Kate Barasz
professor
Managerial Decision Sciences
IESE Business School Universidad de Navarra
Spain
Biography
Kate Barasz is an Assistant Professor in the Marketing Department at IESE Business School. She teaches Marketing Management in the MBA Program. Broadly, Kate's research examines the unseen and unanticipated causes and consequences of choice. One stream of research examines choice from the decision-maker's perspective; for instance, how and why does uncertainty cause people to hope for objectively worse outcomes? Another stream of research investigates choice from the observer?s perspective: what do we infer about other people?their preferences, motives, and personality-based on the choices we see them make? She is particularly interested in the applied domains of medical decision making and charitable giving. Her work has been published in academic journals including Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Journal of Marketing Research, and Journal of Experimental Psychology: General. Kate holds a B.A. in Economics and Public Policy from Duke University and a Doctorate in Business Administration from Harvard Business School. In addition to her academic experience, she also worked as a consultant in Bain & Company's Boston and Atlanta offices.
Research Interest
Marketing
Publications
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Barasz, Kate; Kim, Tami; John, Leslie K., "The Role of (Dis)similarity in (Mis)predicting Others' Preferences", Journal of Marketing Research, Vol. 53, No. 4, 2016, pp 597 - 607
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Barasz, Kate; Ubel, Peter A., "Unhealthy Consumerism: The Challenge of Trading off Price and Quality in Healthcare", Behavioural Public Policy, (Forthcoming)
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Barasz, Kate; John, Leslie K.; Keenan, Elizabeth A.; Norton, Michael I., "Pseudo-Set Framing", Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, (Forthcoming)