Carlos Alós Ferrer
Carlos Alós Ferrer is an interdisciplinary researcher between microeconomics, psychology, and decision neuroscience. He is a Chair Professor of Economics at Lancaster University Management School, and Co-Editor in Chief of the Journal of Economic Psychology. His research focuses on understanding and improving human economic decisions, ranging from decisions under risk to strategic decisions (game theory) and voting. For that, Professor Alós Ferrer uses decision neuroscience ("neuroeconomics"), behavioral experiments, and mathematical modeling.
Giorgio Coricelli
Giorgio Coricelli is Professor at Dornsife college of Letters, Arts and Sciences at University of Southern California, Los Angeles, where he studies human behaviors emerging from the interplay of cognitive and emotional systems. His main focuses concern the role of emotions in decision making, and the the relational complexity in social interaction. Professor Coricelli's objective is to apply robust methods and findings from behavioral decision theory to study the brain structures that contribute to forming judgments and decisions, both in an individual and a social context.
Arno Riedl
Arno Riedl is Full Professor of Public Economics at Maastricht University and co-editor-in-chief of the Journal of Experimental Economics. His research focuses on individual and interactive decision-making in social and economic settings. He works primarily with tools and methods from behavioral and experimental economics and game theory, and follows an interdisciplinary approach drawing on psychology, neuroscience, biology, and economics.
Andreas Glöckner
Andreas Glöckner is Full Professor of Social Psychology at the University of Cologne and co-editor of the journal Judgment and Decision Making. His research centers on judgment and decision making, with a strong focus on the cognitive processes underlying intuition and choice. He studies cooperation and social dilemmas, as well as stereotypes/discrimination and cross-cultural decision behavior, often using eye-tracking and other process tracing methods. Methodologically, he works on open science and computational modeling (including neural-network approaches), with applications in behavioral economics and empirical legal studies.
Ian Krajbich
Ian Krajbich is a Professor of Psychology at UCLA, where he leads the Neuroeconomics and Decision Neuroscience Lab. He studies the choice process to better understand how people form and express preferences. His research develops and tests computational (mathematical) models of decision making, drawing ideas from economics, psychology, neuroscience, and marketing. Methodologically, Professor Krajbich's lab combines tools such as eye tracking, response times, mouse tracking, and brain imaging to link cognition and information processing to choice.