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C. Doe

2016 Mobile Ad Summit
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17
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C. Doe

Columbia CryptoEconomics (CCE) Workshop 2025
Monday
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October 
17
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Columbia CryptoEconomics Workshop 2025 (CCE'25)


Economics and incentives are a critical part of the design of modern layer-1 blockchain protocols such as Ethereum. For example, scarce resources like blockspace require careful pricing. Block rewards, transaction fees, and maximal extracted value (MEV) must be shared across the stakeholders in the system, and participants must be incentivized appropriately. Subtle game theory governs the interactions between block builders, block proposers, and end users. Many of these economic and game-theoretic challenges are specific to the blockchain application domain, necessitating new models, new mechanisms, and new analysis frameworks.


This two-day workshop will bring together practitioners, researchers, and academics to discuss challenges, recent progress, and opportunities in the economics of blockchain protocols. The workshop will consist of invited keynote presentations, contributed talks, and panel discussions.


Confirmed Speakers:

Orestis Alpos (Common Prefix)

Ben Berger (Offchain Labs)

Austin Campbell (NYU / Zero Knowledge Consulting)

Andrea Canidio (CoW Protocol)

Panos Chatzigiannis (Visa Research)

Lioba Heimbach (Category Labs)

David Hoffman (Bankless)

Kamilla Kara (Aarhus University)

Cole Kennelly (Volmex Labs)

Kshitij Kulkarni (Succinct)

Andy Lewis-Pye (London School of Economics)

Thomas Li (Courant Institute)

Akaki Mamageishvili (Offchain Labs)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Noam Nisan (Hebrew University of Jerusalem/Starkware)

Mallesh Pai (Rice University/Tempo)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)

Joshua Rudolf (Ethereum Foundation)

Alexander Shamis (Subzero Labs)

Clara Shikhelman (Chaincode Labs)

Maria Inês Silva (Ethereum Foundation)

Srivatsan Sridhar (Stanford)

Sarisht Wadhwa (Duke University)

Kyriaki Zioga (Archimedes Research Unit)

 

Hosts: 
Columbia-Ethereum Research Center on Blockchain Protocol Design
Briger Family Digital Finance Lab at Columbia Business School


Organizers:

Justin Drake (Ethereum Foundation)

Ciamac Moallemi (Columbia Business School/Paradigm)

Barnabé Monnot (Ethereum Foundation)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)


 

APPLY TO ATTEND
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Call for Talks

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Columbia CryptoEconomics Workshop 2025 (CCE'25)


Economics and incentives are a critical part of the design of modern layer-1 blockchain protocols such as Ethereum. For example, scarce resources like blockspace require careful pricing. Block rewards, transaction fees, and maximal extracted value (MEV) must be shared across the stakeholders in the system, and participants must be incentivized appropriately. Subtle game theory governs the interactions between block builders, block proposers, and end users. Many of these economic and game-theoretic challenges are specific to the blockchain application domain, necessitating new models, new mechanisms, and new analysis frameworks.


This two-day workshop will bring together practitioners, researchers, and academics to discuss challenges, recent progress, and opportunities in the economics of blockchain protocols. The workshop will consist of invited keynote presentations, contributed talks, and panel discussions.


Confirmed Speakers:

Orestis Alpos (Common Prefix)

Ben Berger (Offchain Labs)

Austin Campbell (NYU / Zero Knowledge Consulting)

Andrea Canidio (CoW Protocol)

Panos Chatzigiannis (Visa Research)

Lioba Heimbach (Category Labs)

David Hoffman (Bankless)

Kamilla Kara (Aarhus University)

Cole Kennelly (Volmex Labs)

Kshitij Kulkarni (Succinct)

Andy Lewis-Pye (London School of Economics)

Thomas Li (Courant Institute)

Akaki Mamageishvili (Offchain Labs)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Noam Nisan (Hebrew University of Jerusalem/Starkware)

Mallesh Pai (Rice University/Tempo)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)

Joshua Rudolf (Ethereum Foundation)

Alexander Shamis (Subzero Labs)

Clara Shikhelman (Chaincode Labs)

Maria Inês Silva (Ethereum Foundation)

Srivatsan Sridhar (Stanford)

Sarisht Wadhwa (Duke University)

Kyriaki Zioga (Archimedes Research Unit)

 

Hosts: 
Columbia-Ethereum Research Center on Blockchain Protocol Design
Briger Family Digital Finance Lab at Columbia Business School


Organizers:

Justin Drake (Ethereum Foundation)

Ciamac Moallemi (Columbia Business School/Paradigm)

Barnabé Monnot (Ethereum Foundation)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)


 

VIEW 2025 EVENT PHOTOS
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Call for Talks

An introductory paragraph set in a slightly larger size can help provide a rhythm to the typography and help increase the legibility of the page.

