Advances with Field Experiments
Advances with Field Experiments (AFE) 2025 Conference
September 18-19, 2025
Location: The University of Chicago
5757 S. University Ave.
Saieh Hall for Economics
Chicago, IL 60637
The Science of Philanthropy Initiative (SPI2025) and Advances with Field Experiments (AFE2025) conferences convened sequentially in 2025, on September 17-18 and September 18-19, respectively. Professor Michael Kremer was a shared keynote presenter for both conferences.
View the 2025 AFE conference mobile-friendly schedule.
View the 2025 AFE conference schedule PDF.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
(Pictured above, from left to right)
Leonardo Bursztyn, The University of Chicago
Leonardo Bursztyn is the Saieh Family Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago. He is also an Editor of the Journal of Political Economy, the co-director of the Becker Friedman Institute Political Economics Initiative, and the founder and director of the Normal Lab.
His research uses field experiments, often combined with observational data, to better understand how individuals' main economic decisions are shaped by their social environments. His work has examined educational, labor market, financial, consumption, and political decisions, both in developing and developed countries.
Leonardo is a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), a fellow at the Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD), and an affiliate at the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) and at the Pearson Institute. He is also the recipient of a 2016 Sloan Research Fellowship. He received his PhD in economics at Harvard University in 2010.
Zoe Cullen, Harvard Business School
Zoe Cullen graduated with a PhD from Stanford in Economics in 2016. She worked from 2016-2018 as the Chief Economist for an Asian bank on the roll out of a digital transaction platform. In 2018 she joined HBS as an Assistant Professor in the Entrepreneurial Management Unit. Her interests are in the design of labor markets and the choices of employers and labor platforms that affect matters of public interest, such as pay transparency, pay inequality and criminal background screening. She’s an NBER Affiliate in Labor Studies, an Associate Editor at the Journal of Political Economy and an Alfred P. Sloan Fellow (2024-2026).
Michael Kremer, The University of Chicago, “Should Schools Install Air Filters? Evidence from Colombia”
Michael Kremer directs the Development Innovation Lab at the University of Chicago, where he is a University Professor. He is the joint winner of Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel (Economics Nobel Prize) 2019, for the “experimental approach to alleviating global poverty”.
Kremer’s work focuses on innovation, including in education, health, water, finance, agriculture. He has also worked extensively on how to design institutions to accelerate innovation, including through Advance Market Commitments (AMC) and social innovation funds.
Kremer actively translates his academic work into real-world programs. He helped to design an AMC for a pneumococcal vaccine. Subsequently three vaccines have been approved, and rolled out in 60 countries, saving an estimated 700,000 lives. As part of the Accelerating Health Technologies group, he conducted research and advised governments and international organizations on how to accelerate vaccination against COVID-19. His work on school-based deworming informed India’s national deworming day, which treats over 275 million children each year. His work on safe drinking water led to the Dispensers for Safe Water Program, which reaches 4 million people via the NGO Evidence Action. He is a co-founder of Precision Agriculture for Development, which leverages digital technology to improve productivity and incomes for small-holder farmers in developing countries.
Kremer is a co-founder and serves as Scientific Director of USAID's Development Innovation Ventures (DIV), an open, tiered, evidenced-based fund that supports innovation for development.
ORGANIZERS
John List, Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics, University of Chicago
Robert Metcalfe, Columbia University
AFE 2025 PRIZES
The inaugural AFE award committee was thrilled to announce three new paper prizes, created to encourage and recognize outstanding work by early-career scholars presenting at AFE, as well as overall creativity. An award committee selected the winners based on scientific quality and creativity, and prize recipients were recognized following dinner on Day 1.
Louis Pasteur Prize
The Louis Pasteur Prize was jointly awarded to the best PhD student papers.
- YoungJoo Jung (UIUC) "Generous to Men or Harsh to Women?Experimentally Unpacking Gender Bias in Lending"
- Molly Doruska (Cornell) "Flood Risk and Differential Firm Investment: Evidence from Dakar, Senegal"
Ronald Fisher Prize
The Ronald Fisher Prize was awarded to the best junior (Pre-Tenure) paper.
- Alexandra Schubert (UC Berkeley/Wesleyan) "Self-Detrimental Avoidance of Rest"
Marie Curie Prize
The Marie Curie Prize was awarded to the most creative paper.
- Bo Cowgill (Columbia) "Clause and Effect: Theory and Field Experimental Evidence on Noncompete Clauses."
AFE 2025 PRESENTATIONS
Thank you to all organizers, presenters, and participants who made AFE 2025 a success!
