Birth Date: | 22 November 1970 |
Birth Place: | Moncofa, Spain |
Carlos Alós-Ferrer | |
Nationality: | Spanish |
Institution: | Lancaster University |
Field: | Neuroeconomics, decision theory, game theory |
Carlos Alós-Ferrer (born November 22, 1970, in Moncofa, Spain) is a neuroeconomist, decision theorist, and game theorist, a full professor of economics at Lancaster University (U.K.), and the current editor in chief of the Journal of Economic Psychology. He is also a regular contributor to Psychology Today, where he writes about Decisions and the Brain.
He holds a M.Sc. in mathematics from the University of Valencia (Spain, 1992) and a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Alicante (Spain, 1998).[1] He has been assistant professor at the University of Vienna (Austria, 1997–2002), associate professor at the University of Salamanca (Spain, 2002–2004), and associate professor at the University of Vienna (2004–2005). He became a full professor of microeconomics at the University of Konstanz (Germany, 2005) and later moved to the University of Cologne (Germany, 2012).[2] From 2018 to 2024, he was professor of decision and neuroeconomic theory at the University of Zurich (endowed by the NOMIS foundation).[3] [4] In 2024, he moved to Lancaster University Management School as Chair in Economics.
Alós-Ferrer has worked extensively in game theory, bounded rationality, social choice, and behavioral economics. From 2012 to 2018, he was speaker of the interdisciplinary research unit "Psychoeconomics," which used methods from psychology, economics, and neuroscience to study human decision making, and was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG).[5] Since January 2019, he is the editor in chief of the Journal of Economic Psychology.[6] [7] His research interests are neuroeconomics, decision theory, game theory, and evolution and learning in games and markets.