Columbia CryptoEconomics Workshop 2025 (CCE'25)


Economics and incentives are a critical part of the design of modern layer-1 blockchain protocols such as Ethereum. For example, scarce resources like blockspace require careful pricing. Block rewards, transaction fees, and maximal extracted value (MEV) must be shared across the stakeholders in the system, and participants must be incentivized appropriately. Subtle game theory governs the interactions between block builders, block proposers, and end users. Many of these economic and game-theoretic challenges are specific to the blockchain application domain, necessitating new models, new mechanisms, and new analysis frameworks.


This two-day workshop will bring together practitioners, researchers, and academics to discuss challenges, recent progress, and opportunities in the economics of blockchain protocols. The workshop will consist of invited keynote presentations, contributed talks, and panel discussions.


Confirmed Speakers:

Orestis Alpos (Common Prefix)

Ben Berger (Offchain Labs)

Austin Campbell (NYU / Zero Knowledge Consulting)

Andrea Canidio (CoW Protocol)

Panos Chatzigiannis (Visa Research)

Lioba Heimbach (Category Labs)

David Hoffman (Bankless)

Kamilla Kara (Aarhus University)

Cole Kennelly (Volmex Labs)

Kshitij Kulkarni (Succinct)

Andy Lewis-Pye (London School of Economics)

Thomas Li (Courant Institute)

Akaki Mamageishvili (Offchain Labs)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Noam Nisan (Hebrew University of Jerusalem/Starkware)

Mallesh Pai (Rice University/Tempo)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)

Joshua Rudolf (Ethereum Foundation)

Alexander Shamis (Subzero Labs)

Clara Shikhelman (Chaincode Labs)

Maria Inês Silva (Ethereum Foundation)

Srivatsan Sridhar (Stanford)

Sarisht Wadhwa (Duke University)

Kyriaki Zioga (Archimedes Research Unit)

 

Hosts: 
Columbia-Ethereum Research Center on Blockchain Protocol Design
Briger Family Digital Finance Lab at Columbia Business School


Organizers:

Justin Drake (Ethereum Foundation)

Ciamac Moallemi (Columbia Business School/Paradigm)

Barnabé Monnot (Ethereum Foundation)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)


 

WATCH THE 2025 WORKSHOP DAY 1 & 2 VIDEOS HERE
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Call for Talks

An introductory paragraph set in a slightly larger size can help provide a rhythm to the typography and help increase the legibility of the page.

Columbia CryptoEconomics Workshop 2025 (CCE'25)


Economics and incentives are a critical part of the design of modern layer-1 blockchain protocols such as Ethereum. For example, scarce resources like blockspace require careful pricing. Block rewards, transaction fees, and maximal extracted value (MEV) must be shared across the stakeholders in the system, and participants must be incentivized appropriately. Subtle game theory governs the interactions between block builders, block proposers, and end users. Many of these economic and game-theoretic challenges are specific to the blockchain application domain, necessitating new models, new mechanisms, and new analysis frameworks.


This two-day workshop will bring together practitioners, researchers, and academics to discuss challenges, recent progress, and opportunities in the economics of blockchain protocols. The workshop will consist of invited keynote presentations, contributed talks, and panel discussions.


Confirmed Speakers:

Orestis Alpos (Common Prefix)

Ben Berger (Offchain Labs)

Austin Campbell (NYU / Zero Knowledge Consulting)

Andrea Canidio (CoW Protocol)

Panos Chatzigiannis (Visa Research)

Lioba Heimbach (Category Labs)

David Hoffman (Bankless)

Kamilla Kara (Aarhus University)

Cole Kennelly (Volmex Labs)

Kshitij Kulkarni (Succinct)

Andy Lewis-Pye (London School of Economics)

Thomas Li (Courant Institute)

Akaki Mamageishvili (Offchain Labs)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Noam Nisan (Hebrew University of Jerusalem/Starkware)

Mallesh Pai (Rice University/Tempo)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)

Joshua Rudolf (Ethereum Foundation)

Alexander Shamis (Subzero Labs)

Clara Shikhelman (Chaincode Labs)

Maria Inês Silva (Ethereum Foundation)

Srivatsan Sridhar (Stanford)

Sarisht Wadhwa (Duke University)

Kyriaki Zioga (Archimedes Research Unit)

 

Hosts: 
Columbia-Ethereum Research Center on Blockchain Protocol Design
Briger Family Digital Finance Lab at Columbia Business School


Organizers:

Justin Drake (Ethereum Foundation)

Ciamac Moallemi (Columbia Business School/Paradigm)

Barnabé Monnot (Ethereum Foundation)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)


 

WATCH THE 2025 DAY 3 WORKING SESSION VIDEOS HERE
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APPLY TO ATTEND CCE'25

 

SUBMIT A TALK PROPOSAL FOR CCE'25

Schedule - Wednesday, December 10, 2025

8:30 – 9:15 AM

Registration / Breakfast (West Atrium)

