Newsletter 203: Feb 26, 2018


The Center for Decision Sciences at Columbia Business School
Welcome to the Center for Decision Sciences' Weekly Newsletter. Below you can find a list of events of interest.

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Seminars of Interest at Columbia 

Tuesday February 27th

4:15pm to 5:45pm - IAB 1101
Money Macro Workshop - Veronica Guerrieri
No Title Available

4:00pm to 5:00pm - Jerome L. Greene Science Center 
Systems, Cognitive and Computational Neuroscience Seminar Series - Danielle Bassett (University of Pennsylvania)
Networks That Learn, and the Networks They Learn

Wednesday February 28th

12:30pm to 2:00pm - Uris 332
Management Seminar - Silvia Belleza (Columbia Business School)
Trickle-Round Signals: When Low Status Becomes High

2:15pm to 3:45pm - IAB 1101
International Economics Workshop - Paul Piveteau (Johns Hopkins University)
No Title Available

4:15pm to 5:45pm - 1101 IAB
Applied Microeconomics Seminar - Sebastian Siegloch
Property Taxation, Housing, and Local Labor Markets: Evidence from German Municipalities (with Max Löffler)

Thursday March 1st

12:30pm to 1:45pm - Uris 331
Finance Free Lunch (Faculty Only) -- Stephen Penman 
Title Not Available

12:30pm to 2:00pm - Uris 303
Marketing Seminar - Eileen Fischer (York University)
Title Not Available

2:15pm to 3:45pm - Uris 303
Finance Seminar - John Graham
CEO power and board dynamics (with Hyunseob Kim and Mark Leary)

Friday March 2nd

12:30pm to 1:45pm - Uris 307
Competitive Strategy Seminar - Eric Anderson
Harbingers of Failure...and Success (with Chaoqun Chen)

Seminars of Interest at NYU

Thursday March 1st 

12:30pm to 1:30pm - NYU Psychology Room 121
NYU Psychology Talks - Barbara Shinn-Cunningham (Boston University)
Title Not Available

Article of the Week
Advisors, don’t let couples fall into this ‘super risky’ financial behavior
Working with couples can present many challenges, particularly when one partner is less financially literate than the other. John Lynch, the director for the Center for Research on Consumer Financial Decision Making and a professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder, says the key is to start with financial education as early as possible in the relationship. Financial education interventions are helpful early as couples fall into their respective roles, but after a delay, even long interventions have no significant influence. 
 

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