I first met Shahar socially through common friends and then again when he was studying for his PhD under the supervision of another friend. So when he graduated, our personal and professional paths combined and he came to spend a few years at the Center for Advanced Hindsight as a postdoctoral fellow. Over those years we got to understand each other to a deeper level and think even more alike (mostly for the better). Shahar is a delight to be with and work with, and I am looking forward to many years of joint research. Shahar is currently a professor at the Interdisciplinary Institute in Israel.
Tom Gilovich
When I was a PhD student, I attended one of Tom’s presentations, and I was amazed by the quality of his thought and creativity. Tom has a unique ability to ask important questions and find answers in interesting places. For example, he has shown that teams with black uniforms receive more penalties than their opponents; that basketball players don’t really get a “hot hand”; and that NBA players miss more free throws when they don’t think they deserve the penalty. I have always wanted to be a bit more like Tom. He is currently a professor at Cornell University.
Yoel Inbar
I first met Yoel when he was a student of Tom Gilovich and David Pizarro, and that is how we started working together. Yoel is the epitome of the modern hipster—equal parts cool and geek with a deep knowledge of indie rock bands (you probably haven’t heard of them) and UNIX. One of Yoel’s interests is disgust, and he is an expert in finding interesting ways to disgust people (fart spray, feces-shaped chocolate, odd foods, etc.). Yoel is currently a professor at Tilburg University in the Netherlands.
Zoë Chance
Zoë is a force of creativity and kindness. Talking to her is a bit like being in an amusement park—you know it is going to be exciting and interesting, but it is hard to anticipate which direction her comments will take. Together with her love of life and mankind, she is the ideal blend of researcher and friend. Zoë is currently a postdoctoral fellow at Yale University.
Bibliography and Additional Readings
Introduction: Why Is Dishonesty So Interesting?
Tim Harford,
Chapter 1. Testing the Simple Model of Rational Crime (SMORC)
Jerome K. Jerome,
Jeff Kreisler,
Eynav Maharabani, “Honesty and Helping Behavior: Testing Situations Involving Temptation to Cheat a Blind Person,” master’s thesis, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel (2007).
Nina Mazar, On Amir, and Dan Ariely, “The Dishonesty of Honest People: A Theory of Self-concept Maintenance,”
Nina Mazar and Dan Ariely, “Dishonesty in Everyday Life and Its Policy Implications,”
Chapter 2. Fun with the Fudge Factor
Nina Mazar, On Amir, and Dan Ariely, “The Dishonesty of Honest People: A Theory of Self-concept Maintenance,”
Lisa Shu, Nina Mazar, Francesca Gino, Max Bazerman, and Dan Ariely, “When to Sign on the Dotted Line? Signing First Makes Ethics Salient and Decreases Dishonest Self-Reports,” working paper, Harvard Business School NOM Unit (2011).
Jason Dana, Roberto A. Weber, and Jason Xi Kuang, “Exploiting Moral Wiggle Room: Behavior Inconsistent with a Preference for Fair Outcomes,”
Christopher K. Hsee, “Elastic Justification: How Tempting but Task-Irrelevant Factors Influence Decisions,”
Christopher K. Hsee, “Elastic Justification: How Unjustifiable Factors Influence Judgments,”
Maurice Schweitzer and Chris Hsee, “Stretching the Truth: Elastic Justification and Motivated Communication of Uncertain Information,”
Chapter 2b. Golf