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9:15 - 9:30 AM

Opening Remarks (Auditorium)

Tim Roughgarden, Columbia Engineering / a16z crypto
George Deodatis, Vice Dean of Research, Columbia Engineering

Costis Maglaras, Dean, Columbia Business School

9:30 – 10:30 AM

Session 1 - chaired by Tim Roughgarden (Auditorium)

"On the Welfare of EIP-1559 with Patient Bidders" by Noam Nisan, Hebrew University of Jerusalem / Starkware

"Minimmit: Fast Finality with Even Faster Blocks" by Andy Lewis-Pye, London School of Economics

10:30 – 11:00 AM

Break (West Atrium)

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11:00 AM – 12:00 PM

Session 2 - chaired by Barnabé Monnot (Auditorium)

"Ethereum Validator Economics in the Age of Real Time Proving" by Kshitij Kulkarni, Succinct

"Adversarial procurement for prover market design" by Mike Neuder, Princeton University

12:00 – 1:45 PM

Lunch Break (West Atrium)

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1:45 – 3:00 PM

Session 3 - Lightning Talks chaired by Mike Neuder (Auditorium)

"Becoming Immutable: How Ethereum is Made" by Andrea Canidio, CoW Protocol

"TimeBoost: Do Ahead-in-Time Auctions Work?" by Akaki Mamageishvili, Offchain Labs

"Perils of Parallelism: TFMs under Execution Uncertainty" by Sarisht Wadhwa, Duke University

"Sealed-bid on-chain auctions with bid-hiding, censorship-resistance, and participation-efficiency guarantees" by Orestis Alpos, Common Prefix

 "One-dimensional vs. Multi-dimensional Pricing in Blockchain Protocols" by Kyriaki Zioga, Archimedes Research Unit

"The Evolution of Onchain Derivatives" by Cole Kennelly, Volmex Labs

3:00 – 3:30 PM

Break (West Atrium)

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3:30 – 4:30 PM

Session 4 - chaired by Ciamac Moallemi (Auditorium)

"Optimistic MEV in Ethereum Layer 2s: Why Blockspace Is Always in Demand" by Lioba Heimbach, Category Labs
"The Darkest Part of the MEV Dark Forest" by Mallesh Pai, Rice University/Tempo/Paradigm

4:30 - 4:35 PM

Closing Remarks

Tim Roughgarden, Columbia Engineering / a16z crypto

4:35 – 7:00 PM

Networking Reception (West Atrium)

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Schedule - Thursday, December 11, 2025

8:30 – 9:25 AM

Registration / Breakfast (West Atrium)

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9:25 – 9:30 AM

Opening Remarks (Auditorium)

Ciamac Moallemi, Columbia Business School

9:30 – 10:30 AM

Session 5 - chaired by Barnabé Monnot (Auditorium)

"EIP-1559: A Five-Year Retrospective" by Tim Roughgarden, Columbia Engineering / a16z crypto
"Economic Censorship Games in Fraud Proofs" by Ben Berger, Offchain Labs

10:30 – 11:00 AM

Break (West Atrium)

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11:00 AM – 12:00 PM

Session 6 - chaired by Tim Roughgarden (Auditorium) 

"EVM Gas Metering - How to manage resources on Ethereum" by Maria Inês Silva, Ethereum Foundation 
"Consensus Under Adversary Majority" by Srivatsan Sridhar, Stanford University

12:00 – 1:45 PM

Lunch Break (West Atrium)

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1:45 – 3:00 PM

Session 7 - Lightning Talks chaired by Mike Neuder (Auditorium)

"Bribers, Bribers on The Chain, Is Resisting All in Vain? Trustless Consensus Manipulation Through Bribing Contracts" by Kamilla Kara, Eotvos Lorand University Budapest

"TEE^{BFT}: Pricing the Security of Proof of Cloud" by Alexander Shamis, Subzero Labs
"Can Bitcoin Survive Quantum Computing? An Analysis and Playbook" by Clara Shikhelman, Chaincode Labs

"Implied Impermanent Loss: A Cross-Sectional Analysis of Decentralized Liquidity Pools" by Thomas Li, Courant Institute

"LifeXP: Secure, usable and reliable key recovery for Web3 applications" by Panos Chatzigiannis, Visa Research

3:00 – 3:45 PM

Break (West Atrium)

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3:45 – 4:30 PM

Session 8 - Panel (Auditorium) 

Austin Campbell, NYU / Zero Knowledge Consulting

 

Mallesh Pai, Rice University / Tempo

Joshua Rudolf, Ethereum Foundation


David Hoffman, Bankless (MODERATOR)

4:30 – 4:35 PM

Closing Remarks (Auditorium)

Ciamac Moallemi, Columbia Business School 

Symposium Hosts

Prem Natarajan, PhD

Vice President

Amazon Alexa



Dr. Prem Natarajan is vice president for Amazon Alexa, leading a multi-disciplinary team to make Alexa a trusted AI assistant, advisor, and companion for everyone, everywhere. His team’s product, engineering, and scientific advances have improved how customers experience Alexa through advances in natural language understanding, entity linking and resolution, and related machine learning technologies. Dr. Natarajan and his team are now focused on advancing generalizable AI, combining the best of human-like intelligence with machine learning to accelerate the future of ambient intelligence – where the underlying AI seamlessly blends into your environment, connects heterogeneous services and devices, and adapts on your behalf to provide greater utility.