ABOUT AFE
Recent years have seen an enormous increase and interest in academic research using experimental methods in the field to address questions across a broad range of topics in economics. Moreover, businesses and governments across many countries around the world are starting to appreciate the power that field experiments can have on the design of products, services, and policies.
The Advances with Field Experiments 2025 Conference will gather a group of academics to present the best and most innovative new work using field experiments to address economic questions. Previous Advances with Field Experiments conferences convened in 2011, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, virtually in 2020, in 2022 and 2023.
All types of field experiments, including natural, framed, and artefactual field experiments, are encouraged. In particular, we strongly encourage Ph.D. students to participate.
General questions? Please contact conference administrator Jamie Temmer.
Aarushi Kalra (Brown University)—'Hate in the Time of Algorithms: Evidence on Online Behavior from a Large-Scale Experiment'
Abdelaziz Lawani (Department of Agricultural Business and Education, Tennessee State University)—'Field Experiments without the Field? Testing the Behavioral Robustness of LLMs under Varying Model Parameters'
Abid Alam (Queen's University)—'The Efficacy of Growth Mindset and Social Belonging Interventions'
Abu Shonchoy (Florida International University)—'Barriers to Labor Migration for the Rural Poor'
Adam Osman (UIUC)—'How Big Does a “Big Push” Need to Be? Experimental Evidence on Poverty Traps'
Adam Sacarny (Columbia University (visiting at BFI during the fall))—'Can E-mails Make Prescribing Safer? Evidence from a Randomized Trial'
Adrien Dautheville (Norwegian School of Economics)—'Shaping Futures: Empowering students in the transition to the labor market in Tanzania'
Ajalavat Viriyavipart (Chulalongkorn University)—'Learning to wait: How financial and numerical literacy influence time preference decisions'
Ajay Sailopal (The University of Chicago)—'On the impact of Social iInteraction in end of life economics'
Alden Cheng (Gies College of Business, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign/NBER)—'"Peer Effects in the Workplace: Evidence from the Illinois Workplace Wellness Study (with Damon Jones, David Molitor, and Julian Reif)"'
Alessandra Fenizia (The George Washington University)—'Management Consultancy in the Public Sector: Evidence from Greece'
Alex Armand (Nova SBE)—'On the Political Economy of Urbanization: Experimental Evidence from Mozambique'
Alexandra Schubert (University of Zurich)—'Self-Detrimental Avoidance of Rest'
Alisher Batmanov (University of California San Diego)—'Beliefs & Demand for Mental Health Services Among University Students'
Amalia Di Girolamo (University of Birmingham)—'Toward an Understanding of Giving in the Dictator Game'
Amanda Chuan (Michigan State University)—'The value of pecuniary and non-pecuniary job amenities for students: evidence from a field experiment'
Amanda Kowalski (University of Michigan)—'Counting Defiers in Health Care: A Design-Based Model of an Experiment Can Reveal Evidence Against Monotonicity'
Angela Doku (Toronto Metropolitan University)—'Natural Disasters, Political Polarization, and Support for Environmental Policy'
Anirudh Sankar (Stanford University)—'Tell me why: Assessing the value of mechanistic explanations in a randomized experiment on fertilizer choice in Eastern Uganda'
Anna Popova (LMU Munich)—'Mindless Entry or Timeless Engagement? An Experimental Study on Strategies to Reduce Screen Time'
Anna Yurko (NRU Higher School of Economics, Moscow)—'Examining the Effects of Outside Options on Matching Outcomes in the DA Mechanism: an Experimental Approach'
Anne Brenøe (University of Zurich)—'Backlash to Gender Equality?'
Anuj Kumar (University of Florida)—'Improving Skill Production with Peer-Driven Knowledge Sharing in K-12 Schools'
APURVA BORAR (CORNELL UNIVERSITY)—'Occupational Social Value and Women's Labor Supply in India: A Field Experiment'
Ariel Listo (University of Maryland)—'Measuring the Sources of Taste-Based Discrimination Using List Experiments'
Arkadev Ghosh (Duke University)—'Learning About Outgroups: The Impact of Broad Versus Deep Interactions'
Badr ABOUFARASSE (Bordeaux School of Economics - University of Bordeaux - France)—'Causal Transfer Learning for Generalizing Experimental Estimates of Carbon Tax Support in China'
Becky Royer (University of Chicago)—'Crying Out for Attention: Using AI to Measure Parental Responsiveness and Child Outcomes'
Benjamin Krause (University of Chicago)—'Imagined Communities and Nation Building'
Bilge Erten (Northeastern University)—'Caregiver Mental Health and Early Childhood Development in Conflict-Affected Settings: Large Scale Experimental Evidence from Colombia'
Bo Cowgill (Columbia Universiy)—'Clause and Effect: Theory and Field Experimental Evidence on Noncompete Clauses'
Brent Hickman (Washington University in St Louis, Olin Business School)—'Salience and Buyer's Remorse: Optimal Nonlinear Pricing with Cognitively Constrained Consumers'
Brian Jabarian (University of Chicago Booth Business School)—'Voice AI at Work: Natural Field Experiment on Job Interviews'
Camila Galindo (Universidad de Los Andes)—'Science in Action: Environmental Education using Air Monitoring Technologies in Colombia'
Camila Zamora (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)—'Gender bias in student evaluations of teaching: Do debiasing campaigns work?'
