Virtual Warm-up Talks

Gear up for the in-person SPUDM conference (August 2023 in Vienna) with our series of virtual Warm Up talks this June! These pre-conference events are an official part of the SPUDM program, designed to connect researchers worldwide without the need for travel to Europe. Mark your calendars for June 1st, June 15th, and June 29th at 4:00 PM CEST (Vienna time)!

Each session showcases up to 6 scientists who will present their cutting-edge research in a 12-minute talk, followed by a 3-minute discussion. Don’t miss out on this chance to join the conversation and learn about the newest research in JDM. If you’re ready to warm up for SPUDM 2023, please register now! We look forward to seeing you HERE.

Program

JUNE 1 – UNDERSTANDING NUDGES AND BIASES 

  • “The Nightshift Bias: Sleep deprivation affects physicians’ empathy and decisions” by Shoham Choshen-Hillel 
  • “The Different Power between Default and Advice on IoT Privacy Decisions” by Ziming Wang
  • “Climate protection in Germany: Party cues in a multi-party system” by Valentina Stoehr
  • “Beliefs and Ingroup Favoritism with Children” by Claire Rimbaud
  • “Borrowed Plumes: The Gender Gap in Claiming Credit for Teamwork” by Anna Walter

JUNE 15 – DECISION-MAKING UNDER LIMITED INFORMATION 

  • “Scarcity Reduces Exploration of Unfamiliar Options” by Britt Hadar
  • “Reinforcement Learning in Contests” by Vikas Chaudhary
  • “Attention constraints and learning in categories” by Rahul Bhui
  • “Strategic complexity and the value of thinking” by David Gill
  • “When Does Overconfidence Harm You?” by Sora Youn
  • “To Catch a Stag: Payoff- and risk-dominance in a one-shot coordination experiment” by Stephan Jagau

JUNE 29 – COMPLEX DECISION MAKING 

  • “Reference-dependent choice bracketing” by Pauline Vorjohann
  • “Human Forest and Wisdom-of-Crowds Solutions to the Reference Class Problem” by  Pavel Atanasov
  • “The development of probabilistic reasoning during preschool years” by  Sarah Placi
  • “Recycle right: How to increase recycling accuracy without decreasing recycling rates?” by Megan Hunter