Marciano, Deborah – CV – April 2021

Déborah Marciano Born: May 1985, Paris Citizenship: Israeli and French Phone: (510) 5705634 Email: [email protected]

Education 2019- University of California, Berkeley, Postdoctoral fellow in the Psychology Department and the Haas Business School. Advisors: Prof. Robert Knight and Prof. Ming Hsu 2010-2018 Hebrew University of , Ph.D. in and Specialization Program in the Study of Rationality (Federmann Center for the Study of Rationality). Advisors: Prof. Shlomo Bentin, Prof. Leon Deouell, Prof. Sacha Bourgeois-Gironde Fall 2010 National University of Singapore, Visiting PhD student. Advisor: Prof. Richard Ebstein 2008-2010 Hebrew University of Jerusalem, MA in Cognitive Neuroscience (Summa cum Laude) 2005-2008 Hebrew University of Jerusalem, B.Sc. in Psychobiology and Amirim Ruach (outstanding students program in Humanities) 2002-2005 Paris I, Sorbonne, BA in Law (Magna cum laude) 2002-2004 Paris I, Sorbonne, DEUG degree in Economics (Magna cum laude) Research Interests Affective Neuroscience, Neuroeconomics, Decision Making, Behavioral Economics Teaching Experience 2009, 2011, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, TA in Statistics. Listed among top teachers of the 2012, 2014 Faculty of Social Sciences in 2009 and 2011 2008-2011 Icon Psychometric Training Center, teacher for the psychometric exam Professional Experience 2018- 2020 Behavioral Economics Consultant for the Israeli arm of the Global Joint Distribution Committee 2017-2019 Co-organizer of the Behavioral and Experimental Economics Behavior (BEE) seminar, HUJI 2016- 2017 Behavioral Economics Consultant for the Israeli Water Authority 2010-2019 Ratiolab Interactive Decision-Making Laboratories, HUJI, Research manager 2013 CNRS, Doctoral fellow Scholarships and fellowships 2021-2023 Science Foundation (ISF) postdoctoral fellowship 2021 WISTfund Grant 2019-2021 Yad Hanadiv (Rothschild) postdoctoral fellowship 2019-2020 Hebrew University’s postdoctoral scholarship for outstanding women doctorate students 2019-2020 Fulbright postdoctoral fellowship 2015-2018 Azrieli Graduate Studies Fellowship for outstanding students 2013 Bettencourt Schueller Foundation Grant 2012-2015 Bard Foundation Grant 2012 Joseph Trink fellowship 2009-2014 Federmann Center for the Study of Rationality fellowship 2005-2008 Amirim Scholarship for excellent undergraduate students in humanities Honors and awards 2014 Best Poster Award, Israel Society for Neuroscience 23rd Annual Meeting 2014 Marciano, Deborah – CV – April 2021 2014 Best Poster Award, APA Division 3 Award - Psychonomic Society Poster Competition 2014 (11 finalists chosen among 1,300 posters) 2007-2008 Member of the Faculty of Science Dean's list Travel grants 2016 National Institute for Psychobiology in Israel Travel Scholarship 2016 Jerusalem Brain Community Travel Scholarship 2014 Hebrew University Research Students Authority Travel Grant 2014 Federmann Center for the Study of Rationality Travel Grant 2010 National University of Singapore - Summer Institute in Behavioral Economics, Student Grant Research Grants 2019-2020 Mifal HaPais, Israel National Lottery, Is good luck perceived as a limited resource? Exploring the relationship between luck-related beliefs and pathological gambling (with Prof. Leon Deouell, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem), 125,000 NIS ($36,000) Publications and invited revisions Llorens, A., Tzovara, A., …, Marciano, D., …., Dronkers N.F. (Conditionally accepted at Neuron). Gender bias in academia: a lifetime problem that needs solutions.

Bigman, Y., Yam, K.C., Marciano, D., Reynolds, S.J., & Gray, K. (Revise and Resubmit). Threat of inequality in COVID-19 treatment increases reference for algorithm medical decision-making.