carolina Lopez (World Bank)—'Improving Student Learning through Adaptive Learning Platforms: Experimental Evidence from the Dominican Republic'
Chanwool Kim (The University of Chicago)—'Scale Up of an Infuential Early Chilhood Education Program'
Chien-Yu Lai (National Taiwan University)—'The Effect of Carbon Footprint Labeling on Food Choice: A Field Experiment in Restaurant'
Christian Krekel (LSE)—'Volunteering, Mental Health, and Pro-Sociality: Evidence From England’s National Health Service'
Christina Sarah Hauser (European University Institute and Collegio Carlo Alberto)—'Encouraging Organ Donation: Evidence from a Randomized Informational Intervention among Young Adults in Tunisia'
Christine Aman (Rady School of Management, UC San Diego)—'Breaking Barriers to Food Security: Enhancing CalFresh Enrollment Among UC San Diego Students'
Christoph Goessmann (Imperial College London)—'Courts of Tomorrow: Experimental Evidence on AI-Augmented Justice in Pakistan'
Christoph Semken (University of Toronto (was Stanford))—'Optimal Green Retailing: Theory and Evidence'
Christopher Stanton (Harvard Business School)—'Shifting Work Patterns with Generative AI'
Daniel Chen (Toulouse)—'Data Science for Justice: Evidence from a Nationwide Randomized Experiment in Kenya'
Daniel Fehder (Georgia Tech)—'Selecting on Public Information: A Natural Field Experiment with Innovation-Driven Startups'
Daniel Herbst (University of Arizona)—'Insurance and Asymmetric Information in Wage Contracts: Evidence from an Online Field Experiment'
Daniel Sonnenstuhl (University of Chicago)—'Employment, Productivity, and Weak Institutions: Experimental Evidence from Nigeria'
Daphne Rutnam (University of Zurich)—'Parents' Perceptions of Occupational Fit'
David Almog (Northwestern University)—'AI Recommendations and Image Concerns'
David Holtz (Columbia Business School)—'As Generative Models Improve, We Must Adapt Our Prompts'
David Huffman (Cornell University)—'Manager Cognition and Mental Models of Consumers'
Deniz Aydin (WashU-Olin)—'Uniform Pricing and Capital Allocation: An Analysis Using Randomized Loan Pricing Experiments'
Diego Marino Fages (Durham University)—'Inherited effects of the military conscription'
Dilnovoz Abdurazzakova (PhD in Economics student/Central European University, Austria)—'Family Happiness or Career Success: Must Girls Choose Only One? Experimental Evidence from Uzbek Schools'
Dixit Poudel (University of Georgia and Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations)—'Can Digital Extension Reduce Farmers’ Vulnerability? Randomized Evidence from Sri Lanka'
Dumebi Uzoabaka Ochem (World Bank)—'Conscious Coupling: Impact of a Skills Intervention to Address Intrahousehold Constraints for Women Entrepreneurs in Ethiopia'
Eduardo Zambrano (Cal Poly - San Luis Obispo)—'Inequality Sensitive Optimal Treatment Assignment'
Elaine Liu (Georgia State University)—'Roots of Bias, Seeds of Change: Can Social Environment Undo Childhood Prejudice?'
Eline Moens (Ghent University)—'So, dear applicant, do you mean working from home or shirking from home?'
