Stephanie Tully (@stephmtully) 's Twitter Profile
Stephanie Tully

@stephmtully

Marketing professor @USCMarshall, and visiting scholar @FederalReserve. Researching consumer finances and experiences.

ID: 2381379367

linkhttps://www.marshall.usc.edu/personnel/stephanie-tully calendar_today10-03-2014 02:21:03

292 Tweet

1,1K Followers

487 Following

Stephanie Tully (@stephmtully) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Great talking with the WSJ about some of the factors explaining why consumers are still mad about prices, despite several signs of a strong economy wsj.com/economy/consum… via The Wall Street Journal

Stephanie Tully (@stephmtully) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Really interesting work! I like (and buy) the friction story, but it also makes me wonder whether changing the defaults may have also changed preferences to some extent.

Stephanie Tully (@stephmtully) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Agreed! Moreover, it's not just that new settings may show different results, but different executions aimed at addressing these behavioral science principles within the same setting can show different results.

Stephanie Tully (@stephmtully) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Job market candidates - reframe the purpose of your job talk accordingly! I used to view my talks as people evaluating me and my competency. Once I reframed them as an opportunity to tell people what I've learned through research, my talks improved so much.

Stephanie Tully (@stephmtully) 's Twitter Profile Photo

How do AI disclosures on social media affect our engagement with content? Check out this thread to learn about our new research. Led by two great USC PhD students - Steve Carney & @ignacioriverosg

Stephanie Tully (@stephmtully) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Definitely concerning. The silver lining is that this may make researchers think harder. It puts more emphasis on the need for stronger theory (given less data availability). Tenure committees will need to consider productivity expectations as a result of this though.