 

Prior to Amazon, he was senior vice dean of engineering at the University of Southern California, where he led nationally influential DARPA- and IARPA-sponsored research efforts in biometrics, face recognition, OCR, natural language processing, media forensics, and forecasting. Prior to that, he served as executive vice president and principal scientist for speech, language, and multimedia at Raytheon BBN Technologies.

 

Dr. Natarajan is a well-recognized thought leader in AI and a keynote speaker who is frequently interviewed by publications like CNN, MIT Tech Review, Economist and Fast Company. He is the author and co-author of more than 200 published papers in research areas such as speech recognition, machine translation and computer vision. He also holds several patents in the field of conversational AI and machine learning. He received his PhD and master’s degree in Electrical Engineering at Tufts University, and a bachelor’s degree in Engineering from Savitribai Phule Pune University in India.



Portrait

Shih-Fu Chang, PhD

Dean of Columbia Engineering and Morris A. and Alma Schapiro Professor

Columbia University


Dean Chang is the dean of Columbia Engineering, where he leads the education, research, and innovation mission. He received his BS from National Taiwan University in 1985 and his PhD from the University of California-Berkeley in 1993.

At Columbia Engineering, Dean Chang has greatly contributed to the growth and advancement of the School, propelling it to be one of the top engineering programs in the nation. He plays a key role in the creation of the School’s guiding vision, Columbia Engineering for Humanity.

Dean Chang is the Morris A. and Alma Schapiro Professor with appointments in the departments of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. As one of the most influential experts in multimedia, computer vision and artificial intelligence, his research has led to spinoff companies and licensed technology in multimedia search. The image search tools developed by his group have been used by more than 200 law enforcement agencies in fighting online human trafficking crimes. He has launched AI tools for online disinformation detection and attribution.

Dean Chang is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Association for Computing Machinery, and IEEE, and an elected member of Academia Sinica. He received an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Amsterdam and the Great Teacher Award from the Society of Columbia Graduates. He is also the inaugural director for the Columbia Center of AI Technology in collaboration with Amazon.

Call for Talks

An introductory paragraph set in a slightly larger size can help provide a rhythm to the typography and help increase the legibility of the page.

Columbia CryptoEconomics Workshop 2025 (CCE'25)


Economics and incentives are a critical part of the design of modern layer-1 blockchain protocols such as Ethereum. For example, scarce resources like blockspace require careful pricing. Block rewards, transaction fees, and maximal extracted value (MEV) must be shared across the stakeholders in the system, and participants must be incentivized appropriately. Subtle game theory governs the interactions between block builders, block proposers, and end users. Many of these economic and game-theoretic challenges are specific to the blockchain application domain, necessitating new models, new mechanisms, and new analysis frameworks.


This two-day workshop will bring together practitioners, researchers, and academics to discuss challenges, recent progress, and opportunities in the economics of blockchain protocols. The workshop will consist of invited keynote presentations, contributed talks, and panel discussions.


Confirmed Speakers:

Orestis Alpos (Common Prefix)

Ben Berger (Offchain Labs)

Austin Campbell (NYU / Zero Knowledge Consulting)

Andrea Canidio (CoW Protocol)

Panos Chatzigiannis (Visa Research)

Lioba Heimbach (Category Labs)

David Hoffman (Bankless)

Kamilla Kara (Aarhus University)

Cole Kennelly (Volmex Labs)

Kshitij Kulkarni (Succinct)

Andy Lewis-Pye (London School of Economics)

Thomas Li (Courant Institute)

Akaki Mamageishvili (Offchain Labs)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Noam Nisan (Hebrew University of Jerusalem/Starkware)

Mallesh Pai (Rice University/Tempo)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)

Joshua Rudolf (Ethereum Foundation)

Alexander Shamis (Subzero Labs)

Clara Shikhelman (Chaincode Labs)

Maria Inês Silva (Ethereum Foundation)

Srivatsan Sridhar (Stanford)

Sarisht Wadhwa (Duke University)

Kyriaki Zioga (Archimedes Research Unit)

 

Hosts: 
Columbia-Ethereum Research Center on Blockchain Protocol Design
Briger Family Digital Finance Lab at Columbia Business School


Organizers:

Justin Drake (Ethereum Foundation)

Ciamac Moallemi (Columbia Business School/Paradigm)

Barnabé Monnot (Ethereum Foundation)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)


 

WATCH THE 2024 WORKSHOP DAY 1 & 2 VIDEOS HERE
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Call for Talks

An introductory paragraph set in a slightly larger size can help provide a rhythm to the typography and help increase the legibility of the page.

