Author: davidcomerford

New members, new events and new faculty!

On the first week of term, we are very excited about the new academic year. Developments on the MSc Behavioural Science We welcomed an enthusiastic group of new students to our MSc Behavioural Science on Monday who bring a diverse wealth of experience with them. This will be the first cohort to profit from our

Read full post

Flagship event: 20 October on Campus – Behavioural Science and Digital Markets Regulation

The Behavioural Science Centre at the University of Stirling is extremely pleased to announce that we will host a one-day workshop on “Behavioural Science and Digital Markets Regulation” on Friday, 20 October 2023. The aim of the workshop is to bring together researchers working on behavioural regulatory policy and practitioners from the field (such as CMA, FCA, Ofgem,

Read full post

Behavioural Science Centre Reunion

On September 14, the Behavioural Science Centre held a reunion to mark a decade of our MSc Behavioural Science. We were delighted to have talks on the day from a range of individuals who have been involved with the program over the years.  Founder director of the MSc program, Dr. Michael Daly, kicked off the

Read full post

Help Support Rigorous Science

From David Hardisty: If you haven’t heard, Francesca Gino is suing the Data Colada researchers (Joe, Uri, and Leif) and Harvard for $25 million USD: https://www.science.org/content/article/honesty-researcher-facing-fraud-concerns-sues-harvard-and-accusers-25-million The lawsuit claims defamation related to Data Colada’s work detailing evidence of fraud across four papers: http://datacolada.org/109 Personally, I think Data Colada does an incredible service to our field and to

Read full post

Lessons from cases of academic fraud

A Harvard professor who researches dishonesty is now on administrative leave following allegations of data fraud. Monetary / career incentives seem to do little to predict faking data. Francesca Gino is another researcher of morality who has had papers retracted because their data was simply made up. The techniques that behavioural scientists used to uncover

Read full post

Happy 300th Birthday Adam Smith (and Economics) ((and the world of comfort))

Something happened to humans over the past couple of hundred years. From having been largely stagnant for thousands of years, population, life expectancy and material comfort all took a dramatic and sustained uptick starting around 1700. That’s amazing and, what’s also amazing is… nobody quite knows why this explosion in human progress happened when it

Read full post

Theme by the University of Stirling