Emanuel Renkl (Technical University of Munich)—'Subtle Cues, Significant Tips: Experimental Evidence from Restaurants'
Emil Palikot (Stanford)—'The value of non-traditional credentials in the labor market'
Emma Riley (University of Michigan)—'Knowing the Numbers: Performance Data and Microenterprise Outcomes in Uganda'
Eric Edmond (Dartmouth College)—'Talk Therapy and Human Capital in Adolescence: Evidence from a Low-Resource Setting'
Erika Kirgios (University of Chicago Booth School of Business)—'Diversity incentives can increase women's leadership aspirations'
Esma Ozer (Penn State University)—'Strategic Interactions and Peer Learning in Contests: Evidence from a Field Experiment'
Eszter Timár (Corvinus University of Budapest)—'Spending on families amidst the demographic challenge - findings from a survey experiment'
Eugen Dimant (University of Pennsylvania)—'Divided We Act: Political Polarization, Social Sanctions, and Strategic (Un)Fairness'
Faith Fatchen (University of Chicago)—'Disentangling Motivation and Study Productivity Among Students in the Gulf Region'
Fatemeh Momeni (University of Chicago Education Lab)—'Supporting Adolescent Reading Skills through Small-Group Instruction: A Randomized Controlled Trial of a High School Literacy Intervention in Chicago'
Felipe Araujo (Lehigh University)—'Personalizing Utility Bill Reminders: A Field Experiment Testing Behavioral Messaging and ML-Driven Targeting in Brazil'
Florencia Hnilo (Stanford University)—'RCTs, Awareness, and Assignment Bias'
Franco Albino (The University of Chicago)—'"The Effect of Audience Political Preferences on Expert Assessments and Its Role in Political Polarization"'
Franco Lidany (Boston College)—'Cross-Product Compatibility, Lock-In, and Market Power: The Case of Smartphones and Laptops'
Fulya Ersoy (University of Chicago)—'Closing the Gender Gap in STEM: Role of Performance Feedback and Advice'
Gabriella Fleischman (Harvard Kennedy School)—'Income-Based Homophily and Social Capital'
Gedeão Locks (DIW Berlin)—'Perceived Signaling Effects in Higher Education: Evidence from France'
George Beknazar-Yuzbashev (Columbia University)—'Advertising Loads as Prices'
Gerhard Speckbacher (WU Vienna)—'Team Members' Preferences for Team Reward Distribution When the Reward Depends on Performance vs. Luck'
Gregory Sun (Washington University in St Louis)—'Physician Private Information as an Input into Pharmaceutical Innovation: A Proposal'
Guglielmo Briscese (UChicago)—'The Role of Parental Beliefs and Public Policies in Financing Higher Education: An Experimental Study'
Gustavo Nino (University of Illinois Urbana - Champaign)—'Ridehailing and the "Transit Accessibility" Challenge: Experimental Evidence from a Ride-2-Connect Program'
Guylaine Nouwoue N D Epse Tchakounte (University of Exeter)—'Can Tax Classes Build Compliance Culture? Evidence from Randomized Survey Experiments in Cameroon.'
Gwen-Jiro Clochard (Institute of Social and Economic Research - Osaka University - Joint Initiative for Latin American Experimental Economics)—'Bringing Contact Interventions to the Lab: Effects of Bilateral Discussions on Interethnic Trust in Senegal'
Gwyneth Miner (BYU)—'Reducing Migration Uncertainty: The Impact of an Income Smoothing Program for Kenyan Migrants'
Hammad Shaikh (University of Stavanger Business School)—'Don’t let your fruits rot: An experimental investigation of leadership training in a grocery store.'
Hieu Nguyen (Southwestern University)—'Testing Strategic Complementarity in the Field: Evidence from LGBTQ+ Artists’ Creative Production and Labor Supply Decisions'
Holland Henderson-Boyer (The University of Alabama)—'Predicting and Counteracting Climate-Induced Stress: A Novel Machine Learning Method'
Ieda Matavelli (University of New South Wales)—'We Don't Talk About Boys: Masculinity Norms Among Adolescents in Brazil'
Ilaria Prometti (University of Pavia)—'AI as Manager and Job Preferences: A Field Experiment (with Alex Chan [Harvard])'
Isabella Blengini (EHL Lausanne)—'Learning through Values'
Ishita Ghai (RAND School of Public Policy, RAND Corporation)—'Drivers of under-prescription of cervical cancer screening: evidence from Uganda'
Jade Siu (University of Reading / University of Oxford)—'Encouraging Formal Work: Experimental Evidence from Administrative Data in Jordan'
Jamleck Osiemo (Wageningen University and Research/Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT)—'Can information on safety trigger demand and supply of safe food? Experimental evidence from informal maize markets in Kenya'
Janna Ter Meer (Scripps Research)—'A model for the rapid development, testing and scaling of recruitment and engagement strategies in health research studies and clinical trials'
Jeff Livingston (Bentley University)—'Can generative AI help investors avoid the disposition effect?'