Columbia CryptoEconomics Workshop 2025 (CCE'25)


Economics and incentives are a critical part of the design of modern layer-1 blockchain protocols such as Ethereum. For example, scarce resources like blockspace require careful pricing. Block rewards, transaction fees, and maximal extracted value (MEV) must be shared across the stakeholders in the system, and participants must be incentivized appropriately. Subtle game theory governs the interactions between block builders, block proposers, and end users. Many of these economic and game-theoretic challenges are specific to the blockchain application domain, necessitating new models, new mechanisms, and new analysis frameworks.


This two-day workshop will bring together practitioners, researchers, and academics to discuss challenges, recent progress, and opportunities in the economics of blockchain protocols. The workshop will consist of invited keynote presentations, contributed talks, and panel discussions.


Confirmed Speakers:

Orestis Alpos (Common Prefix)

Ben Berger (Offchain Labs)

Austin Campbell (NYU / Zero Knowledge Consulting)

Andrea Canidio (CoW Protocol)

Panos Chatzigiannis (Visa Research)

Lioba Heimbach (Category Labs)

David Hoffman (Bankless)

Kamilla Kara (Aarhus University)

Cole Kennelly (Volmex Labs)

Kshitij Kulkarni (Succinct)

Andy Lewis-Pye (London School of Economics)

Thomas Li (Courant Institute)

Akaki Mamageishvili (Offchain Labs)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Noam Nisan (Hebrew University of Jerusalem/Starkware)

Mallesh Pai (Rice University/Tempo)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)

Joshua Rudolf (Ethereum Foundation)

Alexander Shamis (Subzero Labs)

Clara Shikhelman (Chaincode Labs)

Maria Inês Silva (Ethereum Foundation)

Srivatsan Sridhar (Stanford)

Sarisht Wadhwa (Duke University)

Kyriaki Zioga (Archimedes Research Unit)

 

Hosts: 
Columbia-Ethereum Research Center on Blockchain Protocol Design
Briger Family Digital Finance Lab at Columbia Business School


Organizers:

Justin Drake (Ethereum Foundation)

Ciamac Moallemi (Columbia Business School/Paradigm)

Barnabé Monnot (Ethereum Foundation)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)


 

WATCH THE 2024 WORKING SESSION DAY 3 VIDEOS HERE
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Call for Talks

An introductory paragraph set in a slightly larger size can help provide a rhythm to the typography and help increase the legibility of the page.

Columbia CryptoEconomics Workshop 2025 (CCE'25)


Economics and incentives are a critical part of the design of modern layer-1 blockchain protocols such as Ethereum. For example, scarce resources like blockspace require careful pricing. Block rewards, transaction fees, and maximal extracted value (MEV) must be shared across the stakeholders in the system, and participants must be incentivized appropriately. Subtle game theory governs the interactions between block builders, block proposers, and end users. Many of these economic and game-theoretic challenges are specific to the blockchain application domain, necessitating new models, new mechanisms, and new analysis frameworks.


This two-day workshop will bring together practitioners, researchers, and academics to discuss challenges, recent progress, and opportunities in the economics of blockchain protocols. The workshop will consist of invited keynote presentations, contributed talks, and panel discussions.


Confirmed Speakers:

Orestis Alpos (Common Prefix)

Ben Berger (Offchain Labs)

Austin Campbell (NYU / Zero Knowledge Consulting)

Andrea Canidio (CoW Protocol)

Panos Chatzigiannis (Visa Research)

Lioba Heimbach (Category Labs)

David Hoffman (Bankless)

Kamilla Kara (Aarhus University)

Cole Kennelly (Volmex Labs)

Kshitij Kulkarni (Succinct)

Andy Lewis-Pye (London School of Economics)

Thomas Li (Courant Institute)

Akaki Mamageishvili (Offchain Labs)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Noam Nisan (Hebrew University of Jerusalem/Starkware)

Mallesh Pai (Rice University/Tempo)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)

Joshua Rudolf (Ethereum Foundation)

Alexander Shamis (Subzero Labs)

Clara Shikhelman (Chaincode Labs)

Maria Inês Silva (Ethereum Foundation)

Srivatsan Sridhar (Stanford)

Sarisht Wadhwa (Duke University)

Kyriaki Zioga (Archimedes Research Unit)

 

Hosts: 
Columbia-Ethereum Research Center on Blockchain Protocol Design
Briger Family Digital Finance Lab at Columbia Business School


