J
Julia Rose
Researcher at University of Innsbruck
Publications - 15
Citations - 882
Julia Rose is an academic researcher from University of Innsbruck. The author has contributed to research in topics: Financial market & Experimental finance. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 14 publications receiving 646 citations. Previous affiliations of Julia Rose include Erasmus University Rotterdam.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Evaluating the replicability of social science experiments in Nature and Science between 2010 and 2015
Colin F. Camerer,Anna Dreber,Felix Holzmeister,Teck-Hua Ho,Jürgen Huber,Magnus Johannesson,Michael Kirchler,Gideon Nave,Brian A. Nosek,Brian A. Nosek,Thomas Pfeiffer,Adam Altmejd,Nick Buttrick,Nick Buttrick,Taizan Chan,Yiling Chen,Eskil Forsell,Anup Gampa,Anup Gampa,Emma Heikensten,Lily Hummer,Taisuke Imai,Siri Isaksson,Dylan Manfredi,Julia Rose,Eric-Jan Wagenmakers,Hang Wu +26 more
TL;DR: It is found that peer beliefs of replicability are strongly related to replicable, suggesting that the research community could predict which results would replicate and that failures to replicate were not the result of chance alone.
Journal ArticleDOI
Bubbles and financial professionals
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors run 116 experimental markets with 412 professionals and 502 students and find that professional markets with bubble drivers - capital inflows or high initial capital supply - are susceptible to bubbles, although they are more efficient than student markets.
Journal ArticleDOI
No need for more time: Intertemporal allocation decisions under time pressure
Florian Lindner,Julia Rose +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the stability of time preferences under time pressure was analyzed in a laboratory study with 144 subjects using convex time budgets with and without time pressure in a within-subject design, and they found that preferences were stable across conditions for aggregate estimates of present bias and utility function curvature.
Data and Analysis
TL;DR: The team collected the amount of dust produced in one basement while a train was being loaded out and the rate of dust production came to be 62.8 lbs.
Posted Content
Individual attitudes and market dynamics towards imprecision
Christoph Huber,Julia Rose +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the impact of risk, imprecision in probabilities (ambiguity), imprecise in outcomes, and a combination of the latter two in an individual decision task and in a market environment was analyzed.