Jeffrey Flory (Claremont McKenna College)—'Identity at Work: A Field Experiment on Gender, Race, Behavior, and Worker Heterogeneity'
Jeremy Yang (Harvard University)—'Owned Media: A Field Experiment on WeChat'
Jiwon Hwang (The University of Chicago )—'"Understanding the Market for Policy Evaluation"'
Joao Francisco Pugliese (Stanford)—'Financial products, complexity, and regressiveness: theory and evidence from Brazil'
Jose Cervantez (The Wharton School)—'Does Tracking Diversity Change Behavior?: A Field Experiment with Podcasters'
Joseph Sherlock (KCL)—'Operational Transparency to Increase Trust in Elections and Voter Turnout: Results from Lab and Field Research Testing Communication Interventions'
Josephine Arnfred (University of Copenhagen)—'Diversifying the Bureaucracy of Tomorrow'
Joshua Deutschmann (University of Chicago)—'Long-run impacts of increased access to asset-collateralized loans'
Josie I Chen (National Taiwan University)—'Can Task-Based Incentives Strengthen Energy-Saving Goals? A Field Experiment'
Juan Yamin (Brown University)—'When and How to Pilot: Statistical Decision Theory for Two-Wave Experiments'
Julia Seither (Universidad del Rosario)—'The Competing Impacts of Self-Employment on Intimate Partner Violence and Women’s Economic Autonomy'
Julie Rosaz (Burgundy School of Business)—'Social preferences under background risk: Evidence from the Semeru volcano area in Indonesia'
Jung Ho Choi (Stanford)—'Decoding a Social Disclosure Decision: A Field Experiment with Workforce Diversity Data'
Juni Singh (World bank)—'Social networks and entrepreneurship'
Justin Holz (University of Michigan)—'Why don't people attend their court hearing? Evidence from a field experiment on evictions'
Karen Ye (Queen's University)—'Encouraging STEM Specialization Among High School Girls in Saudi Arabia'
Karina Gomez-Medrano (Harvard University)—'Beyond the experiment: medium-run impacts of a teacher performance pay program in Tanzania'
Kartik Srivastava (Harvard University)—'Familiar strangers: Evidence from referral-based hiring experiments in India'
Katarína Čellárová (Charles University)—'Embedding Self-Regulated Learning in the Classroom: Evidence from a Teacher Training Program'
Katharina Hartinger (Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz)—'Banking for Boomers – A Field Experiment on Technology Adoption in Financial Services'
Kathrin Durizzo (Harvard, T.H. Chan School of Public Health)—'Reducing petty corruption in health care with insurance literacy: Experimental evidence from in Ghana'
Katya Vasilaky (Cal Poly)—'Does Background Uncertainty Narrow the Gender Competition Gap? An experiment with non-students'
Ketki Sheth (University of Tennessee)—'What does a financial incentive signal? A lottery experiment in Uganda'
Kevin Carney (University of Michigan)—'Teaching Mental Health: Evaluating India’s Happiness Curriculum'
Kevin Lee (Ross School of Business, University of Michigan)—'Causal Alignment: Augmenting Language Models with A/B Tests'
Khandker Wahedur Rahman (University of Oxford)—'The Grapes of App: Experimental Evidence on Training Farmers Using A Smartphone Application'
Kohei Hayashida (UCSD, Rady School of Management, PhD Candidate)—'Choice Frictions and Congestion in Matching Market: Evidence from a Large-scale Field Experiment in Online Dating'
Lajos Kossuth (MIT Sloan School of Management)—'The motivational effect of a nationwide public recognition program on teachers’ performance: evidence from a natural field experiment in Peruvian primary schools'
Laura Gee (Tufts University)—'The Visible Costs of Invisible Labor'
Lena Song (UIUC)—'Intelligence or Interference? AI and Online Interactions'
Levenson Badio (Texas A&M University)—'Gender and Technology Adoption: Do Women's Control and Men's Awareness Matter?'
