Craig R. M. McKenzie
9500 Gilman
Drive - MC 0553
University of California, San
Diego
La Jolla
CA 92093-0553
USA
cmckenzie@ucsd.edu
Professor of Management & Strategy Professor
Rady School of Management Department
of Psychology
Tel: 858.534.3739 Tel:
858.534.8075
Fax: 858.534.0745 Fax:
858.534.7190
http://management.ucsd.edu/faculty/directory/mckenzie/ http://psy.ucsd.edu/~mckenzie
Education
Ph.D., Psychology, The University
of Chicago (1994)
B.A., Philosophy, University of California, Irvine
(1987)
B.A., Psychology, University of California, Irvine
(1985)
Experience
Professor of
Management & Strategy, Rady School of Management,
University of California,
San Diego (2006
- present; Adjunct Associate Professor, 2004 - 2006)
Professor,
Department of Psychology, University
of California, San Diego (2006 - present; Associate
Professor, 2000 - 2006; Assistant Professor, 1994 - 2000)
Awards
Faculty Early
Career Development (CAREER) Award from the National Science Foundation (1996)
Hillel Einhorn
New Investigator Award, sponsored by the Society for Judgment and Decision
Making (1994)
Decision Analysis
Student Paper Competition Award, sponsored by the Decision Analysis Special
Interest Group of the Operations Research Society of America (1992)
University of Chicago
Graduate Fellowship (1988 - 1992)
Graduated cum laude (1987)
Selected for University of California Education Abroad Program.
Studied philosophy at Lund University,
Sweden (1985 -
1986)
Grants
National Science
Foundation, "Collaborative Research: SJDM/SMDM Research Exchange"
(SES-0922023; conference grant), 9/1/2009-8/31/2011, $16,206 (with Alan
Schwartz)
National Science
Foundation, “Conscious Thought and Rational Norms” (SES-0820553), 10/1/2008 -
9/30/2011, $374,459 (Shlomi Sher, Co-PI)
National Science
Foundation, “Generating and Evaluating Interval Estimates” (SES-0551225),
5/1/2006 - 4/30/2010, $250,000
National Science
Foundation, “Information Leakage from Logically Equivalent Frames”
(SES-0242049), 4/1/2003 - 3/31/2007, $189,680
National Science
Foundation, “Examining the Rarity Assumption and Its Implications”
(SES-0079615), 10/1/2000 - 9/30/2005, $297,915
National Science
Foundation (CAREER Award), “Consideration of Alternative Hypotheses in Judgment
under Uncertainty” (SBR-9515030), 7/1/1996 - 6/30/2001, $206,314
Publications
Erat, S., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (submitted). Attribution of individual responsibility
following group-level feedback.
McKenzie, C. R.
M., & Liersch, M. J. (submitted). Misunderstanding savings growth:
Implications for retirement savings.
Liersch, M. J.,
& McKenzie, C. R. M. (submitted). In defaults we trust.
McKenzie, C. R.
M., & Sher, S. (submitted). Product attribute framing and information
leakage.
Liersch, M. J.,
& McKenzie, C. R. M. (submitted). When do implausible anchors influence
judgment? A 2-stage model of anchoring
effects.
Sher, S., &
McKenzie, C. R. M. (in press).
Levels of information: A framing hierarchy. In G. Keren (Ed.), Perspectives on framing. Psychology
Press - Taylor & Francis Group. [pdf
]
Sher,
S., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (in press).
Framing effects. In P. Hogan
(Ed.), The Cambridge encyclopedia of the
language sciences. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Chase, V. M. (in
press). Why rare things are precious:
The importance of rarity in lay inference.
In P. M. Todd, G. Gigerenzer, & The ABC Research Group (Eds.), Ecological rationality: Intelligence in the
world. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
Schotter,
E. R., Berry, R. W., McKenzie, C. R. M., & Rayner, K. (2010). Gaze bias: Selective encoding and liking
effects. Visual Cognition, 18,
1113-1132. [pdf]
Nelson,
J. D., McKenzie, C. R. M., Cottrell, G. W., & Sejnowski, T. J. (2010).
Experience matters: Information acquisition optimizes probability gain. Psychological Science, 21, 960-969. [pdf]
Nelson,
J. D., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2009).
Confirmation bias. In M. W. Kattan (Ed.), Encyclopedia of medical decision making (pp. 161-171). London:
Sage.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2009). Business and
psychology: The growing trend of judgment and decision making. Rady
Business Journal, 2, 16-22. (Not
peer reviewed.) [pdf]
Liersch,
M. J., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2009).
Duration neglect by numbers -- and its elimination by graphs. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision
Processes, 108, 303-314. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2009). Bayes plus
environment. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 32, 93-94.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Liersch, M. J., & Yaniv, I. (2008). Overconfidence in interval estimates: What
does expertise buy you? Organizational Behavior and Human Decision
Processes, 107, 179-191. [pdf]
Sher,
S., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2008).
