Education
Rustichini graduated in philosophy from University of Florence in 1977. He then received his master's degree in economics in 1980 fromCareer
Rustichini taught economics atResearch
Rustichini's work is focused in the areas of decision theory, game theory, general equilibrium theory, economic dynamics, neuroeconomics, experimental economics, behavioral economics, microeconomic theory, models of bounded rationality, and political economy.Neuroeconomics
Rustichini has conducted research in the area of neuroeconomics. He conducted a study to investigate the neural underpinnings of the effect of social comparison on risky choices. He measured brain activity of participants who conducted private and social decision making, through functional MRI. His study revealed that the influence of social comparison on the decision process was mediated by the interplay between reward and social reasoning networks. He also studied the merit principle and the causes of social reward differences encoded in human brain. He also investigated how individuals respond to the comparison between their outcome and the outcomes of others, and how this comparison is affected by the reason of the difference. In 2020, Rustichini conducted a study to investigate the contribution of cognitive and non-cognitive skills to intergenerational social mobility and found that genetic factors, along with the cognitive and non-cognitive skills influenced the re-ordering of social standing that takes place across generations.Intelligence and economic behavior
Rustichini has investigated the relationship between intelligence, and economic and strategic behavior, jointly with the examination of the genetic determinants of intelligence. In the analysis of strategic behavior, his research has established that the probability of cooperation in repeated non-zero-sum games increases with the average intelligence of the group. His works identifies the pathways of the effect in the reduction of errors in the implementation of strategies. According to his research, intelligence operates through the effectiveness of working memory; cooperation in turn is the outcome more of cognitive ability than social preferences. He has also shown that when groups of different intelligence meet cooperation increases in groups of lower intelligence.Decision theory
Rustichini conducted research on the integration of classical decision theory and personality theory and proposed steps towards a theory of economic decision. His study indicated that the integration of the two theories provided the conceptual structure for understanding the effects of personality traits on economics preferences, and the effects of cognitive and non-cognitive skills on economic behavior and success. He also studied the behavioral foundation of interdependent preferences and focused on establishing an axiomatic foundation that provided a link between observation of choices and a convenient functional representation. His study highlighted the Festinger's view and Veblen's view regarding the nature of interdependent preferences.Social justice and merit
Rustichini conducted several studies to investigate the effect of wealth level and the degree on inequality on growth and found a direct relation between the level of wealth and growth, given that the incentives to domestic accumulation are weakened by redistributive considerations. He also presented a field study which contradicted the hypothesis according to which, the occurrence of the behavior subject to the fine is reduced with an introduction of a penalty that leaves everything else unchanged. In the early 2000s, Rustichini authored a paper focusing on gender differences in high-ranking positions and presented experimental evidence to support that women may be less effective than men in competitive environments which accounted for the significant gender gap in performance.Awards and honors
*2004 - Fellowship, Econometric Society *2013 - Editor's Award for Experimental Economics, Economic Science Association *2015 - Fellowship, the Game Theory Society *2017 - Nominee for Maurice Allais Prize in Economic Science award, Maurice Allais FoundationBibliography
*Gneezy, U., & Rustichini, A. (2000). A fine is a price. The Journal of Legal Studies, 29(1), 1-17. *Gneezy, U., & Rustichini, A. (2000). Pay enough or don't pay at all. The Quarterly journal of economics, 115(3), 791–810. *Gneezy, U., Niederle, M., & Rustichini, A. (2003). Performance in competitive environments: Gender differences. The quarterly journal of economics, 118(3), 1049–1074. *Maccheroni, F., Marinacci, M., & Rustichini, A. (2006). Ambiguity aversion, robustness, and the variational representation of preferences. Econometrica, 74(6), 1447–1498. *Okbay, A., Beauchamp, J. P., Fontana, M. A., Lee, J. J., Pers, T. H., Rietveld, C. A., ... & Oskarsson, S. (2016). Genome-wide association study identifies 74 loci associated with educational attainment. Nature, 533(7604), 539–542.References
External links
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Rustichini, Aldo Living people American people of Italian descent American economists University of Minnesota faculty University of Florence alumni Alumni of the University of Manchester University of Minnesota alumni Fellows of the Econometric Society Year of birth missing (living people) Professors of Political Economy (Cambridge, 1863)