Citations of papers by Andreas Duus Pape. 1. "Evaluating Case-Based Decision Theory: Predicting Empirical Patterns of Human Classification Learning." (With Kenneth J Kurtz.) 1 citation. Cited in Han Bleichrodt, Martin Filko, Amit Kothiyal, & Peter P. Wakker, "Making Case-Based Decision Theory Directly Observable" a working paper. http://people.few.eur.nl/bleichrodt/CBDT_20Jul2013.pdf Two things to note about this citation: 1) The citation is about the contribution of my paper in general, but also specifically cites an empirical fact that we establish in guiding their experimental design: in particular, they assume the accumulative, not average, form of similarity in case-based decision theory because we show that accumulative appears to be a better fit to human data. (See page 33 of the .pdf) 2) These are big names in decision theory, particularly the last, Peter Wakker. http://people.few.eur.nl/wakker/cv.htm For example: In board of journals: Decision Analysis, Journal of Mathematical Psychology, Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, Theory and Decision. And see his publication list here: http://people.few.eur.nl/wakker/oldps.htm The fact that a name like Wakker finds the research useful is a very important indicator. 2. "Groundwater Management: The Effect of Water Flows on Welfare Gains." (With Todd Guilfoos, Neha Khanna, and Karen Savage.) Cited by: Li, J., Michael, H. A., Duke, J. M., Messer, K. D., & Suter, J. F. (2014). Behavioral response to contamination risk information in a spatially explicit groundwater environment: experimental evidence. Water Resources Research. This is an experiment in groundwater management (a stylized game that represents groundwater management) that describes the physical properties of the aquifer in the way that we do in our paper. Quote: ``However, recent studies that better capture spatially heterogeneous pumping externalities by using spatially explicit models that incorporate the physics of groundwater flow* suggest that a bathtub model with homogeneous users could substantially underestimate welfare gains from optimal control.'' *= citations including us. 3. "Optimal Auctions with Ambiguity." (With Subir Bose and Emre Ozdenoren.) Cited by 62 according to Google Scholar, including the following non-self citations in top journals: Che, Yeon-Koo, and Jinwoo Kim. "Robustly Collusion-Proof Implementation." Econometrica 74.4 (2006): 1063-1107. Siniscalchi, Marciano. "Vector expected utility and attitudes toward variation." Econometrica 77.3 (2009): 801-855. Bergemann, Dirk, and Karl Schlag. "Robust monopoly pricing." Journal of Economic Theory 146.6 (2011): 2527-2543. Bergemann, Dirk, and Karl H. Schlag. "Pricing without priors." Journal of the European Economic Association 6.2-3 (2008): 560-569. Azrieli, Yaron, and Roee Teper. "Uncertainty aversion and equilibrium existence in games with incomplete information." Games and Economic Behavior 73.2 (2011): 310-317. Bodoh-Creed, Aaron L. "Ambiguous beliefs and mechanism design." Games and Economic Behavior 75.2 (2012): 518-537. Garrett, Daniel F. "Robustness of simple menus of contracts in cost-based procurement." Games and Economic Behavior (2013). Azrieli, Yaron, and Roee Teper. "Uncertainty aversion and equilibrium existence in games with incomplete information." Games and Economic Behavior 73.2 (2011): 310-317. 4. "Minimum Wages and School Enrollment of Teenagers: A Look at the 1990's." (With Duncan Chaplin and Mark Turner.) Cited by 42 according to google scholar, including the following non-self citations in journals: Neumark, David, and Olena Nizalova. "Minimum wage effects in the longer run." Journal of Human resources 42.2 (2007): 435-452. Campolieti, Michele, Tony Fang, and Morley Gunderson. "How minimum wages affect schooling-employment outcomes in Canada, 1993–1999." Journal of Labor Research 26.3 (2005): 533-545. McMullen, Steven. "How do Students Respond to Labor Market and Education Incentives? An Analysis of Homework Time." Journal of Labor Research 32.3 (2011): 199-209. Cited 10 times according to Web of Science. 5. "Self-Imposed Constraints on Collective Action Under Uncertainty." (With Nathan Anderson.) (Under various titles). 7 citations via Google Scholar. Citations include: Cheung, Ron, and Chris Cunningham. "Who supports portable assessment caps: The role of lock-in, mobility and tax share." Regional Science and Urban Economics 41.3 (2011): 173-186. Brooks, Leah, Yosh Halberstam, and Justin Phillips. Spending within limits: Evidence from municipal fiscal restraints. No. 2012-52. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (US), 2012.