Organizers:

Justin Drake (Ethereum Foundation)

Ciamac Moallemi (Columbia Business School/Paradigm)

Barnabé Monnot (Ethereum Foundation)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)


 

VIEW 2024 EVENT PHOTOS
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Keynote Speakers

Gaurav Sukhatme, PhD

Fletcher Jones Foundation Endowed Chair in Computer Science and Professor of Computer Science and Electrical & Computer Engineering

University of Southern California


Big Data and Small Models: Lessons for Robotics

We have recently demonstrated the possibility of learning drone swarm controllers that are zero-shot transferable to real quadrotors via large-scale, multi-agent, end-to-end reinforcement learning. We train policies parameterized by neural networks that can control individual drones in a swarm in a fully decentralized manner. Our policies, trained in simulated environments with realistic quadrotor physics, demonstrate advanced flocking behaviors, perform aggressive maneuvers in tight formations while avoiding collisions with each other, break and re-establish formations to avoid collisions with moving obstacles, and efficiently coordinate in pursuit-evasion tasks. We will demonstrate the successful deployment of the model learned in simulation to highly resource-constrained physical quadrotors performing station-keeping and goal-swapping behaviors. Motivated by these results, and the observation that neural control of memory-constrained, agile robots requires small, yet highly performant models, we have begun a project that leverages graph hypernetworks to learn hyperpolicies trained with off-policy reinforcement learning. This results in networks that are two orders of magnitude smaller than commonly used networks yet encode policies comparable to those encoded by much larger networks trained on the same task. Our method can be appended to any off-policy reinforcement learning algorithm, without any change in hyperparameters, we illustrate this by showing early results across locomotion and manipulation tasks. The talk will conclude with some thoughts on the generality of such approaches for a more general class of devices with modest computational capabilities.


Gaurav S. Sukhatme holds the Fletcher Jones Foundation Endowed Chair in Computer Science at the University of Southern California (USC). He is Professor of Computer Science and Electrical & Computer Engineering and serves as the Executive Vice Dean at the USC Viterbi School of Engineering. He is an Amazon Scholar. He received his undergraduate education at IIT Bombay in Computer Science and Engineering, and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from USC. He is the co-director of the USC Robotics Research Laboratory and the director of the USC Robotic Embedded Systems Laboratory, which he founded in 2000. His research interests are in networked robots, learning robots and field robotics. He has published extensively in these and related areas. Sukhatme has served as PI on numerous NSF, DARPA and NASA grants. He was a Co-PI on the Center for Embedded Networked Sensing (CENS), an NSF Science and Technology Center. He is a fellow of the AAAI, the IEEE and a recipient of the NSF CAREER award and the Okawa foundation research award. He is one of the founders of the Robotics: Science and Systems conference and the Editor-in-Chief of Autonomous Robots.

Portrait

Jacob Devlin

Senior Staff Research Scientist

Google


Challenges and Opportunities in Large-Scale Language Modeling

In the last few years, neural network language models have been scaled to hundreds of billions of parameters, resulting in breakthrough capabilities as few-shot learners and conversational agents. In this talk, I will go over some of the challenges in training language models at this scale. Additionally, I will give an overview of key research areas in large-scale language modeling besides scale itself, such as meta-learning, optimization, sparsity, and efficient architectures.


Jacob Devlin is a Senior Staff Research Scientist at Google, where he works on deep learning models for natural language understanding. He is best known for developing the BERT model for language understanding. More recently, he co-led the PaLM project, which is Google's largest-scale language modeling effort to date.

Spark Talks

Sergul Aydore, PhD

Senior Applied Scientist, Amazon AI



Sergul has been a Senior Applied Scientist at Amazon AI, leading privacy in ML efforts. Her research interests are Differential Privacy and Robust Machine Learning. Before Amazon, Sergul was an Assistant Professor at the Stevens Institute of Technology, NJ, USA. She is also the General Chair for Women in ML Workshop at NeurIPS’22. Sergul received her PhD degree from the Signal and Image Processing Institute at University of Southern California in 2014. Her PhD work was on developing robust connectivity measures for neuroimaging data. Sergul’s scientific work has been published in AI and medical imaging venues.


Differentially Private Synthetic Data

In this talk, I will describe a formal solution for privacy-preserving data exchange. Imagine a hospital that wants to share its data with external researchers to accelerate scientific findings. Due to the sensitive nature of patient data, the data is anonymized to protect the privacy of individuals. However, anonymized data does not provide formal privacy guarantees and the utility of the data is likely to be destroyed. Instead, with help of machine learning tools, a synthetic version of the original data can be used for data exchange. The synthetic data represents the original data but is not the exact replica. To provide privacy guarantees, we rely on the notion of differential privacy. The differentially private synthetic data can then be shared between parties with formal privacy guarantees. I will present our approach for generating private synthetic data and demonstrate the usefulness for query release and machine learning tasks.

