Khayouti, S., Kiss, H. J. & Horn, D. (2023). Does Trust Associate with Political Regime? Periodica Polytechnica Social and Management Sciences, 31(1), 74–79. https://pp.bme.hu/so/article/view/17839
Berlinger, E., Kiss, H. J., & Khayouti, S. (2022). Loan forbearance takeup in the Covid-era – The role of time preferences and locus of control. Finance Research Letters, 50, 103250. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1544612322004470
Holb, É., Khayouti, S., Kisfalusi, D., Messing, V., Varga, K., & Varga, J. (2022). The duration of remote learning, schools', teachers' and students' preparedness, and learning gaps based on teacher reports. In Horn, D. & Bartal, A.M (Eds.) White book about the socioeconomic effects of the Covid-19 pandemic. Közgazdaság-és Regionális Tudományi Kutatóközpont, 108-129. https://kti.krtk.hu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/teljes-kotet.pdf
Horn, D., Khayouti, S., & Kiss, H. J. (2021). Risk preferences and the COVID-19 pandemic. In Fazekas K., Kónya I., & Krekó J. (Eds.), The Hungarian Labor Market 2020 (pp. 243-250). Közgazdaság- és Regionális Tudományi Kutatóközpont, ELKH. https://real.mtak.hu/136479/1/mt_2020_hun_243-250.pdfKhayouti, S., Kiss, H. J., & Horn, D. (2021). Competition and/or cooperation? Lessons from representative surveys. Economic Review-monthly of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 68(9), 966-986. http://www.kszemle.hu/tartalom/cikk.php?id=1991
Khayouti, S. (2019) The effect of religious moral reminders on cheating behavior. In Sík, D. (Ed.) (2019), Choices and predetermined trajectories (pp. 36-50). ELTE Eötvös Kiadó. https://www.eltereader.hu/kiadvanyok/sik-domonkos-szerk-valasztasok-es-kenyszerpalyak/
Eyibak, Z. & Khayouti, S. (2025). The effect of reflection on borrowing and business decisions. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1S7NNtNA-flStxD5WU4QWGLpna-OG2LmY/view?usp=sharing
Khayouti, S. (2025). A model of altruism-based reciprocal behavior. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ismcxWWV7pvzppus484xHR__EcT7QTKk/view?usp=sharing
Drucker, L. F., Horn, D., Khayouti, S. & Kiss, H. J. (2025). How to identify trust and reciprocity: A replication. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1aWTVCHy5mWnX2nTAak9xUY0HbHixiqYm/view?usp=sharing
Khayouti, S., Kiss, H. J. & Horn, D. (2020). Patient democracies? (CERS-IE Working Papers No. 2020/12). Centre for Economic and Regional Studies, Institute of Economics. https://kti.krtk.hu/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/CERSIEWP202012.pdf
Khayouti, S., Kiss, H. J., & Horn, D. (2021, September). Tényleg versenyeznek egymással a magyarok, vagy képesek vagyunk együttműködni? Itt a válasz. [Do Hungarians compete or cooperate with each other?] Portfolio. https://www.portfolio.hu/krtk/20210926/tenyleg-versenyeznek-egymassal-a-magyarok-vagy-kepesek-vagyunk-egyuttmukodni-itt-a-valasz-501970
ESA North American Meeting, Tucson, USA (upcoming),
presentation: How to identify trust and reciprocity: A replication
17th Nordic Conference in Behavioral and Experimental Economics, Stavanger,
presentation: A model of altruism-based reciprocal behavior
2nd Matterhorn Symposium on Behavior, Institutions, and Cooperation, Brig, Switzerland,
presentation: The effect of reflection on borrowing and business decisions
Swiss Society of Economics and Statistics, Zurich,
presentation: A model of altruism-based reciprocal behavior
CEU Student Conference in Economics: Jump-Starting Your Research Career, Vienna,
presentation: A cognitively inspired model of upstream reciprocity
Summer Workshop in Economics at the Centre for Economic and Regional Studies, Institute of Economics, Budapest,
presentation: A cognitively inspired model of upstream reciprocity
15th Annual Conference of the Hungarian Society of Economics, Budapest,
presentation: A cognitively inspired model of upstream reciprocity
Annual Financial Market Liquidity Conference, Budapest, (with Edina Berlinger and Hubert János Kiss),
presentation: Time discounting predicts credit loan forbearance take-up
National Scientific Students’ Associations Conference [“OTDK”][1], Pécs,
paper: What influences our cheating behaviour?
Scientific Students’ Associations Conference [“TDK”] at the Faculty of Social Sciences, Budapest,
paper: What influences our cheating behaviour?
MSc thesis: A cognitively inspired model of upstream reciprocity. Available upon request (via email).
BSc thesis: What influences our cheating behavior? Available upon request (via email).