How do voters respond to information? Evidence from a randomized campaign C Kendall, T Nannicini, F Trebbi American Economic Review 105 (1), 322-53, 2015 | 307 | 2015 |
Incumbency advantages in the Canadian Parliament C Kendall, M Rekkas Canadian Journal of Economics/Revue canadienne d'économique 45 (4), 1560-1585, 2012 | 104 | 2012 |
Unbundling Polarization N Canen, C Kendall, F Trebbi | 70 | 2018 |
Political Parties as Drivers of US Polarization: 1927-2018 NJ Canen, C Kendall, F Trebbi National Bureau of Economic Research, 2021 | 48 | 2021 |
Causal Narratives CW Kendall, C Charles National Bureau of Economic Research, 2022 | 27* | 2022 |
The Time Cost of Information in Financial Markets C Kendall Journal of Economic Theory 176, 118-157, 2018 | 26 | 2018 |
On the Complexity of Forming Mental Models C Kendall, R Oprea | 21* | |
Are biased beliefs fit to survive? An experimental test of the market selection hypothesis C Kendall, R Oprea Journal of Economic Theory 176, 342-371, 2018 | 11 | 2018 |
The common good and voter polarization C Kendall, J Matsusaka Available at SSRN 3868589, 2021 | 10* | 2021 |
Market panics, frenzies, and informational efficiency: theory and experiment C Kendall mimeo, University of Southern California, 2017 | 10* | 2017 |
Future self-proof elicitation mechanisms C Kendall, A Chakraborty Available at SSRN 4032946, 2022 | 8 | 2022 |
Noisy Foresight A Chakraborty, CW Kendall National Bureau of Economic Research, 2022 | 6 | 2022 |
Herding and Contrarianism: A Matter of Preference? C Kendall https://www.sites.google.com/site/chadwkendall/home/files/kendall-ptherding …, 2017 | 5* | 2017 |