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Daniel Kahneman

  • Thursday, 9 May, 2024
    Simon Edelsten
    Five things to do if your investments aren’t working

    Think you may have bought a turkey?

  • Friday, 29 March, 2024
    Obituary
    Daniel Kahneman, Nobel Prize-winning psychologist, 1934-2024

    An accidental invader of economics, his insights changed the discipline forever

    Picture of Daniel Kahneman in glasses, coloured shirt and sweater standing on the balcony of a building at Princeton University
  • Wednesday, 27 March, 2024
    Nobel Prize-winning psychologist Daniel Kahneman dies, aged 90

    Renowned collaborative researcher debunked notion that people tend to make rational economic decisions

    Daniel Kahneman
  • Wednesday, 3 January, 2024
    ReviewTheatre
    This Much I Know, Hampstead Theatre, London — Stalin, psychology and white supremacists

    Jonathan Spector’s overburdened play draws on the ideas of Nobel Prize-winner Daniel Kahneman

    A woman sits in a chair with her hands folded in her lap; behind her is a large projected image of Stalin
  • Tuesday, 25 May, 2021
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    Noise — humbling lesson in inaccuracy by Kahneman, Sibony and Sunstein

    Random scatter in estimates and predictions is often far from benign and can be minimised if we acknowledge our failings

    Hundreds of megaphones deployed by American football supporters in Los Angeles
  • Friday, 7 May, 2021
    Lunch with the FT
    Daniel Kahneman: ‘Everything I’ve done has been collaborative’

    The Nobel-winning psychologist on behavioural economics, human error and why he doesn’t see himself as a guru

  • Friday, 13 April, 2018
    Undercover EconomistTim Harford
    Statisticians know we cannot rely on personal impressions alone

    There is a lot to be said for our own experience, but it has obvious limitations

    Tencent Holdings Ltd.'s new headquarters, center, stand under construction in Shenzhen, China, on Monday, Aug. 22, 2016. The new headquarters for Tencent is a $599 million project aimed at creating a campus-like atmosphere for the urban setting. Scheduled for completion next year, the Shenzhen skyscraper could become one of the largest labs for new internet services and connected devices. Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
  • Friday, 16 February, 2018
    Undercover EconomistTim Harford
    Oxfam, #MeToo and the psychology of outrage

    Our initial impressions are reinforced by others — and can be hijacked for political ends

    NEW YORK, NY - DECEMBER 09: People carry signs addressing the issue of sexual harassment at a #MeToo rally outside of Trump International Hotel on December 9, 2017 in New York City. (Photo by Stephanie Keith/Getty Images)
  • Friday, 9 February, 2018
    Undercover EconomistTim Harford
    A sloth’s guide to surviving a week of market volatility

    Investors should work to a long timescale rather than the frenetic fast-twitch world

  • Monday, 22 January, 2018
    FT AlphavilleMatthew C Klein
    Michele Wucker explains “Gray Rhinos”
  • Friday, 13 October, 2017
    Undercover EconomistTim Harford
    Richard Thaler: how to change minds and influence people

    The story of how a ‘lazy’ man won a Nobel Prize is as important as what he won it for

  • Monday, 14 August, 2017
    Janan Ganesh
    What the summer book choices of the elites reveal about politics

    Three titles dominate and, if you look closely enough, a single idea connects them

  • Friday, 21 April, 2017
    Undercover EconomistTim Harford
    Why prizewinning chiefs risk a swift fall from grace

    Statistical quirks mean outstanding performances tend to be shortlived

    Oscar Munoz, President and Chief Executive Officer of United Airlines, photographed at the May Fair Hotel, on 21 March 2017 in London, United Kingdom.
  • Wednesday, 8 March, 2017
    Fintech
    Technology outsmarts the human investor

    Automation eats into the financial profession by unbundling jobs

    web_Asset robots Ingram Pinn
  • Friday, 23 December, 2016
    ReviewLife & Arts
    The Undoing Project by Michael Lewis — smart thinkers

    How Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky laid the foundations of behavioural economics

  • Friday, 27 May, 2016
    Undercover EconomistTim Harford
    How the sense of an ending shapes memory

    ‘Composers, novelists and film directors try to end on a high. Restaurants keen to manipulate their online reviews have found a similar trick’

    Illustration by Harry Haysom of a girl recalling good memories
  • Monday, 23 February, 2015
    The Fit Executive
    Use a trick from behavioural economics to lose weight

    Financial incentives can push us to exercise, as Pact app shows

    Weight
  • Sunday, 9 November, 2014
    Fund management
    Deciding to fire the fund manager – a rough guide

    John Plender mulls the problem of ditching an adviser, as even the best managers make bad calls

    Pimco has seen large fund outlows in the past year
  • Friday, 24 October, 2014
    Undercover EconomistTim Harford
    Why are recessions so depressing?

    Happiness is around six times more sensitive to economic growth when that ‘growth’ is negative

  • Wednesday, 22 October, 2014
    Property sector
    GB cycling’s Shane Sutton hunts marginal gains in fund management

    Stockpickers are turning to cycling and behavioural economics

    Shane Sutton, Britain's head cycling coach, photographed outside the FT this afternoon.
  • Sunday, 29 June, 2014
    Fund management
    Prospecting for a theory on investor behaviour

    Fund analysis is rooted in backward-looking risk-adjusted return analysis, says Jonathan Davis

    MRI Brain Scan
  • Friday, 2 May, 2014
    Media
    The thinking person’s guide to life in an age of ‘Angry Birds’

    The horizon is brightened by the return of the Pelican imprint, writes Lorien Kite

  • Friday, 21 March, 2014
    Life & Arts
    Behavioural economics and public policy
    A roadside litter campaign in the Borough of Tonbridge and Malling, Kent.
  • Monday, 24 February, 2014
    Business education
    How the decision gurus choose

    Leaders in the field discuss how they make important choices in their own lives

    Business Life
  • Thursday, 14 November, 2013
    SoapboxBusiness education
    What is the role of scholarship in business schools?

    Many aspects of management practice are based on what was originally meaningless research

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