Tuesday, February 21, 12:30 pm
Berkman
Center, 23 Everett Street, second floor
This event will be webcast live at 12:30 pm ET and archived on our site shortly after.
The advent of the internet provides social scientists with a fantastic
tool for conducting behavioral experiments online at a very large-scale
and at an affordable cost. It is surprising, however, how little
research has leveraged the affordances of the internet to set up such
social experiments so far.
In this talk, Jerome Hergueux will introduce the audience to one of the
first online platforms specifically designed for conducting interactive
social experiments over the internet to date. He will present the
preliminary results of a randomized experiment that compares behavioral
measures of social preferences obtained both in a traditional University
laboratory and online, with a focus on engaging the audience in a
reflection about the specificities, limitations and promises of online
experimental economics as a tool for social science research.
Jerome is a PhD candidate in Economics at Sciences Po Paris and the
University of Strasbourg. He is a Fellow at the Berkman Center for
Internet & Society, where he works with Professor Yochai Benkler to
develop new interactive survey methods to uncover the foundations and
dynamics of interactions and behavior in online social spaces.
Jerome is mainly interested in applying economics' analytical tools to
the understanding of the evolution of culture, broadly defined as any
set of norms of cooperation shared by a group of individuals trying to
overcome particular collective action issues (be it in online or offline
settings). He then tries to assess the relevance of those norms for
determining a wide range of economic outcomes at the community level.
Jerome originates from the French region of Alsace, near the German
border. He holds an MA in Finance from the University of Strasbourg and a
Master in International Relations and International Economics from
Sciences Po Paris. Jerome speaks French, English and Arabic, and is
heavily interested in the Middle East's politics and culture.
Last updated July 27, 2012