Tilburg Institute for Behavioral Economics Research

Understanding the psychology of economics

Tiber Past Conferences


TIBER/EASP/SPSSI Meaning and Existential Psychology Conference

Date: Thursday, November 17 & Friday, November 18th 2011th
Time: 09.00 - 17.00h
Location: De Harmonie Tilburg

ASPO Autumn Symposium

The symposium on ‘Long Term Psychology’ will take place on Thursday the 6th of October at Tilburg University. It promises to be an interesting symposium with excellent speakers from different disciplines, all giving their view on how to encourage behaviors that are better for the self and society in the long run.

In this symposium, we will look at what the different disciplines in psychology and marketing can teach us about Long Term Psychology. Think of health behaviors like dieting and exercising, sustainable behaviors like recycling and fostering CO2 storage, and behaviors that encourage tolerance to others. This symposium thus not only focuses on new, cutting-edge research, but also on the societal relevance of this research.

The symposium will consist of six keynote addresses, each followed by a plenary discussion. As such, we hope to offer you an interactive and interesting symposium, with a line-up of renowned speakers:

  • Nira Liberman (Tel Aviv University)
  • Bram van den Bergh (Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam)
  • Carolien Martijn (Maastricht University)
  • Emely de Vet (Universiteit Utrecht)
  • Fieke Harinck (Universiteit Leiden)
  • Yoel Inbar (Tilburg University)


10th Tiber Symposium on Psychology and Economics

TIBER-X WAS A SUCCES


TIBER thanks all the participants, it was a great day. If you have taken pictures during the symposium, please email them to us.

Find the abstract book here.

GENERAL INFORMATION


The 10th Tiber Symposium on Psychology and Economics will be held at Tilburg University on Friday August 19th, 2011.

The symposium aims to bring together Economists, Psychologists, Marketing researchers and others who work on Behavioral Decision Making, either in individual or interdependent settings. The symposium will be held in the Cobbenhagen Building at Tilburg University.

We are happy to announce that Dan Ariely and James Andreoni are confirmed keynote speakers for this year's event. We also host another 46 talks by researchers from all across the world. They present their latest work in 25-minute presentations.

If you would like to attend the symposium, scroll down to find a link that directs you to the registration form.

If you have any questions concerning the symposium, please send us an email


9th Tiber Symposium on Psychology and Economics

General Information


This 9th Tiber Symposium on Psychology and Economics will be held in the Dante Building of the Tilburg University on Friday August 27, 2010.
The symposium aims to bring together Economists, Psychologists, Marketing researchers and others who work on Behavioral Decision Making, either in individual or interdependent settings. The symposium will be held at Tilburg University and consists of two keynotes and a number of parallel sessions with presentations of about 20-30 minutes (see Program 2010.

The two keynote speakers for 2010 are Deborah Small (University of Pennsylvania) and Matthias Sutter (University of Innsbruck).

The goal of this series of symposia is to establish contact and discussion between researchers of the different fields. We look for empirical contributions from the diverse fields, such as Individual Decision Making, Consumer Behavior, Bargaining, Social Dilemmas, Experimental Games, Emotions, Fairness and Justice, Rational Choice and related subjects.

Researchers, students, and scholars interested in the topic are kindly invited to join these meetings. Registration starts at Thursday April 15th and closes at Friday August 13th. Look under Registration for a registration form and attendance fees. If you would like to contribute to this symposium by presenting a paper, look under Call for Papers

Important Dates
  • 15th of April - Call for papers / Start Registration
  • 1st of June - Deadline for submission of abstracts
  • 18th of June - Selection of speakers
  • 27th of August - Symposium at Tilburg University

Call for Papers

Call for Papers Form

Conference Program 2010

Program 2010.

CV's

Deborah Small

Matthias Sutter

Instructions for Presentations

Presentations will be grouped thematically in pairs. Ideally, one presentation in each thematic session will be held by a Psychologist/Marketing Scientist and the other one by an Economist. Sessions last 50 minutes (gross time per talk is 25 minutes including discussion). Please, time your papers to be between 15-20 minutes to allow for time for questions. Laptop computers will be available in the rooms.
A chair will be appointed for each session.

The Program & Organizing Committee consists of
Jan Potters, Professor of Economics: j.j.m.potters@uvt.nl
Wieland Mueller, Prof. of Economics & Business Administration: w.mueller@uvt.nl
Rik Pieters, Professor of Marketing: f.g.m.pieters@uvt.nl
Marcel Zeelenberg, Professor of Economic Psychology: m.zeelenberg@uvt.nl
Ilja van Beest, Professor of Social Psychology: i.vanbeest@uvt.nl
Rob Nelissen, Assistant Professor of Social Psychology: r.m.a.nelissen@uvt.nl

Travelling to Tilburg University


Tiber Conference "Multiple selves and sustainable development"

This symposium on "multiple selves and sustainable development" was organized in the Royal Academy of Sciences Building ("Trippenhuis"), in Amsterdam, in the Netherlands on April 22-23, 2010. Unfortunately this conference had to be cancelled due to the volcano problems and the closed air traffic, however we were able to move the symposium to a later date and a different location. Period: This symposium on "multiple selves and sustainable development" was organized in the Royal Academy of Sciences Building ("Trippenhuis"), in Amsterdam, in the Netherlands on April 22-23, 2010. Unfortunately this conference had to be cancelled due to the volcano problems and the closed air traffic, however we were able to move the symposium to a later date and a different location. Period: November 18-19, 2010. Location: the NH Hotel Carlton, Vijzelstraat 4, 1017 HK Amsterdam (The Netherlands). Phone number +31 20 622 22 66.

