Peter McGee Data-verified
Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.
Associate Professor
faculty
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Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Peter McGee, an Associate Professor at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, investigates human decision-making and behavioral economics through experimental methods. His recent publications explore gender differences in reservation wages within search experiments, the impact of incentives on personality expression, and how individuals perceive warning signal quality. McGee's work also touches on financial markets, examining asymmetric information, liquidity needs, and migration to Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) through experimental studies. He has co-authored publications with Arya Gaduh from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville. McGee's research contributes to understanding factors influencing economic choices and behaviors.
Metrics
- h-index: 8
- Publications: 29
- Citations: 270
Selected Publications
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Gender and race differences on incentivized personality measures (2025)
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Preferences for Warning Signal Quality: Experimental Evidence (2025)
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Preferences for Warning Signal Quality: Experimental Evidence (2025)
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Asymmetric information, liquidity needs, and migration to ETFs: An experimental investigation (2024)
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Gender Differences in Reservation Wages in Search Experiments (2024)
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Whoever you want me to be: Personality and incentives (2024)
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Gender Differences in Reservation Wages in Search Experiments (2023)
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Gender Differences in Reservation Wages in Search Experiments (2023)
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Whoever You Want Me to Be: Personality and Incentives (2022)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- Gender Differences in Reservation Wages in Search Experiments
- Whoever you want me to be: Personality and incentives
- Whoever You Want Me to Be: Personality and Incentives
- Gender Differences in Reservation Wages in Search Experiments
- Gender Differences in Reservation Wages in Search Experiments
Showing 5 of 7 shared publications
- Preferences for Warning Signal Quality: Experimental Evidence
- Preferences for Warning Signal Quality: Experimental Evidence
- Preferences for Warning Signal Quality: Experimental Evidence
- Preferences for Warning Signal Quality: Experimental Evidence
- Asymmetric information, liquidity needs, and migration to ETFs: An experimental investigation
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