Framing effects and rationality.
In N. Chater & M. Oaksford (Eds.), The probabilistic mind: Prospects for Bayesian cognitive science
(pp. 79-96). Oxford: Oxford University
Press. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Mikkelsen, L. A. (2007).
A Bayesian view of covariation assessment. Cognitive
Psychology, 54, 33-61. [pdf]
Nelson,
J. D., McKenzie, C. R. M., Cottrell, G. W., & Sejnowski, T. J. (2007).
Optimal experimental design principles explain human attention on a probabilistic
categorization task. Society for Neuroscience conference, San Diego, CA. (Published abstract.)
Nelson,
J. D., McKenzie, C. R. M., Cottrell, G. W., & Sejnowski, T. J. (2007).
Towards a descriptive theory of value of information in categorization tasks:
implications for theories of eye movement and information search. Journal of Vision, 7, 960. http://www.journalofvision.org/7/9/960/ (Published abstract.)
Sher,
S., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2006). Information leakage from logically equivalent
frames. Cognition, 101, 467-494. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Liersch, M. J., & Finkelstein, S. R. (2006). Recommendations implicit in policy defaults. Psychological Science, 17, 414-420. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2006). Increased sensitivity
to differentially diagnostic answers using familiar materials: Implications for
confirmation bias. Memory and Cognition, 34, 577-588. [pdf]
Roy,
M. M., Christenfeld, N. J. S., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2005). Underestimating the duration of future
events: Memory incorrectly utilized or memory bias? Psychological
Bulletin, 131, 738-756. [pdf]
Roy,
M. M., Christenfeld, N. J. S., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2005). The broad applicability of memory bias and
its coexistence with the planning fallacy: Reply to Griffin and Buehler
(2005). Psychological Bulletin, 131, 761-762. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2005). Judgment and decision making. In K. Lamberts & R. L. Goldstone (Eds.), Handbook of cognition (pp.
321-338). London: Sage Publications. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2004). Framing effects in inference tasks -- and why they are
normatively defensible. Memory and Cognition, 32, 874-885. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2004). Hypothesis testing and evaluation. In D. J.
Koehler & N. Harvey (Eds.), Blackwell
handbook of judgment and decision making (pp. 200-219). Oxford: Blackwell. [pdf]
McKenzie, C.
R. M., Wixted, J. T., & Noelle, D. C. (2004). Explaining purportedly
irrational behavior by modeling skepticism in task parameters: An example
examining confidence in forced-choice tasks.
Journal of Experimental
Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 30, 947-959. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Nelson, J. D. (2003). What a speaker's choice of frame reveals:
Reference points, frame selection, and framing effects. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, 10, 596-602. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2003). Rational models as
theories -- not standards -- of behavior.
Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 7,
403-406. [pdf]
McKenzie, C.
R. M., & Amin, M. B. (2002). When wrong predictions provide more support
than right ones. Psychonomic Bulletin and
Review, 9, 821-828. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Lee, S. M., & Chen, K. K. (2002). When negative evidence
increases confidence: Change in belief after hearing two sides of a
dispute. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 15, 1-18. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Wixted, J. T. (2001). Participant skepticism: If you can't beat
it, model it. Behavioral and Brain
Sciences, 24, 424-425.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Ferreira, V. S., Mikkelsen, L. A., McDermott, K. J., & Skrable,
R. P. (2001). Do conditional hypotheses target rare events? Organizational
Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 85, 291-309. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Wixted, J. T., Noelle, D. C., & Gyurjyan, G. (2001). Relation
between confidence in yes-no and forced-choice tasks. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 130, 140-155. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Mikkelsen, L. A. (2000). The psychological side of Hempel's
paradox of confirmation. Psychonomic
Bulletin and Review, 7, 360-366. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1999). (Non)Complementary updating of belief in two hypotheses. Memory and Cognition, 27, 152-165. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1998). Taking into account the strength of an alternative hypothesis.
Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 24, 771-792. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1997). Underweighting alternatives and overconfidence. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision
Processes, 71, 141-160. [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Soll, J. B. (1996). Which reference class is evoked? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 19,
34-35.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1994). The accuracy of intuitive judgment strategies: Covariation
assessment and Bayesian inference. Cognitive
Psychology, 26, 209-239. [1994 Hillel Einhorn New Investigator Award; 1992
Decision Analysis Student Paper Competition Award] [pdf]
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1994). Base rates versus prior beliefs in Bayesian inference. Psycoloquy, 5(1) base-rate.6.mckenzie.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1994). Taking into account the strength of an alternative hypothesis.
Dissertation Abstracts International:
Section B: The Sciences & Engineering, 55, 1694.
Hartley,
A. A., Kieley, J., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (1992). Allocation of visual
attention in younger and older adults. Perception
& Psychophysics, 52, 175-185.
Hogarth,
R. M., Gibbs, B. J., McKenzie, C. R. M., & Marquis, M. A. (1991). Learning
from feedback: Exactingness and incentives. Journal
of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 17, 734-752. [Reprinted
in W. M. Goldstein & R. M. Hogarth (Eds.), Research on judgment and decision making: Currents, connections, and
controversies (pp. 244-284), 1997. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press]
[pdf]
Hartley,
A. A., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (1991). Attentional and perceptual
contributions to the identification of extrafoveal stimuli: Adult age
comparisons. Journal of Gerontology:
Psychological Sciences, 46, 202-206.
Conference
Presentations
Liersch,
M. J., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2010, August). Can we put our trust in defaults? Academy of Management Annual
Meeting, Montreal, Canada.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Liersch, M. J. (2010, June).
Misunderstanding savings growth:
Implications for retirement savings.
First Annual Boulder Summer Conference on Consumers’ Financial Decision
Making, Boulder, CO.
Liersch,
M. J., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2009, November). Choosing to re-experience painful memories: Duration neglect in memory,
but not in prospective choice. Annual Meeting of the Society for Judgment
and Decision Making, Boston, MA.
Rusconi,
P., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2009, November). Testing different accounts of insensitivity to answer diagnosticity. Annual
Meeting of the Society for Judgment and Decision Making, Boston, MA.
Schotter,
E. R., Berry, R. W., McKenzie, C. R. M., & Rayner, K. (2009,
November). Does looking behavior predict choice? 50th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic
Society, Boston, MA.
Liersch,
M. J., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2009, August).
In defaults we trust. 22nd Biannual Conference on Subjective
Probability, Utility, and Decision Making (SPUDM), Rovereto, Italy.
Liersch,
M. J., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2009, August).
When do implausible anchors
influence judgment? A 2-stage model of anchoring effects. Academy of Management Annual Meeting,
Chicago, IL.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2009, July). Discussant, Rational
Process Models symposium. Annual Cognitive Science Conference, Amsterdam,
Netherlands.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2009, May). Framing effects and
information leakage. Invited talk, Association for Psychological Science
Annual Convention, San Francisco, CA.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Liersch, M. J. (2009, May). The
role of conversational pragmatics in reporting interval estimates.
Association for Psychological Science Annual Convention, San Francisco, CA.
Sher,
S., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2009, April).
Levels of information: A framing
hierarchy. Invited presentation, workshop on Perspectives on Framing,
Tilburg University, Tilburg, Netherlands.
Liersch,
M. J., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2008, November). In
defaults we trust. Annual Meeting of
the Society of Judgment and Decision Making, Chicago, IL.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Liersch, M. J., & Yaniv, I. (2008, August). Overconfidence
in interval estimates: What does expertise buy you? Academy of Management Annual Meeting,
Anaheim, CA.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Liersch, M. J., & Yaniv, I. (2008, April). Overconfidence
in interval estimates: What does expertise buy you? Behavioral Decision Research in Management
Conference, San Diego, CA.
Finklea,
K. M., Huber, D. E., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2008, April). Perceptual
differences in the own race bias: A multidimensional scaling analaysis. Western Psychological Association Annual
Conference, Irvine, CA.
Finklea,
K. M., Huber, D. E., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2008, April). Perceptual
differences in the own race bias: A multidimensional scaling analaysis. American Psychology-Law Society Annual
Conference, Jacksonville, FL.
Liersch,
M. J., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2007, November). When do implausible anchors influence judgment? A 2-stage model of
anchoring effects. Annual Meeting of
the Society for Judgment and Decision Making, Long Beach, CA.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2006, November). A Bayesian account of some classic learning
phenomena. 47th Annual Meeting of
the Psychonomic Society, Houston, TX.
