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Michael Kirchler

Researcher at University of Innsbruck

Publications -  126
Citations -  8925

Michael Kirchler is an academic researcher from University of Innsbruck. The author has contributed to research in topics: Experimental finance & Asset (economics). The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 118 publications receiving 6791 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Kirchler include University of Gothenburg.

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Is more information always better?: Experimental financial markets with cumulative information

TL;DR: This paper studied the value of information in financial markets by asking whether having more information always leads to higher returns and found that only the very best informed traders (i.e., insiders) significantly outperform less informed traders.
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Bubbles and Information: An Experiment

TL;DR: It is found that markets with asymmetrically informed traders have significantly smaller bubbles than markets with symmetricallyinformed or uninformed traders, suggesting that bubbles are abated when traders know that a subset of them have an edge over others.
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Intuition and Moral Decision-Making - The Effect of Time Pressure and Cognitive Load on Moral Judgment and Altruistic Behavior.

TL;DR: Across all samples and decision tasks men were more likely to make utilitarian moral judgments and act selfishly compared to women, providing further evidence that there are robust gender differences in moral decision-making.
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Market design and moral behavior

TL;DR: It is found that the threat of monetary punishment promotes moral behavior in both regimes and only the removal of anonymity, thus making subjects identifiable, has different effects across regimes, which are explained by different perceptions of responsibility.
Posted Content

Evaluating replicability of laboratory experiments in Economics

TL;DR: This paper replicated 18 studies published in the American Economic Review and the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 2011-2014 and found a significant effect in the same direction as the original study for 11 replications (61%).