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High-probability grants
According to our matching algorithm, Susanne Lohmann is the likely recipient of the following grants.
Years |
Recipients |
Code |
Title / Keywords |
Matching score |
1993 — 1995 |
Lohmann, Susanne |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Information, Participation and Representation: An Economic Analysis of Collective Action @ University of California-Los Angeles
9308405, PI-Lohmann: This research addresses two problems commonly associated with collective action. First, political outcomes tend to be biased in favor of small, well-organized groups and against large, diffuse groups. As an explanation, it is often argued that smaller groups are more successful in overcoming the free rider problem of collective action. Second, collective action may undermine the credibility of particular regulatory policies. Firms may have disincentives to commit resources when they anticipate that the regulatory environment may change in response to interest groups and public pressures. To date the analysis of these two problems is based on reduced-form models of political participation and decision-making. This project will employ game theoretical techniques to explicitly derive people's incentives to become organized and policymakers' incentives to respond to their pressures. This work will identify the factors affecting the efficiency of political outcomes and the tradeoffs inherent in the political design of regulatory policy.
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1 |
2001 — 2002 |
Fiske, Alan (co-PI) [⬀] Lieberman, Matthew [⬀] Lohmann, Susanne Iacoboni, Marco (co-PI) [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Conference: Social Cognitive Neuroscience, April 2001, Los Angeles, Ca. @ University of California-Los Angeles
The first Conference on Social Cognitive Neuroscience will be held on the UCLA campus in April 2001. This conference will highlight the new but fast growing field of Social Cognitive Neuroscience. Symposia will focus on Social Relations and Theory of Mind, Emotion, Control and Automaticity, Attitudes and Attitude Change, and Stereotyping and Social Perception. Each symposium will consist of research reports using neuroimaging, neuropsychological, or computational modeling methodologies. Additional panel discussions will allow cognitive neuroscientists and social scientists to discuss ways in which important questions from the social sciences can be tested using the methods of cognitive neuroscience. There will also infrastructure talks focusing on developing coherent training programs in social cognitive neuroscience and securing funding for this sort of interdisciplinary research. There will also be a poster session to allow for rapid transmission of other research findings. Informal sessions will allow additional opportunities for researchers to become acquainted and to share their latest research results. The conference will help to inform the new emphasis at NSF on cognitive neuroscience (NSF 01-041).
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1 |