms for major media outlets including The Wall Street Journal, Economist, Financial Times, Guardian and the Huffington Post amongst others.
Michael Luca - Harvard Business School
Dr. Stefan Hunt is Head of Keystone’s Advanced Technology Services (K.ATS) in Europe and has over 20 years of experience in economics, behavioural analysis and experimental design. Prior to joining Keystone, Stefan was the Chief Data and Technology Insight Officer at the UK Competition and Markets Authority (CMA). He created and led a world-leading team of technologists – including behavioural scientists. Stefan worked on digital regulation and was actively involved in all the CMA’s major digital cases, from mergers and acquisitions to market studies and investigations, to antitrust cases. Prior to that he was the founder and head of the behavioural economics and data science unit at the UK Financial Conduct Authority. He has a PhD in economics from Harvard University, a master’s in experimental psychology and mathematics from the University of Cambridge, and he is an Honorary Professor in economics at the University of Nottingham.
Kush Amlani is Global Competition and Regulatory Counsel at Mozilla, leading the competition legal and policy work at this leading not-for-profit technology company. Prior to joining Mozilla, Kush was a Senior Competition and Regulatory Lawyer at the BBC for five years. He joined the BBC from SJ Berwin LLP (later Kings and Wood Mallesons) where he worked on competition cases in sectors such as energy, media, telecoms and pharmaceuticals, including the pay-for-delay cases before the European Commission and the Court of Justice. Kush studied law at the University of Warwick and Université Montesquieu Bordeaux IV.
Kushall Amlani - profile on LinkedIn
Abstract:
It is well established that defaults have a strong impact on people’s behaviours – for example the browser that people use on their phone or desktop, and many don’t even know they are being defaulted or how to change it. One potential solution regulators are considering is the use of ‘choice screens’ that prompt people to actively select their preferred default browser instead of it being selected for them by the platform/device manufacturer – and in the EU such choice screens are a requirement under the Digital Markets Act. The aim is to give people more control over the browser they use and ultimately promote greater competition amongst browsers. However, there is little robust evidence to date on the use and design of such choice screens. We undertook a large-scale experiment to test how differently designed choice screens influence people’s choices and levels of satisfaction. Our analysis provides insight into the impact of the design of choice screens and their potential to be effective. We found that certain elements of design – in particular ordering and placement – can significantly influence the choices that people make. People also had clear stated preferences for being shown a choice screen, and being shown more information about the browsers included on it.
Can browser choice screens be effective? - Mozilla Research
Presentation slides |
Discussant: Vanessa Turner (The European Consumer Organisation, BEUC)
Vanessa is Senior Advisor - Competition at The European Consumer Organisation, BEUC. Within BEUC, Vanessa focusses on ensuring that consumer interests are taken into account in European competition policy and key enforcement cases, in particular in Digital Markets and Sustainability. Since September 2020 Vanessa also acts as a non-governmental advisor to the International Competition Network for the European Commission.
Prior to joining BEUC, Vanessa was a Partner in the Competition Practice of Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and Allen and Overy in Brussels (as well as in London and Düsseldorf). In between these roles, she was a Member of the Cabinet of the Commissioner for Competition Policy at the European Commission (responsible for mergers and antitrust cases and policy), Special Advisor to the US FTC in Washington DC, and General Counsel, Company Secretary and Executive Vice President at Visa Europe.
Seminar chaired by Emanuele Ciriolo
7 November 2023
Speaker: Prof. Robert Sugden, University of East Anglia
Robert Sugden is Professor of Economics at the University of East Anglia in the United Kingdom. His research uses a combination of theoretical, experimental and philosophical methods to investigate issues in behavioural economics, normative economics, choice under uncertainty, the foundations of decision and game theory, the methodology of economics, and the evolution of social conventions. His current work aims to reconcile behavioural and normative economics, using principles of opportunity and mutual advantage rather than welfare. This work is synthesised in his recent book The Community of Advantage (Oxford University Press, 2018).
University of East Anglia profile page
Abstract:
Many of the empirical findings of behavioural economics are routinely described as ‘biases’ or ‘errors’ which interpose between individuals’ true preferences and their choices. Behavioural economists’ recommendations about public policy are often justified in terms of their effects on individuals’ welfare, with ‘welfare’ defined as the satisfaction of preferences. The difference from traditional welfare economics is that preferences are not assumed to be reliably revealed in choice, even when individuals have full information about the relevant market. Instead, each individual is implicitly assumed to have latent preferences which would be revealed in her decisions if she had complete information and was not subject to biases or errors attributable to deficiencies of cognitive capacity, attention or self-control.