Lisa Page (University of Pittsburgh)—'Got Beef with Beef? Evidence from a Large-Scale Carbon Labeling Experiment'
Luca Favero ()—'Judging the Paper by Its Cover: Affiliation Bias in Conference Admissions'
Mahreen Khan (University of Oxford)—'Soft Skills for Job Market Success: Experimental Insights from Bangladesh'
Mallory Avery (Monash University)—'The Unintended Effects of Recruitment Technology: Lessons from Asynchronous Interviews'
Mansa Saxena (Northwestern University)—'Gender Gaps in Application Signals and Assessment: Experimental Evidence from Hiring in Malawi'
Manuela Angelucci (UT Austin)—'The Long-Term Impact of Depression Pharmacotherapy in India'
Maria Adelaida Martinez Cabrera (Bentley University)—'Enhancing Peru's CCT Program: Exploring Alternative Transfer Schemes and Conditionality Nudges in Urban Areas'
Maria Porter (University of Arizona)—'Building trust in financial services for agriculture in Ethiopia: Digital innovations in crop insurance product design'
Maria Urcia (Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas)—'Moral Emotions in a Bribery Game: Experimental Evidence from Guilt, Shame, and Pride in Peruvian University Students'
Mariana Carrera (Montana State University)—'Do Planning Prompts Increase Gym Attendance? A Randomized Field Experiment'
Mariona Tres Vilanova (SOAS, University of London)—'Electricity Supply and Contract Compliance in the SME sector. A Lab-in-the-field Experiment in Nigeria'
Mateusz Stalinski (University of Warwick)—'Toxic Content and User Engagement on Social Media: Evidence from a Field Experiment'
Matteo Fossi (University of Southern California)—'Beyond bonuses: the incentive effect of a prosocial initiative on bankers'
Matteo Ruzzante (Northwestern University)—'Equity-Efficiency Tradeoffs in the Design of Agricultural Input Subsidies: Experimental Evidence from Mozambique'
Matthew Brown (Stanford)—'Do Sports Bettors Need Consumer Protection? Evidence from a Field Experiment'
Matthew Shapiro (Illinois Institute of Technology)—'Misjudged Public Perceptions of Environmental Health Risks to Chemical Exposure: The Case of PFAS'
Maulik Jagnani (Tufts University)—'Dual Misbeliefs and Technology Adoption: Evidence from Air Purifiers in Bangladesh'
Max Thon (University of Zurich/University of Cologne)—'How to prevent employee theft? Field-experimental evidence'
Michael Cuna (chicago)—'Hidden Curriculum'
Michael Kofoed (University of Tennessee, Knoxville)—'Navigating Higher Education Insurance: An Experimental Study on Demand and Adverse Selection'
Michele Belot (Cornell University)—'The Value of Bonding at Work: Evidence from a Field Experiment'
Miguel Fonseca (University of Exeter)—'A natural experiment on gift exchange'
Mike Zhiren Wu (Monash University)—'Wings of Growth: A Mindset Intervention in Rural China'
Mikhail Galashin (UCLA Anderson)—'Market for Answers: Using Community Information in Survey Design'
Minji Kwak (University of Southern California)—'Social Incentives of Non-Elected Leaders in Village Economics'
Miranda Lambert (Texas A&M University)—'War, Abduction, and Household Violence: Evidence from Northern Uganda'
Mohamed Abouaziza (London School of Economics (LSE))—'Savings and Seller-Buyer Relationships: Evidence from Dairy Cooperatives in Kenya'
Mohammad Malek (Miyazaki International University)—'Credit Access and Women's Bargaining Power within the Household'
Molly Doruska (Cornell University)—'Flood Risk and Differential Firm Investment: Evidence from Dakar, Senegal'
Monica Beeder (University of Southampton)—'Rights and Wrongs: Labour Knowledge and Perceived Exploitation Among Migrant Workers in Australia'
Moritz Nardini (LMU Munich School of Management)—'Round-Ups, Consumers' Savings Rates and Stock Market Participation: Evidence from FinTech'
Moritz Poll (Brown University)—'Micro-enterprise saturation: Critical mass or overcrowding?'
Muhammad Irfan Shakir (Department of Economics and Management, University of Padova, Padova, Italy)—'Enhancing Individuals’ Awareness and Willingness to Participate in Renewable Energy
Communities: An Experimental Approach'
Muhammed Bulutay (Heidelberg University)—'Beliefs and Behavior: Causality in Information Experiments with Cross Learning'
Naomi Gershoni (Ben-Gurion University)—'Commuting to Opportunity: Reducing Employment Barriers with Short-Term Subsidies'
Nathan Mester (Olin School of Business, Washington University in St. Louis)—'Learn or Produce? Skill Development in the Age of AI'
Niccolò Meriggi (University of Oxford)—'Participation, Legitimacy and Fiscal Capacity in Weak States:: Evidence from Participatory Budgeting'
Nicolas Bottan (Cornell University)—'Inflation, Exchange Rates, and Consumption: The Impact of Macroeconomic Expectations in a Small Open Economy'
Nikita Sangwan (Queen's University Belfast)—'Job Search, Employment and Skilling in the Digital Age'
Nina Teng (London Business School)—'Do Disruptive Startups Attract More Talent? Evidence from a Field Experiment in India'
Nini Yining Lin (Carnegie Mellon University)—'Behavioral Attenuation and The Take-up of EdTech: Experimental Evidence from Rural China'
Nuzhat Sharmeen (University of Glasgow)—'Changing Gender Attitudes Towards Women Working: can alumni help?'
