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Marshall Faculty Publications, Awards, and Honors: June/July 2025

Marshall Faculty Publications, Awards, and Honors: June/July 2025

We are proud to highlight the many accomplishments of Marshall’s exceptional faculty recognized for recently accepted and published research and achievements in their field.

07.22.25

Business Communication

Pete Cardon had a paper published in the International Journal of Business Communication titled, “Professionalism and Trustworthiness in AI-Assisted Workplace Writing: The Benefits and Drawbacks of Writing with AI.”

Data Sciences and Operations

Jacob Bien had a paper accepted by Biometrika titled, “Decomposing Gaussians with Unknown Covariance.”

Chamsi Hssaine had a paper accepted by the 26th ACM Conference on Economics and Computation titled, “Learning Fair and Effective Points-Based Rewards Programs.”

Georgios Petropoulos had a paper accepted by Management and Business Review titled, “Six Strategic Decisions Every B2B Marketplace Needs to Make. Management and Business Review.”

Matteo Sesia has been selected to receive the Google Research Scholar Award for his research proposal titled, “Conformal Inference for Uncertainty Estimation in Real-World Machine Learning: Adaptivity and Robustness Under Data Imperfections.”

Peng Shi received the “Exemplary Applied Modeling Track Paper” award at EC 2025 (ACM Conference on Economics and Computation) for his paper titled, “Welfare-Optimal Policies for Sponsored Advertising in a Two-Sided Marketplace.”

Finance and Business Economics

Richard Green had a new paper published in the Journal of Economic Geography titled, “Do housing regulations affect rural-urban migration? Evidence from rent control in India.”

David Hirshleifer and Yaron Levi received the Conference Award for best empirical paper at the 18th International Behavioural Finance Conference in London. Their paper is titled, “Social Interaction Intensity and Investor Behavior.”

Christopher Jones had a paper published in the Review of Financial Studies titled, “Too Good to Be True: Look-ahead Bias in Empirical Options Research.”

Wenhao Li had a paper published in the Journal of Financial Economics titled, “The Passthrough of Treasury Supply to Bank Deposit Funding.”

John Matsusaka had a paper published in the Journal of Politics titled, “When Do Legislators Represent Their Constituents? Evidence from Roll-Call and Referendum Votes.”

John Matsusaka had a paper published in the Journal of the European Economic Association titled, “The Common Good and Voter Polarization.”

John Matsusaka had a paper published in Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy titled, “Direct Democracy Backsliding: 1955-2024.”

Management and Organization

Eric Anicich had a paper published in Personnel Psychology titled, “Riding the Waves of Power: Power Fluctuation, Cognitive Energy and Goal Pursuit.”

Marketing

Yunhao Huang had a paper published in Management Science, titled “A Theory of the Effects of Privacy.”

Daniel Sokol had a paper published in Harvard Business School: Technology & Operations Management Unit Working Paper Series titled “Antitrust Platform Regulation and Entrepreneurship: Evidence From China.”

Gerard Tellis, Hyo Kang, Milan Miric, and Bowen Lou chaired the 2025 AIM (AI in Management) Conference. The conference highlighted over 130 papers, welcomed over 200 attendees, and raised $20,000 for four named awards, which were given out to eight winners.