Ido Erev

Israeli-American behavioral economist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ido Erev (Hebrew: עדו ערב) is an Israeli psychologist.[1][2][3][4]

Born (1959-12-06) December 6, 1959 (age 66)
InstitutionsTechnion
Quick facts Born, Academic background ...
Ido Erev
Born (1959-12-06) December 6, 1959 (age 66)
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of North Carolina
Academic work
DisciplineBehavioral Economics
Incentives
InstitutionsTechnion
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Erev is the Women’s Division—ATS Academic Chair, Vice Dean for the MBA programs and heads the Technion section of the Max Wertheimer Minerva Center for Cognitive Research, and head of the Technion's ICORE group for Empirical Legal Studies of Decision Making.[5]

His research has been covered in the New York Times to explain the rapid spread of the Corona Virus,[6] Jerusalem Post,[7] and the Times of Israel.[8]

Career

Prof. Erev was the Michael A. Gould fellow at Columbia Business School; a Marvin Bower Fellow at Harvard Business School; a fellow at the Israel Institute for Advanced Studies;[9] a visiting professor at Erasmus School of Economics;[10] and a research environment professor at Warwick Business School [11]

Research

Erev publishes primarily on reinforcement learning in individual decision tasks as well as 2-player games. [12] He has contributed the learning chapter to the Handbook of Experimental Economics [13]

References

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