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June 10–11, 2027, room Auditorium 3
Toulouse, January 7–8, 2027, room Auditorium 3 - Auditorium 4
Arsenal, July 6–10, 2026
Saharsh Agarwal (Indian School of Business)
July 2, 2026, 14:00–15:00, Online
Online search engines depend on external content to respond to user queries, while content providers rely on search engines for visibility and user acquisition. The integration of GenAI-based summaries into search interfaces (eg, Google’s AI Overviews (AIOs)) may reduce users’ incentives to visit...
Ludwig Straub (Harvard University)
June 29, 2026, 11:30–12:30, Banque de France, room Online and in room 4
We integrate dispersed information into a heterogeneous-agent New Keynesian model in which households cannot fully distinguish idiosyncratic from aggregate income, creating a two-way feedback between household sentiment about future income and aggregate demand. We develop a portable methodology—...
Clément Lalanne (Université Paris Cité)
Toulouse: TSE, June 25, 2026, 11:00–12:15, room Auditorium 3
Silvia Sonderegger (Nottingham University)
Toulouse: IAST, June 23, 2026, 11:30–12:30, room Auditorium 4 (First floor- TSE Building)
Social sanctions sustain social order by reinforcing widely accepted principles. Political polarization may weaken this mechanism by fragmenting these principles, yet causal effects are hard to identify: observational data cannot separate the effect of polarized preferences from exposure to...
Karlye Stedman (Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City)
June 22, 2026, 11:30–12:30, Banque de France, room Online and in Room 4
Risk-on risk-off shocks have pronounced distributional impacts on capital flows, with managed funds playing an increasingly pivotal role in amplifying these effects. This paper demonstrates that among managed funds, passive funds, with their limited discretion and benchmarking mandates,...
TSE, June 22–23, 2026, room Auditorium 3
Jesse Fenneman
Toulouse: IAST, June 19, 2026, 11:30–12:30, room Auditorium 4 (First floor - TSE Building)
The behavioral and social sciences increasingly study similar problems in isolation. Researchers often use different concepts, measures, and disciplinary languages for structurally related situations, making it difficult to understand when we expect that findings will generalize across disciplinary...