 

Suman Jana, PhD

Associate Professor of Computer Science, Columbia University


Suman Jana is an associate professor in the department of computer science and the data science institute at Columbia University. His primary research interest is at the intersections of computer security and machine learning. His research has received six best paper awards, a CACM research highlight, a Google faculty fellowship, a JPMorgan Chase Faculty Research Award, an NSF CAREER award, and an ARO young investigator award.


Efficient Neural Network Verification using Branch and Bound

In this talk, I will describe two recent Branch and Bound (BaB) verifiers developed by our group to ensure different safety properties of neural networks. The BaB verifiers involve two main steps: (1) recursively splitting the original verification problem into easier independent subproblems by splitting input or hidden neurons; and (2) for each split subproblem, using fast but incomplete bound propagation techniques to compute sound estimated bounds for the outputs of the target neural network. One of the key limitations of existing BaB verifiers is computing tight relaxations of activation functions' (i.e., ReLU) nonlinearities. Our recent works (α-CROWN and β-CROWN) introduce a primal-dual approach and jointly optimize the corresponding Lagrangian multipliers for each ReLU with gradient ascent. Such an approach is highly parallelizable and avoids calls to expensive LP solvers. Our verifiers not only provide tighter output estimations than existing bound propagation methods but also can fully leverage GPUs with massive parallelization. Our verifier, α, β-CROWN (alpha-beta-CROWN), won the second International Verification of Neural Networks Competition (VNN-COMP 2021) with the highest total score.

Govind Thattai, PhD

 Principal Scientist, Amazon Alexa AI



Govind Thattai is a Principal Scientist at Alexa AI, and is leading the Multimodal science efforts for Embodied AI and Visual Question Answering. Prior to joining Amazon in 2018, Govind has worked in the areas of Speech Recognition, Computer Vision and NLU at BBN, KLA and eBay. 


Embodied AI at Alexa 
Embodied AI is the AI that enables a robotic agent to perceive, navigate, interact and learn in a 3D physical environment. This talk describes Alexa’s initiative to present Embodied AI as a University Challenge for Alexa Prize, and the new Embodied AI framework called Arena.

Ali Hirsa, PhD 

(Moderator) Professor of Industrial Engineering and Operations Research, Columbia University

Ali Hirsa is a professor, director of financial engineering program, and director of Center for AI in business analytics & FinTech at Columbia University. Ali has worked at both sell-side and buy-side for more than 25 years. Ali’s research interests are AI/ML/DL applications in asset management and finance. Ali is author of two textbooks and is Editor-in-Chief of Journal of Investment Strategies. He is a frequent speaker at academic and practitioner conferences. Ali received his PhD in Applied Mathematics from University of Maryland at College Park under the supervision of Professors Howard C. Elman and Dilip B. Madan.

Panel: Autonomy & Trust

Eshan Bhatnagar, MBA

Head of Product, Alexa AI Natural Understanding


Eshan Bhatnagar is Head of Product at Alexa AI Natural Understanding team where he leads a multidisciplinary product, design and user research organization with a focus on applying AI across Natural Language Understanding, Computer Vision, Multimodal Learning & Generation, and Robotics to deliver delightful experiences to millions of Amazon customers worldwide. Eshan was an early product leader in the Amazon Alexa organization where he helped build the original Echo Show, and founded new product areas from scratch that are used by millions of customers worldwide. Eshan joined Amazon in 2013 where he led Commerce, Payments and Currency products at AWS, and helped launch AWS's local business in India. Prior to Amazon, Eshan led R&D efforts on multicore application processors at Freescale Semiconductors, and conducted technology and financial due-diligence for early-stage startups at Amiti Ventures. Eshan holds a bachelor’s degree in Electronics and Communications Engineering from Manipal Institute of Technology, India, and an MBA in Finance, Accounting, Entrepreneurship, and Marketing from the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.

David Boothe, PhD

Program Manager, Army Research Laboratory


David Boothe was born in Washington DC in 1967.  He received a B.A. in Philosophy from the University of Maryland, College Park in 1989, and a Ph.D. in Computational Neuroscience from the Neuroscience and Cognitive Sciences program University of Maryland in 2007.  He did Post-Doctoral research at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, and the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University.  He is currently the program manager of the Strengthening Teamwork for Novel Groups Collaborative Research Alliance at the Combat Capabilities Development Command, Army Research Laboratory.   He specializes in human machine teaming, neuro-inspired intelligent system design, and brain modeling and simulation.