I will argue that the concept of latent preference lacks psychological foundations and, in consequence, is explanatorily redundant. How far an individual’s decisions are context-dependent is an empirical question, but which contexts induce true preferences is not. In privileging preferences revealed in some contexts over those revealed in others, behavioural economists are being paternalistic while pretending otherwise. I do not claim that public policy should never be paternalistic, but paternalistic recommendations should be made openly. Alternatively, one can take a non-paternalistic approach in which the normative criterion is opportunity rather than preference-satisfaction.
Presentation slides |
Seminar chaired by Colin Kuehnhanss
18 October 2023
Speaker: Prof. Nicola Bellè, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna (Pisa)
Nicola Bellè is an associate professor at the Institute of Management of the Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies in Pisa, where he coordinates the Behavioral Insights Unit within the Management and Healthcare Laboratory. Before joining Sant'Anna, he was an assistant professor at Bocconi University, where he coordinated the Observatory on Change in Public Administration. His research focuses on behavioral and experimental public administration.
Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna (Pisa) profile page
Abstract:
The seminar will delve into a series of experimental studies examining the influence of cognitive biases and decision noise on belief formation among employees in public and healthcare organizations. The aim of the seminar is twofold. On the one hand, it seeks to elucidate practical applications in an attempt to bridge the gap between theory and real-world implementation. On the other hand, it aims to nurture the theoretical discourse about instability and heterogeneity in belief formation.
Seminar chaired by Marianna Baggio
21 September 2023
Speakers:
Prof. Sebastian Krügel, University of Southern Denmark
Prof. Andreas Ostermaier, University of Southern Denmark
Prof. Matthias Uhl, Technische Hochschule Ingolstadt
Abstract:
We empirically investigate the ethical implications of human-machine interaction. Specifically, we present the results of three experiments on the influence of machines on people’s judgments and decisions in the moral domain. First, in a vignette experiment, we research the role of transparency for the influence that algorithms exercise on people. We find that subjects are strongly influenced by algorithmic advice across various moral dilemmas and that this influence even persists if subjects are given reasons to doubt the advice’s moral quality. Second, in an incentivized experiment, we test for unintended behavioral effects in human-machine interaction and stress the relevance of an ethically aligned design of this interaction. We observe that subjects’ selfishness is uninfluenced by the presence of a machine corrective but that their selfishness increases if they are supposed to correct a machine’s decision. Third, in another recent vignette study, we study the effect of ChatGPT on users’ moral judgments. We find that our subjects’ answer to the trolley problem is highly influenced by the chatbots inconsistent advice and that this effect is unconscious to a large degree.
Presentation slides |
Seminar chaired by Alexia Gaudeul
13 June 2023
Speaker: Prof. Timothy J. Hatton, University of Essex
Tim Hatton is a Professor of Economics at the University of Essex. His principal research interests are in economic history and the economics of international migration. One branch of his research is the study of refugees and the flow of asylum applications to the developed world. More recently he has focused on public opinion on immigration and asylum and the development of policy, especially in the European Union.
University of Essex profile page
Abstract:
This talk offers a selective overview of some issues on public opinion on immigrants and asylum seekers and possible links to asylum policies. The talk is organised around three questions:
- How far does policy deviate from public opinion?
- Does public opinion actually influence policy?
- How could policymakers better take account of public opinion?
Seminar chaired by Michal Krawczyk
17 May 2023
Speaker: Prof. Barbara Biasi, Yale School of Management
Barbara Biasi is an Assistant Professor of Economics at the Yale School of Management and a Visiting Assistant Professor at the Einaudi Institute for Economics and Finance. Her research focuses on education, innovation, and gender, making her a leading authority in the field. With her extensive background and contributions to academia, Barbara serves as a Faculty Research Fellow at NBER (National Bureau of Economic Research) and a Research Affiliate at CEPR (Centre for Economic Policy Research), IZA (Institute of Labor Economics), and CESifo (Center for Economic Studies and Ifo Institute). Barbara was recently awarded an ERC (European Research Council) Starting Grant to conduct an in-depth study on educators' careers, underscoring her work's significance in understanding labour dynamics and policy implications.
Abstract:
Does flexible pay increase the gender wage gap? To answer this question, we analyze the wages of public school teachers in Wisconsin, where a 2011 reform allowed school districts to set teachers’ pay more flexibly and engage in individual negotiations. Using quasi-exogenous variation in the timing of the introduction of flexible pay, driven by the expiration of preexisting collective-bargaining agreements, we show that flexible pay lowered the salaries of women compared with men with the same credentials. This gap is larger for younger teachers and smaller for teachers working under a female principal or superintendent. Survey evidence suggests that the gap is partly driven by women engaging less frequently in negotiations over pay, especially when the counterpart is a man. The gap is unlikely to be driven by observable gender differences in job mobility or teacher ability, although the threat of moving and a high demand for male teachers could exacerbate it. Our results suggest that pay discretion and wage bargaining are important determinants of the gender wage gap and that institutions, such as unions, might help narrow this gap.
