Stretch Your Tax Refund — 20% off new mattresses! Turn your tax refund into a home! Or my latest favorite connecting two ideas that I’ve never thought of together: Tax Refunds = Massage Money!
Feedback is intrigued by a study that uses rain and a "realistic three-compartment human head phantom" to explore the effects ...
Dan Ariely, a famous researcher within the field and author of the best-seller Predictably Irrational, allegedly fabricated data for a 2012 paper about dishonesty. In August, Science reported that ...
On a recent morning, I took an Uber to visit Dan Ariely, a psychologist at Duke University and one of the world’s foremost experts on lying. The inside of the car, though neat, had a strong odor ...
Using behavioral psychology and social science to solve crimes, "The Irrational" is an unconventional procedural drama, one ...
Luanne Sims has to grow up fast when she gets her first real job. Dan Ariely is called upon to help a fellow burn survivor. Gather 'round for an episode of The Moth Radio Hour with stories of ...
Additionally, it’s based on the 2008 book Predictably Irrational by bestselling author Dan Ariely. The show follows a world-renowned psychology professor who uses his unique insight into human ...
So if you were browsing from a different zip code, Ashley Madison might assume you were on a business trip and show you an ad, according to Dan Ariely, a professor of behavioral economics at Duke ...
Billionaire Richard White has been accused of giving business advice in exchange for sex by a second woman, who says the ...
It might sound counter-intuitive, but the best place to start when you want to pay off debt is with a savings account, argues Dan Ariely, a behavioral economist and author of the books ...
Similarly, the ETF “Harbor Human Capital Factor (HAPI),” a brainchild of economist Dan Ariely, identifies firms with a pro-worker culture, arguing that this drives the success of a company and ...
Norton, Michael I., Daniel Mochon, and Dan Ariely. "The IKEA Effect: When Labor Leads to Love." Journal of Consumer Psychology 22, no. 3 (July 2012): 453–460.