Nelson,
J. D., Cottrell, G. W., Filimon, F., McKenzie, C. R. M., Movellan, J. R.,
Sejnowski, T. J., & Sereno, M. I. (2006, October). Using optimal experimental design to uncover human intuition:
Probability gain explains information search better than information gain,
impact, or Bayesian diagnosticity. Perceptual Expertise Network (PEN) XIII,
University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ.
Nelson,
J. D., Cottrell, G. W., Filimon, F., McKenzie, C. R. M., Movellan, J. R.,
Sejnowski, T. J., & Sereno, M. I. (2006, October). Optimal experimental design, probability learning, and information
search. NSF Science of Learning Centers meeting, Washington, DC.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2006, June). A rational account of (some) framing effects. Invited presentation, workshop on The
Probabilistic Mind: Prospects for Rational Models of Cognition, London, UK.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2006, June). Framing effects and information leakage. Workshop on The Application of Conversational
Pragmatics to Understanding Reasoning and Decision Making, Toulouse, France.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Sher, S., Liersch, M. J., & Finkelstein, S. R. (2006, June). Some
managerial implications of information leakage. Behavioral
Decision Research in Management Conference, Santa Monica, CA.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Liersch, M. J., & Finkelstein, S. R. (2005, November). Recommendations
implicit in policy defaults. Annual
Meeting of the Society for Judgment and Decision Making, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Liersch,
M. J., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2005, November). Duration
neglect by numbers -- And its elimination by graphs. Annual Meeting of the Society for Judgment
and Decision Making, Toronto, ON, Canada.
McKenzie,
C. R.M. (2005, November). Further tests of an information leakage
account of attribute framing effects.
46th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Toronto, ON, Canada.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2005, August). Information leakage from logically equivalent
frames. European Society for
Philosophy and Psychology, Lund, Sweden.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Liersch, M. J., & Yaniv, I. (2004, November). Overconfidence
in interval estimates: What does expertise buy you? Annual Meeting of the Society for Judgment
and Decision Making, Minneapolis, MN.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2004, November). Framing effects in inference tasks -- and
why they're normatively defensible. Annual Meeting of the Society for
Judgment and Decision Making, Minneapolis, MN.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2004, November). Increased sensitivity to differentially
diagnostic answers using familiar materials: Implications for confirmation bias. 45th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic
Society, Minneapolis, MN.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2004, July). Framing effects in inference tasks -- and
why they're normatively defensible.
Fifth International Conference on Thinking, Leuven, Belgium.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (May, 2004). Framing effects and information leakage. Invited talk presented at the Individual
Decisions Conference, Irvine, CA.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (2004, January). Making the most of your asymmetric posterior. 42nd Bayesian Research Conference, Fullerton,
CA.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Sher, S. (2003, November).
Further tests of a Bayesian
account of covariation assessment.
44th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Vancouver, Canada.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Sher, S. (2003, August).
Information leakage from logically
equivalent frames. 19th Biannual
Conference on Subjective Probability, Utility, and Decision Making (SPUDM),
Zurich, Switzerland.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Wixted, J. T., & Noelle, D. C. (2002, November). Modeling participant skepticism as a means
of explaining purportedly irrational behavior. Annual Meeting of the
Psychonomic Society, Kansas City, MO.
Sher,
S., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (2002, November). Information leakage from logically equivalent frames. Annual
Meeting of the Society for Judgment and Decision Making, Kansas City, MO.
Oppenheimer,
D. M., McKenzie, C. R. M., & Le, V. (2002, November). Elimination of framing
effects through explicitly provided reference points. Annual Meeting of the Society for
Judgment and Decision Making, Kansas City, MO.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Sher, S. (2002, May). Information
leakage and framing effects. Behavioral Decision Research in Management
Conference, Chicago, IL.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Sher, S. (2002, February). Framing
effects: Is the standard account half right or half wrong? 40th Annual
Bayesian Research Conference, Los Angeles, CA.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Nelson, J. D. (2001, November). What a speaker's choice of frame reveals: Reference points, frame
selection, and framing effects. Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society,
Orlando, FL.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Mikkelsen, L. A. (2000, November). A Bayesian view of covariation assessment. Annual Meeting of the
Psychonomic Society, New Orleans, LA.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Amin, M. B. (2000, November). When wrong predictions provide more support than right ones. Annual
Meeting of the Society for Judgment and Decision Making, New Orleans, LA.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Ferreira, V. S., Mikkelsen, L. A., McDermott, K. J., & Skrable,
R. P. (May, 2000). Do conditional
statements target rare events? Behavioral Decision Research in Management
Conference, Tucson, AZ.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Mikkelsen, L. A. (1999, November). The psychological side of Hempel's paradox of confirmation. Annual
Meeting of the Society for Judgment and Decision Making, Los Angeles, CA.
