Craig Fox, PhD is Harold Williams Professor of Management, and also Professor of Psychology and Medicine at UCLA. He is chair and co-founder of the Behavioral Decision Making Area at the UCLA Anderson School of Management. Dr. Fox’s award-winning research investigates behavior under risk, uncertainty, and ambiguity, using a combination of methods that include surveys, laboratory and field experiments, analysis of archival data, and brain imaging. He also applies insights from behavioral economics and social psychology to improve health and financial decisions. This work has been funded by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, and the Templeton Foundation, among others. His scientific manuscripts have been published in leading journals of psychology, economics, management, neuroscience, medicine, law, and general science. He has also contributed popular treatments of his work to such outlets as the New York Times and Harvard Business Review.

Professor Fox has taught courses at the MBA, Executive, and Ph.D. levels on decision making, strategy, negotiation, leadership, and dynamic management. He has been at UCLA since 2003, following six years at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business where he was named the 2001 “Outstanding Faculty Member”. Fox has also taught courses at Stanford, Northwestern, and Columbia Universities as well as Koç University (Istanbul) and the Australian Graduate School of Management (Sydney).  He has been a visiting scholar at NYU, Columbia University, The Hebrew University, and the University of Mannheim

 Dr. Fox is founding co-editor of the journal Behavioral Science & Policy and co-President of the Behavioral Science & Policy Association. He is former President of the Society for Judgment and Decision Making and is a Fellow of the American Psychological Society.

Fox earned his B.A. in Psychology and Economics from the University of California at Berkeley, where he was mentored by Daniel Kahneman, and he earned his M.A. and Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology from Stanford University, where he was mentored by Amos Tversky.

  • Ph.D., M.A., Psychology, Stanford University, 1990-1994 Dissertation title: Risk, uncertainty, and ignorance in decision making Advisor: Amos Tversky 
  • B.A., Economics and Psychology, University of California at Berkeley, 1985-1989 Phi Beta Kappa, highest distinction in general scholarship (summa cum laude) Thesis title: Correlation and causation in surveys of life satisfaction (awarded highest honors) Advisor: Daniel Kahneman