 My name is Marianne Andriès. I'm a finance researcher at Toulouse TSE. I'm in the finance group in Toulouse. We're about just over 20 researchers working on various fields, corporate finance, market microstructures, behavioral finance. I work in asset pricing. So my research agenda is to incorporate some elements from behavioral economics and neuroscience. The evidence from behavioral finance I use is that investors or economical agents in general do not evaluate risk the same way if the payoff is a very short horizon payoff or actually an immediate payoff rather than a long horizon payoff. The easy way to understand that is parachute jumping. People pay a lot of money to go on a plane and jump with a parachute, but actually once they're in the plane many people refuse to jump because suddenly they realize this is a lot of risk and they don't like that risk at all. Even though they knew the risk before, they didn't evaluate it the same way. Even this simple ingredient actually helps explain many puzzles that we see in empirical asset pricing for the prices we observe for short horizon payoffs versus long horizon payoffs. I think the main potential areas of growth in finance research is to combine elements from different fields in economics. There could be synergies between labor economics and finance and some researchers have already started working on that. I think there is a lot of possibilities for more room on this type of projects and I think they're very exciting.