Orsola Garofalo (Copenhagen Business School)—'Does Pitching Help Necessity Entrepreneurs Raise Funds Online? Evidence from a Randomized Control Trial in Tanzania'
Pablo Soto-Mota (El Colegio de México)—'In Her Shoes: How Information on Menstrual Symptoms Shapes Gendered Policy Preferences'
Palaash Bhargava (Columbia University)—'Popularity and Student Networks: Trade-offs in Resolving Social Isolation through Deskmate Assignments'
Pallab Mozumder (Florida International University)—'Promoting Natural Hazard Risk Mitigation Behavior: A Policy Experiment'
Pallavi Prabhakar (FAIR, NHH)—'From Beliefs to Action: How Government Performance Information Drives Civic Participation in India'
Paolo Falco (University of Copenhagen)—'Does incentivizing formal cross-border trade improve firm performance?'
Paul Brimble (University of Michigan)—'The Efficiency Gains from Cash Transfers: Experimental Evidence from Kenya'
Paula Gonzalez (Northwestern University)—'Leveraging profitable pathways to income:Labor market effects of a multifaceted anti-poverty program and cash transfers in Nigeria'
Quang Phuc Phung (Tilburg University)—'Monitoring as a Service'
Raeed Kabir (University of Alabama)—'Towards an Understanding of Optimal Treatment Selection'
Raisa Sherif (Max Planck Institute for Tax Law and Public Finance)—'Personal Initiative Skills, Gender Gaps, and Social Norms: Experimental Evidence from Rural India'
Rajendra Paramanik (Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Patna, India)—'Does identity lead to credibility? Understanding the role of independent voices in India’s Monetary Policy Committee'
Ramin Izadi (MIT)—'Diminishing Returns to Early Childhood Investment: Finland’s Pre-School Expansion Experiment'
Remy Beauregard (UC Davis (PhD Student))—'Benefits on the Bench: Workfare, Mental Health, and the Role of the Team'
Renata Freitas Lemos (The World Bank)—'Investing in Human Capital During Wartime: Experimental Evidence from Ukraine'
Ridwan Hossain (Fordham University)—'Motivating Students: Exploring the Effect of Incentives on Performance'
Robin Aarts (University of Amsterdam)—'Does Music Education Improve Non-Cognitive Skills? Evidence From a Large-Scale RCT'
Romasa Ali (EBS Universität für Wirtschaft und Recht)—'Misperception in Gender Social Norms and its Impact on Women's Empowerment: Evidence from Pakistan'
Rosh Sinha (Indiana University - Kelley School of Business)—'Discrimination in Access to Corporate Insiders: Evidence from a Pre-Registered Field Experiment'
Rubaiya Murshed (University of Dhaka)—'Anchoring Aspirations and Revealing Preferences: A Behavioral Field Experiment to Reduce Brain Drain Among Bangladeshi University Students'
Ruoxuan Wu (University of Chicago)—'Wage Signaling in Online Labor Markets'
Saloni Gupta (Stanford University)—'Scaling Up Personalized Adaptive Learning in India (with Wendy Wong, Alex Eble, Guthrie Gray-Lobe, Michael Kremer, Emily Cupito, Sabareesh Ramachandran)'
Samantha Horn (University of Chicago)—'Knowledge versus Skills: Evidence from a Field Study on Health Misinformation'
Samir Huseynov (Auburn University)—'The Politics of Economic Forecasting: A Dynamic Analysis of Voter Expectations in the 2024 US Presidential Election'
Samuel Lindquist (University of Michigan)—'Discrimination in Small Business Lending: Evidence from a Correspondence Study'
Sara Constantino (Stanford)—'Intergenerational Transmission of Pro-Environmental Attitudes and Behaviors: Evidence from a Field Study in India'
Sarah Shaukat (Tufts University)—'Barriers to Network Formation Among Self-employed Women: Evidence from Pakistan'
Sarah Zaccagni (Aarhus University)—'Cultural diversity and norms: evidence from NYUAD residential colleges'
Seemanti Ghosh (University of Glasgow)—'Poverty and perseverance: The personal connection effect'
Serena Trucchi (Cardiff University)—'Inflation Expectations and Family Formation and Dissolution'
Shanjukta Nath (University of Georgia)—'Targeting, Personalization, and Engagement in an Agricultural Advisory Service'
Sher Afghan Asad (Lahore University of Management Sciences)—'From Intermediaries to Markets: A Randomized Evaluation of Market Linkages for Farmers in Pakistan'
Shotaro Nakamura (Pennsylvania State University)—'Pecuniary and Non-Pecuniary Costs of Accessing a Public Benefits Program and Distributional Consequences: Experimental Evidence from California'
Shunzhuang Huang (University of Chicago, Booth School of Business)—'Finite-Sample Valid Randomization Tests for Monotone Spillover Effects'
Shusaku Sasaki (The University of Osaka)—'Charity Walk Works? Field Experiment and Stakeholder Forecasts'
Sili Zhang (LMU Munich)—'Time versus State in Commitment: Experimental Evidence from Crop Insurance in Uganda'
Sizakele Muyedzwa (Univerisity of Pretoria)—'Investigating Behavioural Predictors of Healthcare Decisions'
Sofoklis Goulas (Brookings Institution)—'Blame the Bot: Teachers Grade Tougher When AI Does Too'
Sophia Pink (Wharton, the University of Pennsylvania)—'Can Stereotype Reactance Prompt Women to Compete? A Field Experiment'
Soraya Roman (Universidade Católica de Brasília)—'Women in Fish Farming: Unveiling the mechanisms for women empowerment.'