Seminar chaired by Andrea Blasco
16 May 2023
Speaker: Prof. Shaul Shalvi, Amsterdam School of Economics
Behavioural Ethics Lab profile page
Abstract:
The EU has set four priorities that shape the political and policy agenda until 2024. Those include for example, building a climate-neutral, green, fair and social Europe and promoting European interests and values such as global peace, stability, democracy and human rights. For policies to be effective, EU citizens’ support and engagement is essential. We will discuss various experimental evidence showing however, that people often prefer to remain ignorant of the impact their behaviour has on others or the environment. By claiming “I did not know”, people can feel good while being selfish. The research highlights the importance of transparency in communicating the consequences of our actions to others.
Seminar chaired by Hannah Nohlen
19 April 2023
Speaker: Prof. Elizabeth Linos, Harvard Kennedy School of Government
Dr. Elizabeth Linos is the Emma Bloomberg Associate Professor for Public Policy and Management, and Faculty Director of The People Lab at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Most of her research deals on how to improve government, by focussing on its people and the services they deliver. Specifically, she uses insights from behavioral science and evidence from public management to consider how to recruit, retain, and support the government workforce, how to reduce administrative burdens that low-income households face when they interact with their government, and how to better integrate evidence-based policymaking into government. Her research has been published in various top academic journals. As the former VP and Head of Research and Evaluation at the BIT in North America, she worked with government agencies in the US and the UK to improve programs using behavioral science and to build capacity around rigorous evaluation. Prior to this role, Dr. Linos worked directly in government as a policy advisor to the Greek Prime Minister, George Papandreou, focussing on social innovation and public sector reform.
Abstract:
Prof. Linos will share insights from her previous research, in particular from "Bottlenecks for Evidence Adoption": Governments increasingly use RCTs to test innovations before scale up. Yet, little is known about whether and how they incorporate the results of the experiments into policy-making. Elizabeth and her co-authors followed up with 67 U.S. city departments which collectively ran 73 RCTs in collaboration with a national Nudge Unit. Compared to most contexts, the barriers to adoption are low. Yet, city departments adopt a nudge treatment in follow-on communication in 27% of cases. As potential determinants of adoption, they considered (i) the strength of the evidence, as determined by the RCT itself, (ii) features of the organization, such as “organizational capacity” of the city and whether the city staff member working on the RCT has been retained, and (iii) the experimental design, such as whether the RCT was implemented as part of pre-existing communication. Their insightful results underline the importance of considering the barriers to evidence adoption, beginning at the stage of experimental design and continuing after the RCT completion.
Seminar chaired by Emanuele Ciriolo
8 March 2023
Speaker: Prof. Jan Bauer, Copenhagen Business School
Copenhagen Business School profile page
Seminar chaired by Marion Dupoux
7 February 2023
Speaker: Prof. Gordon Pennycook, University of Regina
Seminar chaired by Hendrik Bruns
18 January 2023
Speaker: Prof. Natalia Montinari, University of Bologna
Natalia Montinari received her PhD in Economics and Management in 2011, from the University of Padua (Italy). She was a post-doc at the Max Planck Institute of Economics (Germany, 2011-13) and an Assistant Professor at Lund University (Sweden, 2013-16). Besides her current research, in the past she studied how monetary and non-monetary incentives interact with the heterogeneity of individual preferences. She mainly applies experimental economics methodologies. The results of her research activities have been published in international journals, including European Economic Review, Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, Journal of Law, Economics and Organizations, Experimental Economics, Journal of Economics, Organization and Behavior, Journal of Economic Psychology, and PlosOne. She is an Associate Editor of the Italian Economic Journal.
University of Bologna profile page
Abstract:
Prof. Montinari's presentation covers three strands of her current research: the emergence of the early gender wage gap in the labor market, the impact of social norms in defining the career choices of men and women, the short and long-term effects associated to the introduction of affirmative actions
Seminar chaired by Emanuele Ciriolo
Originally Published | Last Updated | 31 Aug 2023 | 11 Dec 2024 |
Related organisation(s) | JRC - Joint Research Centre |
Knowledge service | Metadata | Behavioural insights |
Digital Europa Thesaurus (DET) | consumer behavioursocial sciencesscience education |