I hold two PhDs: one in Energy Economics, and one in Behavioural and Experimental Economics from the University of East Anglia (UEA). My research uses experimental methods, guided by game-theoretic models, to study cooperation, inequality, and fairness in economic decision-making. I am developing projects on decision-making under uncertainty and human–AI interaction, with a focus on policy implications, including ongoing work on the Horizon Europe–funded AI4POL project at the Centre for Competition Policy (CCP).
Research interests:
Experimental Economics, Behavioural Economics, Applied Microeconomics.