Noelle,
D. C., Cottrell, G. W., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (1999, November). Interference effects and individual
differences in instructed category learning. Annual Meeting of the
Psychonomic Society, Los Angeles, CA.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., & Mikkelsen, L. A. (1999, August). The psychological side of Hempel's paradox of confirmation. The
17th Biannual Conference on Subjective Probability, Utility, and Decision
Making (SPUDM), Mannheim, Germany.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1999, January). Taking into
account the strength of an alternative hypothesis. Invited presentation,
NSF CAREER Program P.I. Meeting, Washington, DC.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Lee, S. M., & Chen, K. K. (1998, November). "That's the best you can do?": When negative evidence increases
confidence. Annual Meeting of the Society for Judgment and Decision Making,
Dallas, TX.
McKenzie,
C. R. M., Lee, S. M., & Chen, K. K. (1997, November). "That's the best you can do?": When negative evidence
increases confidence. Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society,
Philadelphia, PA.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1996, November). Dependent versus
independent confidence in two hypotheses: Implications for (non)additivity of
subjective probability. Annual Meeting of the Society for Judgment and
Decision Making, Chicago, IL.
McKenzie,
C. R. M, & Mills, J. S. (1996, November). Judgment versus choice based on frequency information in a Bayesian
task. Annual Meeting of the Society for Judgment and Decision Making,
Chicago, IL.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1994, November). The accuracy
of intuitive judgment strategies: Covariation assessment and Bayesian
inference. Invited presentation (Hillel Einhorn New Investigator Award
sponsored by the Society for Judgment and Decision Making), Annual Meeting of
the Society for Judgment and Decision Making, St. Louis, MO.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1994, May). Taking into account
the strength of an alternative hypothesis. Annual Meeting of the Midwestern
Psychological Association, Chicago, IL.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1993, November). Cognitive representation
affects consideration of an alternative hypothesis. Annual Meeting of the
Society for Judgment and Decision Making, Washington, DC.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1993, June). Environmental
effects on the accuracy of intuitive judgment strategies. American
Psychological Society Convention, Chicago, IL.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1992, November). The accuracy
of intuitive judgment strategies: Covariation assessment and Bayesian inference.
Invited presentation (winner of the Annual Student Paper Competition sponsored
by the ORSA Special Interest Group on Decision Analysis), ORSA/TIMS Joint
National Meeting, San Francisco, CA.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1992, May). Causal thinking
affects the perceived informativeness of covariation data. Behavioral
Decision Research in Management Conference, University of California at
Berkeley, The Haas School of Business.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1992, May). The role of causal
direction in the perceived informativeness of covariation data. Annual
Meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago, IL.
McKenzie,
C. R. M. (1991, November). The accuracy
of judgmental heuristics: Covariation assessment, Bayesian inference, and
hypothesis testing. Annual Meeting of the Society for Judgment and Decision
Making, San Francisco, CA.
Hogarth,
R. M., Gibbs, B. J., McKenzie, C. R. M., & Marquis, M. A. (1990, June). Learning from feedback: Exactingness and
incentives. Behavioral Decision Research in Management Conference,
University of Pennsylvania, The Wharton School.
Hartley,
A. A., Kieley, J. M., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (1987, November). Allocation and reallocation of attention in
young and elderly adults. Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society,
Seattle, WA.
Hartley,
A. A., Kieley, J. M., & McKenzie, C. R. M. (1987, November). Aging and the allocation of attention.
National Institute on Aging Workshop on the Aging of Attention, Washington, DC.
