Rabin, Matthew
Edward G. and Nancy S. Jordan Professor of Economics
http://elsa.berkeley.edu/users/rabin/index.html
Address:
Department of Economics University of California, Berkeley 549 Evans Hall, #3880 Berkeley, CA 94720-3880 (510) 643-8622 (510) 642-0638 (fax)
E-mail Address:rabin at econ.Berkeley.EDU
Web Address:
http://elsa.Berkeley.EDU/~rabin/index.html
CB Handle:
"Game Boy
Personal Information
Date of Birth: December 27, 1963 Citizen: United States of America Marital Status: In search of husband
Education
1981-1984: University of Wisconsin桵adison. B.A., December 1984. Economics and mathematics. 1985: London School of Economics. Graduate Research Fee student, lent and summer terms. 1985-1989: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. PhD, June 1989, Economics.
Positions Held
1982-1984: R.A., Institute for Research on Poverty, University of Wisconsin桵adison. 1985: R.A., STICERD, London School of Economics. 1989: Visiting scholar, month of June, at C.E.P.R.E.M.A.P., Paris, France. 1989-1996: Assistant Professor, Economics Department, University of California-Berkeley. 1993-1994: Visiting Assistant Professor, MIT Department of Economics, August 1993 - May 1994. 1996-1999: Associate Professor, Economics Department, University of California-Berkeley. 1997: Visiting Research Professor, Center for Mathematical Studies, Northwestern University, Spring Quarter, April-June. 1997-1998: Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, September 1997-June 1998. 1999-: Professor, Economics Department, University of California-Berkeley. 2000-2001: BP Amoco-LSE Centennial Professor, Economics Department, London School of Economics (visiting position). 2001-: Director, Program in Psychological Economics, University of California-Berkeley. 2004: Taussig Research Professor, Economics Department, Harvard, February - December 2004.
Honors, Fellowships, and Grants
Most Likely to Express His Opinion, high school senior class, Springbrook High School, 1981. Dowling Scholarship, University of Wisconsin桵adison, Mathematics Department, 1984. Phi Beta Kappa, University of Wisconsin桵adison, 1984. National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship, 1985-1988. Alfred P. Sloan Dissertation Fellowship, 1988-1989. National Science Foundation Research Grant, November 1992-October 1994. Russell Sage Foundation, Behavioral Economics Roundtable Mini-Grant, 1995. Graduate Economics Association, Outstanding Teaching Award, 1994-1995. Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow, 1995-1997. National Science Foundation Research Grant, September 1997-August 2000. Russel Sage Foundation Research Grant, September 1998-August 2000. Graduate Economics Association, Outstanding Teaching Award, 1999-2000. National Science Foundation Research Grant, September 2000-August 2001. MacArthur Foundation Fellow, 2001-2005. Econometric Society Fellow, December 2000. John Bates Clark Medal from American Economic Association, 2001. Keynote Address, Economic Science Association Meetings, Barcelona, June 2001. Marshall Lecture, European Economic Association Meetings, Lausanne, September 2001. Fellow American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2002
Professional Activities
Participant in MacArthur Research Cluster on Costs of Inequality, Fall 1994 to Summer 1999. Participant in MacArthur Research Cluster on Norms and Preferences, Summer 1998 to present. Co-Organizer, Russell Sage Foundation Summer Institute in Behavioral Economics, Berkeley, July 1996; Stanford, July 1998; Berkeley, July 2000; Berkeley, August 2002 (planned). Member, Russell Sage Foundation Behavioral Economics Roundtable, 1996 to present. Member, Program Committee, 8th World Congress of the Econometric Society. Associate Editor, Journal of Economic Perspectives, beginning Summer 2000--
Teaching
Intermediate Microeconomic Theory, undergraduates (Berkeley), Core Microeconomics, graduate students (Berkeley, MIT, LSE), Economic Theory Seminar (Berkeley), Advanced Microeconomic Theory, undergraduate (Berkeley). Game Theory, undergraduate (MIT), Graduate Courses and Informal Lecture Series in Psychology and Economics (MIT, Berkeley, Northwestern, LSE, Harvard), Advanced Game Theory, graduate students (Berkeley and MIT).
Departmental and University Service
Undergraduate Committee, Affirmative Action Officer, Department of Economics, Graduate Committee and Graduate Advising, Graduate Division Affirmative Action Advisory Committee.
[此贴子已经被作者于2004-6-6 9:15:23编辑过]