Marciano, D., Krispin, E., Bourgeois-Gironde, S., & Deouell, L.Y. (2019) Limited resources or limited luck? Why people perceive an illusory negative correlation between the outcomes of choice options despite unequivocal evidence for independence. Judgment and Decision Making, 14 (5), 573-590.

Marciano, D., Bentin, S., & Deouell, L.Y. (2018). Alternative outcomes create biased expectations regarding the received outcome: evidence from event-related potentials. Neuropsychologia, 113, 126-139.

Hassidim, A., Marciano D., Romm, A., & Shorrer, R. I. (2017) The mechanism is truthful, why aren't you?, American Economic Review, 107(5):220-24.

Marciano-Romm, D., Romm, A., Bourgeois-Gironde, S., & Deouell, L. Y. (2016). The Alternative Omen Effect: Illusory negative correlation between the outcomes of choice options. Cognition, 146, 324-338.

Presentation and Posters Is it Regret I See in Your Brain? Poster and flash presentation: International Conference on Neuroscientific Views on Affect and its Regulation in Humans, , Israel, 2013. Seminar presentation: Behavioral Economics Workshop, HUJI, Israel, 2013. Invited talk: Centre de Recherche Français à Jérusalem (CNRS), Israel, 2013.

Looks Like a Bad Sign: Illusory Negative Correlation Between the Outcomes of Choice Options. Poster: 1st Conference on Cognitive Research of the Israeli Society for Cognitive Psychology, Acre, Israel, 2014. 25th Jerusalem School in Economic Theory, Jerusalem, Israel, 2014. HUJI Psychology Department PhD seminar, Jerusalem, Israel. 2014. Psychonomic Society 2014 Annual Meeting, Long Beach, California, 2014 – Best Poster Award Invited talk: 23th annual Rationality Retreat of the Center for the Study of Rationality, Eilat, Israel, 2014. Presentation: 13th Tiber Symposium on Psychology and Economics, Tilburg, Holland, 2014. SJDM 2014 Annual Meeting, Long Beach, California, 2014.

Looks Like a Bad Sign: EEG and Behavioral Data Reveal a Biased Perception of Correlation Between the Outcomes of Choice Options Poster and flash presentation: Israel Society for Neuroscience 23rd Annual Meeting 2014, Eilat, Israel. Presentation: 2nd Conference on Cognitive Research of the Israeli Society for Cognitive Psychology, Acre, Marciano, Deborah – CV – April 2021 Israel, 2015.

Could Have Been Better, Could Have Been Worse: Electrophysiological manifestations of the comparison between received and alternative outcomes. Poster: 3d Conference on Cognitive Research of the Israeli Society for Cognitive Psychology, Acre, Israel, 2016. Poster: 6th International Symposium on Biology of Decision Making (SBDM), Paris, France, 2016. Poster: 14th Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroeconomics, Berlin, Germany, 2016. Poster: Annual meeting of the National Institute for Psychobiology in Israel, Jerusalem, Israel, 2017. Poster: Annual meeting of the Cognitive Neuroscience Society, San Francisco, California, 2019.

Why Do People Perceive an Illusory Negative Correlation Between the Outcomes of Choice Options? Exploring The Mechanism of the Alternative Omen Effect. Presentation: 4th Conference on Cognitive Research of the Israeli Society for Cognitive Psychology, Acre, Israel, 2017. Presentation: 26th SPUDM (Subjective Probability, Utility, and Decision Making) Conference, , Israel, 2017.

You left no good luck here for me: good luck is perceived as a limited resource in space Poster: 8th Conference on Cognitive Research of the Israeli Society for Cognitive Psychology, Israel, 2021 (virtual). Refereeing Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, European Journal of Neuroscience, Society for Judgment and Decision Making Society memberships Society for Judgment and Decision Making; Cognitive Neuroscience Society Extra-curricular activities 2019- Science Mentor for the journal Frontiers for Young Minds 2015-2017 Designing and running an after-school enrichment program in science for middle-school girls from low-income families. Sponsored by the Azrieli Institute for Educational Empowerment 2010 Volunteer teacher at the Hebrew Sunday School of Singapore, Singapore 2005-2006 Volunteer at the Learning Center for the Blind – Hebrew University of Jerusalem