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[Return to Previous Listing]Svetlana Pevnitskaya
Assistant Professor, Economics, Florida State University
Phone: (850) 645-1525
Fax: (850) 644-4535
Bellamy Building 257
Tallahassee, FL 32306-2180
http://mailer.fsu.edu/~spevnitskaya/
Education:
Ph.D. Economics, University of Southern California
Research Interests:
Svetlana Pevnitskaya is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Economics. Her general research interests are in the areas of applied microeconomic theory and experimental economics with main focus on studying individual decision-making in markets and other strategic environments. In her papers on auctions Professor Pevnitskaya’s work includes modeling endogenous entry when bidders have heterogeneous risk preferences, analysis of novel mechanisms such as survival auction and indicative bidding, investigation of various environments for example when there is uncertainty about the number of participants or when bidders have charity preferences. In other projects she investigates the effect of learning, rewards and punishment on strategic behavior and the effect of beliefs on decision making. Professor Pevnitskaya holds PhD in Economics from University of Southern California and worked at Caltech and Ohio State University prior to joining FSU in 2005.
Publications List:
- An Initial Implementation of the Turing Tournament to Learning in Repeated Two Person Games, with Jasmina Arifovic and Richard McKelvey - Games and Economics Behavior, 2006, 57, (1), 93-122
- Endogenous Entry and Self-selection in Private Value Auctions: An Experimental Study, with Thomas Palfrey - Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 2008, 66, 731-747 (earlier version of this paper is Caltech Social Science Working Paper No.1172, 2003)
- Survival Auctions, with John Kagel and Lixin Ye - Economic Theory, 2007, Vol.33, No 1, pp.103-119
- Endogenous Entry in First-Price Private Value Auctions: the Self-Selection Effect, Indicative Bidding: An Experimental Analysis, with John Kagel and Lixin Ye - Games and Economic Behavior, 2008, 62, 697-721
- Bidder Behavior in Sealed Bid Auctions Where the Number of Bidders is Unknown, with Mark Isaac and Kurt Schnier