AEA RCT Registry currently lists 11821 studies with locations in 170 countries.

Most Recently Registered Trials

  • Household Communication and Health Investments for Elderly Women in Tamil Nadu
    Last registered on March 28, 2026

    This study investigates household dynamics in communication and take-up for health check-ups for elderly women in Tamil Nadu. We conduct our study in two parts. In part 1, we survey elders and their caretakers to measure demand for check-ups for elders using incentivized choices over health check-ups, varying the degree of caretaker involvement required across check-up variants. In part 2, for households where we are able to reach both the elder and their caretaker, we will conduct a randomized evaluation of interventions to improve take-up of free health check-ups at a nearby private hospital. We will cross-randomize two interventions. First, we will randomize who is informed about the check-up: either only the elder is informed or both the elder and the caretaker are informed about th...

  • Going All In: Simultaneously Breaking Down Barriers for Women in the STEM Workforce
    Last registered on March 27, 2026

    This RCT aims to measure the impact of a 24-month STEM training initiative designed for first-generation women engineering students in India. Deployed nationwide by an Indian education start-up, the program employs a holistic strategy to overcome multifaceted barriers faced by women in STEM fields. By fostering a women-only environment, providing online accessibility, and emphasizing self-directed learning, the initiative seeks to address institutional, and psychological challenges hindering women's success in STEM. This study will evaluate two cohorts of the program: 2024-2026 and 2025-2027. The study, spanning 2023-2028, aims to evaluate the WE program's efficacy in enhancing participants' technical and higher-order skills, ultimately influencing their labor market outcomes once these...

  • Call Me When You Get Home”: New Technologies, and Safety in Public Spaces
    Last registered on March 27, 2026

    We conduct a multi-stage randomized experiment among university students in the UK that combines (i) randomized information about harassment prevalence drawn from prior survey evidence, (ii) randomized monetary incentives for adopting a mobile safety app, and (iii) randomized access to a real-time video-call protection feature among adopters. We study effects on crime experiences, perceived safety, beliefs about crime risk, anxiety, and mobility. We characterize selection into adoption, and study how effects vary across individuals. We additionally estimate willingness to pay for safety and develop a structural model of nighttime travel choices. The update reflects: (i) design changes in Round 2 (expanded sample, 13 universities) and (ii) an updated supplementary Prolific study with WTP...

  • AI-Assisted Writing for Teaching Reading and English as a Second Language (ESL)
    Last registered on March 27, 2026

    Teaching children reading and English as a second language (ESL) skills---skills that provide lifelong returns---requires access to engaging, contextually relevant materials. For children outside of Western contexts, English-language story options often lack familiar settings, norms, problems, and characters. We aim to learn whether stories written with generative AI assistance can fill that gap by creating context-relevant stories that better engage children in India.

  • Justifying Privacy Intrusions through AI Policy Trade-offs: Evidence from a Conjoint Experiment
    Last registered on March 26, 2026

    This study examines how exposure to policy trade-offs affects individuals’ value priorities regarding artificial intelligence (AI) governance. Many public policies involving AI require balancing multiple normative objectives, such as efficiency, safety, and privacy protection. While prior studies often measure stated preferences over these values, less is known about whether exposure to explicit policy trade-offs can change individuals’ value prioritization. We conduct a survey experiment focusing on AI-assisted traffic management systems. Respondents first report the importance they attach to three policy objectives: traffic efficiency, traffic safety, and personal data privacy. Participants are then randomly assigned to either a control group or a treatment group. The treatment group...

  • The Impact of Personalized Risk Feedback and Information Utility on Health Self-Assessment and Preventive Behavior for Chronic Kidney Disease
    Last registered on March 26, 2026

    This study aims to investigate the impact of personalized risk feedback and information utility framing on individuals' health self-assessments, emotional responses, and willingness to engage in preventive behaviors related to Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD), and how to alleviate information avoidance in health. We will recruit participants through an online platform and present them with a CKD prevention campaign. In the first stage, we will collect baseline data on subjective health predictions, and emotional state. Participants will also provide basic health information to generate a personalized CKD risk assessment. In the second stage, participants will be randomly assigned to one of three groups: a control group that does not receive their risk assessment, a feedback group that recei...

  • Information sharing, insurance decisions and conflict in the household
    Last registered on March 26, 2026

    This research project aims to understand to what extent information about a financial product, when provided either to men or women, affects spouses’ beliefs and attitudes towards the financial product, product purchase decisions, and intra-household information sharing, cooperation and conflict outcomes. We conduct a randomized controlled trial among 3100 pastoral households in Kenya and Ethiopia. We randomize, at the household-level, the gender of the spouse that receives information about an index insurance and savings financial product through video interventions. Additionally, we cross-randomize whether or not the household member that is targeted with information can directly share the information with their spouse, by requesting the intervention team to also show the video to the...

  • Are Voters Updating when Audit Reports are Informative?
    Last registered on March 26, 2026

    This experimental design is implemented in collaboration with the NGO Chile Transparencia. Beginning in February 2020 the Chilean Comptroller General Office rolled out 167 audits in municipalities throughout the country. The treatment consists of the audit report for each municipality in addition to a short information video that highlights the extent to which the municipality has high or low malfeasance counts. We have recruited approximately 49,000 online subjects from these municipalities (plus a control group of 177 non-audited municipalities). All 10,000 subjects will receive a pre-treatment survey measuring their pre-treatment beliefs regarding corruption in their municipality. Within each audited municipality subjects randomly assigned to the treatment will receive a v...

  • Altruism in Networks: A Field Experiment on Social Closeness, Preferences and Transfers
    Last registered on March 26, 2026

    Understanding the mechanisms that explain altruistic actions has been subject to research for decades. To extend our knowledge of altruism in more complex situations, we investigate the role of social cohesion on altruistic transfers in network settings. To this end, we elicit a social network of friends and subsequently measure the relationship levels between them. Then, conditional on the elicited social network and relationships, we measure a series of mechanisms as potential mediational factors between social cohesion and transfer decisions with more than two players involved. Our set-up allows us to identify the degree to which individuals embedded in social networks take into account subsequent transfers between other parties, network information and individual identity.

  • Strategic Ignorance in the Presence of Bystanders
    Last registered on March 26, 2026

    A growing body of research, pioneered by Dana et al. (2007), has confirmed the prevalence of strategic ignorance: if acting in one’s own interest might harm the interest of someone else, many individuals prefer not to know whether interests conflict or align; moreover, if given the option to stay ignorant, subjects tend to behave more selfishly. In particular, Dana et al. (2007) found that in a binary version of the dictator game, only 26% of subjects chose the selfish alternative when payoffs were known. However, when dictators had to click a button to reveal whether there was a conflict of interest between themselves and the recipient, many abstained from revealing this information, and as much as 63% of those who actually faced conflicting interest now chose the selfish option. Alt...