Srini Vasudevan (University of Chicago)—'Value of Social Connection: Evidence from Randomized Introduction of Peer Contact'
Stephanie El Khoury (Arizona State University)—'Information Bias and Selection of Female Professors'
SUTANUKA ROY (AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY)—'Toward an Understanding of Persistence of Kinship Norms with Deep Historical Origins: Evidence using Multiple Revealed Preference Experiments'
Taeho Kim (University of Toronto)—'Negotiation, Employer Demand, and Gender Disparities'
Tarek Jaber-Lopez (CSIC (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas)))—'Networks in prison: an experiment'
Theodora Aba Abekah Koomson ()—'The Effect of Private Pressure on Corporate Disclosures: Evidence from a Randomized Field Experiment'
Tim Ruberg (University of Hohenheim)—'Moral Education and Child Development: A Randomized Controlled Trial in Japan'
Timo Goeschl (Heidelberg University)—'Revealed preferences for policy experiments'
Tommaso Reggiani (Cardiff University)—'Do social media distort the expression of preferences? Evidence from a survey and a field experiment on migration narratives'
Tong Wang (London Business School)—'The Ratings Trap: Prior Ratings, Gender and Instructor Outcomes in Higher Ed'
Tushar Kundu (Columbia University)—'Parent-Teacher Alignment in Multidimensional Skill Development'
Udit Sawhney (University of Passau and Helmudt-Schmidt University)—'My opinion, your opinion – Do group norms and perceptions influence farmers’ fertilizer practices?'
Uditi Karna (Columbia University)—'Breaking barriers to big dreams: a community-wide field experiment in Nepal'
Unnati Narang (UIUC)—'Generative AI Spurs Passive But Not Active Engagement with Content: Evidence from Field and Online Experiments'
Ursa Krenk (University of Zurich)—'Finding Talent in the Age of AI'
Vanessa Berghoff (University of Bonn)—'How Methods Matter: Eliciting Time Preference in Field Settings'
Vicky Tinnefeld (Paderborn University)—'Do energy-saving nudges deliver during peak prices? Field experimental evidence from the European Energy Crisis'
Virginia Minni (University of Chicago Booth School of Business)—'Meaning at Work'
Wenxuan Guo (University of Chicago)—'Gaussianized Design Optimization for Covariate Balance in Randomized Experiments'
Xiaoyue Shan (National University of Singapore)—'Gender Diversity Improves Academic Performance'
Yannick Markhof (United Nations University (UNU-MERIT))—'Lies in Disguise: Measurement error in popular survey methods for sensitive issues'
Ye Zhang (Stockholm School of Economics)—'Statistical Discrimination in Two-sided Matching Markets: Experimental and Theoretical Evidence'
Yixin Yang (Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Maryland)—'Optimizing Incentive Scope: Simulating Clinician Effort Allocation and Patient Welfare under Pay-for-Performance'
Yong Chen (EHL)—'The Scope and Limits of the Endowment Effect: Evidence from Two Natural Experiments'
Youngjoo Jung (University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign (UIUC))—'Generous to Men or Harsh to Women?: Experimentally Unpacking Gender Bias in Lending'
Yujuan Gao (University of Florida)—'Unintended Consequences of Best Intentions: Examining Spillover Effects in Targeted Supplementary Education Interventions'
Zachary Wagner (University of Southern California)—'Increasing Use of Oral Rehydration Salts to Treat Child Diarrhea through Home Delivery: Evidence from a Randomized Controlled Trial in Nigeria'
Zeyang Yu (Princeton University)—'Randomization Inference Under Sample Attrition'