Speakers:

  • Siggie Lindenberg (Groningen, sociology / normative behavior)
  • Michael Inzlicht (Toronto, neuro issues and insights)
  • Aaron Kay (Waterloo, justification sysems)
  • Travis Proulx (Vancouver, empirical existentialism)
  • Jeff Stone (Arizona, consistency theories)
  • Marcel Zeelenberg (Tilburg, emotions)
  • Kathleen Vohs (Minnesota, resource depletion)
  • Dan Goldstein (London, decision making)
  • Paul Sparks (Sussex, attitude-behavior discrepancy)
  • Geoffrey Miller (New Mexico, evolutionary theory)
  • Ken Fujita (t.b.a.)
  • Tom Postmes (Groningen, self-categorization theory/groups)

    End notes by:
  • Henriette Prast (Scientific council, The Hague & Tilburg University)

    Content:
    One of the biggest challenges for governments all around the world is to make people "greener", or to put in more precise terms, to "mobilize consumer demand for sustainable development." Doing this is especially challenging because numerous surveys show again and again that people often are "green" in their talk, but not in their "walk." Why does this attitude-behavior gap exist and how can we close it attitude-behavior gap? How can we make people walk their talk? The Dutch government has made funds available (see www.transforum.nl) for scientific efforts designed to answer these questions. Thus, PhD students, postdocs, and senior researchers are working on all kinds of more basic and more applied empirical research projects.

    However, we think it is also important to reflect on the general issue of attitude-behavior discrepancies (broadly defined) with a number of the world's leading academics. After all, in the relevant literatures, the fact that people do not act on their (good) intentions comes in many forms and has been described in terms of, inter alia, diverging morals (e.g., "inner angles versus inner demons"), roles (e.g., consumer versus citizen roles),identities (e.g., collective versus personal), processing modes (e.g., reflective versus reflexive), different types of social values (e.g., prosocial versus proself), and even as originating in different brain areas (e.g., the emotional versus the deliberative brain). What all these perspectives seem to have in common is that they suggest that the attitude-behavior gap in consumer demand for sustainable products and services originates in what could be called a mild "multiple personality disorder." People have "multiple selves" that do not always nicely correspond and communicate with each other.

    We think it will be inspiring and refreshing to bring together a large number of divergent scientific disciplines and theoretical approaches to address and explain the multiple selves that drive the attitude-behavior discrepancy in consumer demand for sustainability. Such combined and enriched insights are essential and relevant for scientific progress and should have considerable policy implications. Thus, our aim is to investigate how insights from basic science can be used to mobilizing consumer demand for sustainable development. In doing so, we take the sustainability concept broad to include many forms of pro-social behavior including the fields of health, environmental issues, animal welfare, fair trade, and regional products.

  • Symposium on "Evolutionary Perspectives on Consumer Behavior

    General Information


    This Symposium on "Evolutionary Perspectives on Consumer Behavior " has been held on Wednesday May 19th, 2010 from 12:30 - 17:00 hours, in the Tias building, room TZ 005.

    Keynote speaker at this symposium was Minnesotaprofessor Vladas Griskevicius (University of Minnesota). Vlad is the rising star in the field of evolutionary consumer research and has recently published many excellent papers on conspicuous consumption, persuasion, disgust, norm-compliance and non-compliance and many other interesting topics in high-ranking journals.

    In addition several leading Dutch researchers in the field of evolutionary (consumer) behavior will give a presentation of their work, making for an afternoon of state-of-the art research talks in this burgeoning field (See Program).



    Tiber/WRR conference


    This WRR Conference was organized by the Dutch Scientific Council for Government Policy (WRR), Tilburg Institute for Behavioral Economics Research (TIBER) and the Network for Studies on Pensions, Aging and Retirement (NETSPAR, held in The Hague on Thursday February 11th, 2010.


    For good governance it is important that policymakers base their decisions on scientific research or that they are at least aware of the most recent findings relevant to their decisions. For good research it is important that it is relevant for society and that its knowledge is applicable. WRR Program 2010



    Perspective on Framing

    TIBER (Tilburg Institute for Behavioral Economics Research) held a conference on framing to be held at the Tilburg University on Thursday and Friday 2nd and 3rd of April 2009. The meetings took place at Tilburg University, Warande Building room WZ105, starting on Thursday afternoon (13:30) and ending on Friday afternoon (17:30).

    During the past decades, there has been an increasing interest in Framing from different disciplinary perspectives such as Psychology, Economics, Marketing, Health Psychology, Philosophy, and communication to mention just a few. The purpose of this conference is to discuss framing related issues from various different perspectives. The invited speakers represent a wide spectrum coming from different disciplines such including psychology, marketing and linguistics.

    Guest speakers:

    Y. Schul (Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
    Eric R. Igou (University ofLimerick)
    Michaela Wänke & Leonie Reutner (Universität Basel)
    Simon Moran (Ben-Gurion University) & Ilana Ritov (Hebrew University
    Denis Hilton (Université de Toulouse)
    Bart Geurts (Nijmegen University)
    Craig R. M. McKenzie (U.C. San Diego)
    Karl H. Teigen (Oslo University)
    Marc van Buiten (Eindhoven University) & Gideon Keren (Tilburg University)
    Todd McElroy (Appalachian State University)

    Date: April, 2nd and 3rd 2009
    Time: Thursday 13:00 - 17:45 hours and Friday 09:30 - 17:30 hours
    Location: WZ 105

    Researchers, students, and scholars interested in the topic are kindly invited to join these meetings. In order to assist us in our planning, we would appreciate if you could send us an e-mail whether you are planning to attend the conference and on which days (send your e-mail to J.Buysse@uvt.nl). Attending is free of charge and you will be the guest of the TIBER institute for coffee breaks and lunch (on Friday).



    Click here for the photos of the Tiber kick-off conference on 30 and 31 August 2007