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Praveen Kujal

Researcher at Middlesex University

Publications -  90
Citations -  1652

Praveen Kujal is an academic researcher from Middlesex University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Duopoly & Cournot competition. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 88 publications receiving 1492 citations. Previous affiliations of Praveen Kujal include Charles III University of Madrid & University of Arizona.

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Experimental tests of the endowment effect

TL;DR: In this paper, the endowment effect, which predicts undertrading and a willingness to accept greater than willingness to pay, is studied using responses that remove all reference to buying or selling and focus only on choice tasks.
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Fairness: Effect on Temporary and Equilibrium Prices in Posted Offer Markets

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined posted-offer markets and found that in the profit-disclosure (fairness) treatment prices are initially below those in the cost and the no-discrepancy treatments.
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Cognitive Reflection Test: Whom, How, When

TL;DR: This article reported the results of a meta-study of 118 Cognitive Reflection Test studies comprising of 44,558 participants across 21 countries and found that there is a negative correlation between being female and the overall, and individual, correct answers to CRT questions.
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Registered Replication Report : Rand, Greene, and Nowak (2012)

TL;DR: The size and variability of the effect of time pressure on cooperative decisions are assessed by combining 21 separate, preregistered replications of the critical conditions from Study 7 of the original article and the results are consistent with the presence of selection biases and the absence of a causal effect ofTime pressure on cooperation.
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The effect of earned versus house money on price bubble formation in experimental asset markets

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare house money asset market experiments with an earned money treatment where initial portfolios are constructed from a real effort task, and investigate the role of cognitive ability in accounting for the differences in earnings distribution across treatments by using the cognitive reflection test.