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King King Li |
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| Post Doctoral Fellow | ||
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Max Planck Institute of Economics, Strategic Interaction Group Kahlaische Straße 10 D-07745 Jena Germany |
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| phone: | +49 - 3641 - 686 631 | |
| fax: | +49 - 3641 - 686 667 | |
| e-mail: | ||
| my personal webpage | my CV | ||
Education
Ph.D. Economics, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, November 2008
Committee: Chew Soo Hong (Chair), Rami Zwick, Tanjim Hossain, Ryo Okui, Hui Kai Wai, Chong Juin Kuan
Research Interests
- Behavioral Economics/Experimental Economics
- Experimental Political Economy
- Design of Voting Institutions
- Design of Incentive Payment Schemes
- Choice under Risk and Uncertainty
Academic Positions
| 03/2009 – Present | Post Doctoral Fellow, Max Planck Institute of Economics, Strategic Interaction Group, Jena, Germany |
Publications
- Li King King, "Preference towards Control in Risk Taking: Control, No Control, or Randomized?" Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, (2011), Vol. 43, No. 1, 39-63
- Chew Soo Hong, Li King King, Robin Chark, and Zhong Songfa, "Source Preference and Ambiguity Aversion: Models and Evidence from Behavioral and Neuroimaging Experiments," in Daniel Houser and Kevin McCabe (eds.), Advances in Health Economics and Health Services Research, Vol. 20, Neuroeconomics, (2008), 179-201.
Research Papers
- "Social Preference and Provision of Public Goods under Alternative Electoral Incentives"
[Job Market Paper 1] - "The Hidden Costs of Inducing Intrinsic Motivations" (with Tanjim Hossain)
[Job Market Paper 2] - "Asymmetric Memory Recall of Positive and Negative Events in Social Interactions"
[Revise and Resubmit at Experimental Economics] - "The Dominated Candidate Effect in Voting: Evidence from Laboratory Experiments and the German Federal Elections"
- "Thinking in Chinese vs. Thinking in English: The Impact of Language on Social Preference and
Risk Attitudes"
[Revise and Resubmit at Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes] - "Missing Women and the Price of Tea in China: A Reassessment"
- "Moral Sentiments of Buddhist Monks: Evidence from Behavioral Game Experiments in Southern India" (with Chew Soo Hong)