Invited
Colloquia and Seminars
UC Riverside, Anderson
Graduate School of Management (2010)
UC Merced, Mind, Technology, and
Society Series (2009)
University of Milan-Biccoca, Italy,
Department of Psychology (2009)
UC San Diego, Global Financial
Crisis Panel Discussion (2009)
Duke University, Fuqua School of
Business (2008)
UT Austin, McCombs School of
Business (2008)
UC San Diego, Social, Behavioral,
and Computer Sciences Seminar Series (2007)
University of Mannheim, Germany,
Business School (2007)
Summer Institute for Informed
Patient Choice, Dartmouth Medical School (2007)
University of Milan-Biccoca, Italy,
Department of Psychology (2006)
INSEAD, Fontainebleau, France (2006)
UCLA,
Center for Evolution, Behavior, and Culture (2005)
UCLA, Anderson School of Management
(2004)
UC San Diego, Department of
Philosophy (2004)
University of Chicago, Graduate
School of Business (2003)
University of Arizona, Eller College
of Business and Public Administration (2003)
Max Planck Institute for Human
Development, Berlin, Center for Adaptive Behavior and
Cognition (2001, 2002)
UCLA, Cognitive Science
Seminar (1999)
UC Irvine, Institute for
Mathematical Behavioral Sciences and Operations and Decision
Technologies in the
Graduate School of Management (1998)
VA Medical Center, UC San
Diego, Health Services Research Seminar (1998)
California Institute of
Technology, Learning Week Seminar (1997)
UC San Diego, Department of
Psychology (1994)
University of Georgia, Department of
Psychology (1994)
Cornell University, Johnson Graduate
School of Management (1994)
MIT, Department of Brain and
Cognitive Sciences (1994)
Carnegie-Mellon University,
Department of Social and Decision Sciences (1994)
Affiliations
Member
Association for
Psychological Science
European Association for
Decision Making
Psychonomic Society
Society for Judgment and
Decision Making
Activities
Associate Editor
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology (2009 - present)
Guest Associate Editor
Journal of Marketing Research (2010; Special issue on consumers’
financial decision making)
Editorial Board
Journal of Behavioral Decision Making (2002 - present)
Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Learning, Memory, and Cognition (2002 -
2006)
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes (2004 – 2007;
2010 - present)
Psychological Science (2003 - 2007)
Psychonomic Bulletin and Review (1998 -
present)
Advisory Panel
National Science
Foundation (Decision, Risk, and Management Sciences) (2003 -
2004)
Program Committee Member, Society
for Judgment and Decision Making (2007-2010;
Chair, 2009)
Program Committee Co-Chair,
Behavioral Decision Research in Management
Conference (BDRM XI),
Rady School of Management, UC San Diego (2008)
Program Committee Member, 24th
Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society
(2002)
Committee Member, Hillel
Einhorn New Investigator Award, sponsored by the Society
for
Judgment and Decision Making (2002 - 2007; Chair 2007)
Scientific Editor, Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science (2001)
Co-organizer (with Denis Hilton and
Laura Macchi) of a workshop on The Application of
Conversational
Pragmatics to Understanding Reasoning and Decision Making, June
22-24,
2006, Toulouse, France
Member, Interdisciplinary Ph.D.
Program, UCSD (2007 - present)
Ad Hoc Reviewer
Journals
Acta
Psychologica
Annals of
Behavioral Medicine
British
Journal of Psychology
Cognition
Cognitive Psychology
Cognitive
Science
Current Psychology of Cognition
Decision Support Systems
Emotion
Evolution
& Human Behavior
International Journal of Forecasting
Journal of
Consumer Research
Journal of
Economic Psychology
Journal of
Experimental Psychology: General
Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Learning, Memory, and Cognition
Journal of
Experimental Social Psychology
Journal of
Marketing Research
Journal of
Memory and Language
Judgment and
Decision Making
Management Science
Memory &
Cognition
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision
Processes
Perspectives
on Psychological Science
Personality
and Social Psychology Bulletin
Proceedings
of the Royal Society
Psychological
Review
Psychological
Science
Psychonomic
Bulletin and Review
Psycoloquy
Quarterly
Journal of Experimental Psychology
Social
Cognition
Thinking and
Reasoning
Trends in
Cognitive Sciences
Government Agencies,
Conferences, and Publishing Companies
APA Books
Behavioral
Decision Research in Management Conference
Cognitive
Science Society
Israel
Science Foundation
Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates
National
Science Foundation (Decision, Risk, & Management Science;
Human
Cognition & Perception; Developmental and Learning
Sciences)
National
Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Sage
Publications
Courses
Taught
Undergraduate
General Psychology:
Cognitive Foundations (Psych 3)
Introduction to
Cognitive Psychology (Psych 105)
Introduction to Judgment
and Decision Making (Psych 148)
Creativity (Psych 176)
Graduate Seminars
Topics in Judgment and
Decision Making (Psych 209)
Human Rationality (Psych
237)
MBA
Creativity and
Innovation (MGT 222)
Organizational Strategy
and Human Resource Management (MGT 409)