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职称:Professor of Economics and Public Policy
所属学校:University of Virginia-Main Campus
所属院系:School of Leadership and Public Policy
所属专业:Economics, General
联系方式:434-924-7894
Charles Holt is the A. Willis Robertson Professor of Political Economy at the University of Virginia, where he also teaches in the Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy. Previously, he taught at Minnesota, after finishing graduate work at Carnegie-Mellon, where he studied under Ed Prescott and Morris DeGroot. He is the currently the director of the Experimental Economics Laboratory at Virginia. He develops and programs the web-based VeconLab experiments that are widely used for teaching and research (over 90,000 participant logins per year). His publications include over a hundred articles in academic journals, focused on game theory, auctions, experimental economics, and the teaching of economics. He has written and edited several books on topics in experimental economics, and was a founding co-editor of the journal, Experimental Economics. He has previously served as President of the Economic Science Association, the Southern Economic Association, and the Society of Economic Educators. Much of his research pertains to auction design, e.g. for greenhouse gas allowances, spectrum licenses, auto license plates, and toxic banking assets. Other work includes measures of risk aversion and subjective beliefs, and studies of strategic behavior in games and bargaining, using a mix of theory and experiment.
Charles Holt is the A. Willis Robertson Professor of Political Economy at the University of Virginia, where he also teaches in the Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy. Previously, he taught at Minnesota, after finishing graduate work at Carnegie-Mellon, where he studied under Ed Prescott and Morris DeGroot. He is the currently the director of the Experimental Economics Laboratory at Virginia. He develops and programs the web-based VeconLab experiments that are widely used for teaching and research (over 90,000 participant logins per year). His publications include over a hundred articles in academic journals, focused on game theory, auctions, experimental economics, and the teaching of economics. He has written and edited several books on topics in experimental economics, and was a founding co-editor of the journal, Experimental Economics. He has previously served as President of the Economic Science Association, the Southern Economic Association, and the Society of Economic Educators. Much of his research pertains to auction design, e.g. for greenhouse gas allowances, spectrum licenses, auto license plates, and toxic banking assets. Other work includes measures of risk aversion and subjective beliefs, and studies of strategic behavior in games and bargaining, using a mix of theory and experiment.