Journal Publications and Conference Proceedings

My PhD thesis lies in the confluence of psychology and economics, where I study the structural and psychological factors influencing people's intertemporal decision-making.

Intertemporal decision-making is a crucial aspect of human behavior, where individuals make choices spread across time - choosing 'now' vs. waiting for the future. My research delves into how people make these decisions, the environmental and psychological factors that affect them, and how these can be modeled computationally.

In other words, I theorize about the underlying causes of intertemporal preference shifts using computational and mathematical models and test these theories using innovative gaming paradigms. These games, designed to simulate real-world scenarios and allowing us to observe how people make decisions in controlled environments, can be found on my Github.

Here are some of my publications and conference proceedings:

  1. Present-Focused Behavior as a Rational Adaptation to Precarity (2025)
  2. Changes in time preference may simply be induced by changes in time perception (2024)
  3. Unpredictability shortens planning horizons(2023)