
what we do
Drawing from behavioural science research, we generate insights about people’s behaviour & actions across different markets and sectors
how we do
Using behavioural economics and psychology, we design digital interventions that moderate and guide behaviour of individuals & organizations
We conduct online & laboratory field research to uncover concrete facts and causal relationship that are key for the development of effective practical solutions
We found Expilab very helpful and approachable. They helped us design complex online experiments and continued to be supportive throughout the project. We would happily use them again!
There is no need to compromise on research designs to be tested in your digital experiments. We can do more than any existing tools similar to Qualtrics, z-Tree or others.
Our digital platform allows creation or replication of any online websites or environments fully adapted for your research needs
decision process-tracing & heatmaps
interactive & custom-made graphics
complex logic & non-linear experiments
seamless integration into existing studies
high realism of stimuli
“Game of Life”, an online interactive economic game played by the visitors of Science Museum in London, aims to understand how and why we spend money. Designed by Dr. Heather Kappes (LSE) and developed by Expilab, the game extends functionality of spending games typically played in laboratory settings, uses engaging visual design while maintaining tight control over experimental conditions and data collected.
Andrew Ivchenko
Generosity in a small neighborhoods generates virtuous cycles that promote mutation of egoistic behaviors into reciprocity
Daniel Guerrero
New collection of funds, grants and financial resources available to academic scholars interested in conducting behavioural & economic experiments is made available thanks to Daniel Guerrero, associate researcher @Expilab.
admin
Our cognitive resources are scarce, i.e. we have a limited “mental bandwidth” available to us. We have conducted an online experiment with nearly 1000 people and found that online information disclosure behaviour (e.g. how much we share) is affected by different forms of cognitive scarcity
Andrew Ivchenko
PDF slides from LSE’s brown-bag seminar on how-to boost behavioural research using Expilab’s digital experimental platform are available for download
Andrew Ivchenko