Andreas Ortmann
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Citations | 4,690 |
H index | 34 |
Born | Oerlinghausen |
Germany | |
Affiliations | University Of New South Wales |
Interests | Behavioral Economics |
Experimental Economics | |
Organizational Economics | |
History Of Thought | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 849726 |
Classic Coordination Failures Revisited: the Effects of Deviation Costs and Loss Avoidance
Episodes from the Early History of Experimentation in Economics: Discussion Paper, School of Economics, UNSW, 2013-34
Understanding the Plott-Wit-Yang Paradox
Certification as a Viable Quality Assurance Mechanism: Theory and Suggestive Evidence
(The Evolution Of) Post-secondary Education: a Computational Model and Experiments
The Beauty of Simplicity? (simple) Heuristics and the Opportunities Yet to Be Realized
On Uneven Expected Earnings in the Lab: Discussion Paper, School of Economics, UNSW, 2014-07
The Rhetorical Structure of Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations (and the Importance of Acknowledging It): Discussion Paper, School of Economics, UNSW, 2014-11
A Reproduction and Replication of Engel¿s Meta-Study of Dictator Game Experiments: Discussion Paper, School of Economics, UNSW, 2012-44
Testing Leniency Programs Experimentally: the Impact of natural Framing
The Impact of the Non-distribution Constraint and Its Enforcement on Entrepreneurial Choice, Price, and Quality
The Predictive Power of Noisy Round-robin Tournaments
MTurk 'Unscrubbed': Exploring the Good, the 'Super', and the Unreliable on Amazon's Mechanical Turk
On the Interpretation of Giving, Taking, and Destruction in Dictator Games and Joy-Of-Destruction Games: Discussion Paper, School of Economics, UNSW, 2012-50
How Financial Incentives and Cognitive Abilities Affect Task Performance in Laboratory Settings: An Illustration
The Costs of Deception: Evidence from Psychology
Bertrand Price Undercutting: A Brief Classroom Demonstration
The Way in which an Experiment is Conducted is Unbelievably Important: On the Experimentation Practices of Economists and Psychologists
Three Very Simple Games and what it Takes to Solve Them
Structural Versus Behavioral Remedies in the Deregulation of Electricity Markets: an Experimental Investigation Guided by Theory and Policy Concerns
Fairness in Risky Environments: Theory and Evidence
Exploring the Meaning of Significance in Experimental Economics: Discussion Paper, School of Economics, UNSW, 2013-32
Are the Unskilled Really that Unaware? An Alternative Explanation
Loss Avoidance as Selection Principle: Evidence from Simple Stag-hunt Games
Monetary Incentives: Usually Neither Necessary Nor Sufficient?
Three Prominent Tournament Formats: Predictive Power and Costs
When and Why? A Critical Survey on Coordination Failure in the Laboratory
The Unbundling Regime for Electricity Utilities in the EU: a Case of Legislative and Regulatory Capture?
Episodes from the Early History of Experimentation in Economics: Discussion Paper, School of Economics, UNSW, 2013-34
Understanding the Plott-Wit-Yang Paradox
Certification as a Viable Quality Assurance Mechanism: Theory and Suggestive Evidence
(The Evolution Of) Post-secondary Education: a Computational Model and Experiments
The Beauty of Simplicity? (simple) Heuristics and the Opportunities Yet to Be Realized
On Uneven Expected Earnings in the Lab: Discussion Paper, School of Economics, UNSW, 2014-07
The Rhetorical Structure of Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations (and the Importance of Acknowledging It): Discussion Paper, School of Economics, UNSW, 2014-11
A Reproduction and Replication of Engel¿s Meta-Study of Dictator Game Experiments: Discussion Paper, School of Economics, UNSW, 2012-44
Testing Leniency Programs Experimentally: the Impact of natural Framing
The Impact of the Non-distribution Constraint and Its Enforcement on Entrepreneurial Choice, Price, and Quality
The Predictive Power of Noisy Round-robin Tournaments
MTurk 'Unscrubbed': Exploring the Good, the 'Super', and the Unreliable on Amazon's Mechanical Turk
On the Interpretation of Giving, Taking, and Destruction in Dictator Games and Joy-Of-Destruction Games: Discussion Paper, School of Economics, UNSW, 2012-50
How Financial Incentives and Cognitive Abilities Affect Task Performance in Laboratory Settings: An Illustration
The Costs of Deception: Evidence from Psychology
Bertrand Price Undercutting: A Brief Classroom Demonstration
The Way in which an Experiment is Conducted is Unbelievably Important: On the Experimentation Practices of Economists and Psychologists
Three Very Simple Games and what it Takes to Solve Them
Structural Versus Behavioral Remedies in the Deregulation of Electricity Markets: an Experimental Investigation Guided by Theory and Policy Concerns
Fairness in Risky Environments: Theory and Evidence
Exploring the Meaning of Significance in Experimental Economics: Discussion Paper, School of Economics, UNSW, 2013-32
Are the Unskilled Really that Unaware? An Alternative Explanation
Loss Avoidance as Selection Principle: Evidence from Simple Stag-hunt Games
Monetary Incentives: Usually Neither Necessary Nor Sufficient?
Three Prominent Tournament Formats: Predictive Power and Costs
When and Why? A Critical Survey on Coordination Failure in the Laboratory
The Unbundling Regime for Electricity Utilities in the EU: a Case of Legislative and Regulatory Capture?
Andreas Ortmann Life story
Andreas Ortmann is a German-born economist and Professor of Experimental and Behavioural Economics at the UNSW Business School. He is best known for his work on experimental methodology in social sciences, heuristics and coordination games.