
Behavioural Science Uncovered
The podcast about behavioural science research and how it is made.
Latest episodes

Apr 12, 2020 • 21min
Dynamic Inconsistency in Food Choice with Anya Samek
In this episode, we talk with Anya Samek from the University of Southern California about her paper “Dynamic Inconsistency in Food Choice: Experimental Evidence from Two Food Deserts,” which she co-authored with Sally Sadoff and Charlie Sprenger. In the context of two home grocery delivery programs, this paper provides evidence of (i) dynamic inconsistency between immediate and … Continue reading Dynamic Inconsistency in Food Choice with Anya Samek →

Mar 26, 2020 • 29min
Medieval universities and market expansion with Noam Yuchtman
In this episode, we talk with Noam Yuchtman from the London School of Economics about his paper “Medieval Universities, Legal Institutions, and the Commercial Revolution,” which he published in 2014 with Davide Cantoni. Using data from medieval Germany, this paper examines the causal link between the emergence of universities, including the legal training they provided, … Continue reading Medieval universities and market expansion with Noam Yuchtman →

Mar 22, 2020 • 33min
Testing Bayesian Updating with Ned Augenblick
In this episode, we talk with Ned Augenblick from the University of Berkeley Haas School of Business about his paper with Matthew Rabin entitled “Belief Movement, Uncertainty Reduction, & Rational Updating”. This paper analyzes the relationship between (i) the movement in the beliefs of a Bayesian updater when new information arrives, and (ii) the associated reduction … Continue reading Testing Bayesian Updating with Ned Augenblick →

Feb 2, 2020 • 20min
Identifying Social Norms with Roberto Weber
In this episode, we talk with Roberto Weber from the University of Zurich about his paper “Identifying social norms using coordination games: why does dictator game sharing vary?,” which he published in 2013 with Erin Krupka. In this paper, Roberto and Erin introduce a new procedure for eliciting social norms, which they use to understand … Continue reading Identifying Social Norms with Roberto Weber →

Jan 10, 2020 • 21min
Fairness across the World with Bertil Tungodden
In this episode, we talk with Bertil Tungodden from the Norwegian School of Economics about his project entitled “Fairness across the world” in which he and his collaborators elicited the fairness preferences of 65,000 individuals from 60 different countries. As of the recording of this episode, no paper from the project is available yet. However, … Continue reading Fairness across the World with Bertil Tungodden →

Nov 4, 2019 • 25min
Misperceived Social Norms with Leonardo Bursztyn
Leonardo Bursztyn, a researcher from the University of Chicago, discusses the impact of misperceived social norms on female labor force participation in Saudi Arabia. He explores the research process, tools and methods used, and the benefits of conducting experiments in economic theory research.

Oct 26, 2019 • 24min
Sleep Quality and Productivity with Heather Schofield
In this episode, we talk with Heather Schofield from the University of Pennsylvania about her paper “Sleepless in Chennai: The Economic and Health Effects of Reducing Sleep Deprivation Among the Urban Poor”. In this paper, Heather and her co-authors Pedro Bessone, Gautam Rao, Frank Schilbach and Mattie Toma examine the impact of interventions that aim to … Continue reading Sleep Quality and Productivity with Heather Schofield →

Oct 14, 2019 • 42min
Protests as Strategic Games with Noam Yuchtman
In this episode, we talk with Noam Yuchtman from the London School of Economics about his paper “Protests as strategic games: experimental evidence from Hong Kong’s antiauthoritarian movement”. In this paper, Noam and his co-authors Davide Cantoni, David Y Yang and Y Jane Zhang examine how protesters in Hong Kong respond to information about the participation … Continue reading Protests as Strategic Games with Noam Yuchtman →