Find out where our candidates go.
Seasonal Home Advantage in English Professional Football; 1973-2018
TI Fellow Cars Hommes, professor of Nonlinear Economics Dynamics at the University of Amsterdam, has been awarded with the 6th Distinguished Lorentz Fellowship 2014.
Fellow Thomas Buser, TI research master and PhD alumnus, has been awarded prestigious Starting Grant by the European Research Council.
Fellow Cars Hommes (University of Amsterdam) has received the Wim Duisenberg Research Fellowship from the European Central Bank (ECB).
Three TI research fellows, Stefanie Huber, Cars Hommes (CENDEF) and Isabelle Salle (MiNT) have a publication in the European Economic Review, along with co-wri...
On December 12, Fellow Thomas Buser received the prestigious KVS Medal (‘Penning’) for having written and defended the best PhD thesis in the field of economi...
Homeownership and Labour Market Behaviour: Interpreting the Evidence
The article ‘Gender, Competitivenes, and Career Choices’ by fellows Thomas Buser and Hessel Oosterbeek (with Muriel Niederle) was published in The...
Thomas Buser and PhD student Noémi Peter has won the Editor’s Award 2012 for Experimental Economics for their article on ‘Multitasking’. The Econ...
The paper entitled ‘Simple Forecasting Heuristics that Make us Smart: Evidence from Different Market Experiments’ co-authored by fellow Cars Hommes (Universit...
The paper 'Behavioral Heterogeneity in U.S. Inflation Dynamics' by TI fellow Cars Hommes has been published in the Journal of Business & Economic Statistics. Joi...
Wednesday, June 25 2014
Artificial Pitches and Unfair Home Advantage in Professional Football
Do early episodes of depression and anxiety make homelessness more likely?
Home Improvement, Wealth Inequality, and the Energy-Efficiency Paradox
In ‘Behavioral and Experimental Macroeconomics and Policy Analysis: A Complex Systems Approach,' a survey published in the Journal of Economic Literature, research&...
Homothetic Efficiency and Test Power: A Non-Parametric Approach
Nevertheless, they persist: Cross-country differences in homeownership behavior