Kaleb McDowell, PhD

Branch Chief, Army Research Laboratory


Dr. Kaleb McDowell has a B.S in operations research and industrial engineering from Cornell University, and an M.S. in kinesiology and a Ph.D. in neuroscience and cognitive science both from the University of Maryland, College Park. He currently leads ARL’s Human-Guided System Adaptation Research Branch. Since joining ARL in 2003, Dr. McDowell has led several major research and development programs focused on neuroscience and human-intelligent technology integration; served as the chief scientist of the Humans in Complex Systems Directorate, and receiving Army Research and Development Achievement awards in 2007, 2009, and 2013; and ARL’s Director’s Awards in 2020.

Jeannette Wing, PhD

Executive VP for Research and Professor of Computer Science, Columbia University

Jeannette M. Wing is the Executive Vice President for Research and Professor of Computer Science at Columbia University. She joined Columbia in 2017 as the inaugural Avanessians Director of the Data Science Institute. From 2013 to 2017, she was a Corporate Vice President of Microsoft Research. She is Adjunct Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon where she twice served as the Head of the Computer Science Department and had been on the faculty since 1985. From 2007-2010 she was the Assistant Director of the Computer and Information Science and Engineering Directorate at the National Science Foundation. She received her S.B., S.M., and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science, all from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Garud Iyengar, PhD (Moderator)

Tang Professor of Operations and Senior Vice Dean for Research and Academic Programs, Columbia University

Garud Iyengar is the Tang Professor of Operations at Columbia Engineering. He received his B. Tech. in Electrical Engineering from IIT Kanpur, and an MS and PhD in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University. His research interests are broadly in control, machine learning and optimization. His published works span a diverse range of fields, including information theory, applied mathematics, operations research, economics and financing engineering. His current projects focus on the areas of large-scale power systems and supply chains, causal inference, and modeling of cellular processes. He was elected an INFORMS Fellow in 2018. He was the Chair of the Department of Industrial Engineering and Operations Research from 2013-19, and the Associate Director for Research at the Columbia Data Science Institute from 2017-19. He has been an Amazon Scholar since 2019. He is currently the Senior Vice Dean for Research and Academic Programs at Columbia Engineering.

Round Table Facilitators

Portrait

Jack G. M. FitzGerald

Senior Scientist, Amazon Alexa

ROUND TABLE: Public Data Resources

Jack FitzGerald is a senior applied scientist with Amazon Alexa AI’s Natural Understanding group. His research interests include large language models, multilingual language understanding, efficient distributed training, and multitask modeling. Jack has been with Amazon since 2015 and Alexa since 2017. Before Amazon, he was an officer and nuclear physicist in the US Air Force.

Portrait

Maryam Zolnoori, PhD, Research Scientist, Columbia University Irving Medical Center

ROUND TABLE: Public Data Resources

Maryam Zolnoori, PhD, is a research scientist at Columbia University Irving Medical Center. She received her PhD in Biomedical Informatics and her Master in both Information Technology and Health Informatics. Her research have focused on utilizing advanced data science methods and routinely generated data in clinical settings to build decision support tools for improving quality of healthcare. She is the author of more than 50 articles and recipient of several research awards from National Library of Medicine, National Institute on Aging, Federal Drug Administration, Mayo Clinic, and Columbia Center of AI Technology.

 

Portrait

Sergul Aydore, PhD

Senior Applied Scientist, Amazon AI

ROUND TABLE: Responsible AI - Privacy

Sergul has been a Senior Applied Scientist at Amazon AI, leading privacy in ML efforts. Her research interests are Differential Privacy and Robust Machine Learning. Before Amazon, Sergul was an Assistant Professor at the Stevens Institute of Technology, NJ, USA. She is also the General Chair for Women in ML Workshop at NeurIPS’22. Sergul received her PhD degree from the Signal and Image Processing Institute at University of Southern California in 2014. Her PhD work was on developing robust connectivity measures for neuroimaging data. Sergul’s scientific work has been published in AI and medical imaging venues.

Portrait

Roxana Geambasu, PhD

Associate Professor of Computer Science, Columbia University

ROUND TABLE: Responsible AI - Privacy

Roxana Geambasu is an Associate Professor of Computer Science at Columbia University and a member of Columbia's Data Sciences Institute. She joined Columbia in Fall 2011 after finishing her Ph.D. at the University of Washington.  For her work in cloud and mobile data privacy, she received an Alfred P. Sloan Faculty Fellowship, a Microsoft Research Faculty Fellowship, an NSF CAREER award, a ``Brilliant 10'' Popular Science nomination, an Early Career Award in Cybersecurity from the University of Washington Center for Academic Excellence, the Honorable Mention for the 2013 inaugural Dennis M. Ritchie Doctoral Dissertation Award, a William Chan Dissertation Award, two best paper awards at top systems conferences, and the first Google Ph.D. Fellowship in Cloud Computing.

Portrait

Rahul Gupta, PhD

Manager, Trustworthy Alexa AI

ROUND TABLE: Responsible AI - Fairness

Rahul Gupta is a Senior Applied Science manager at the Spoken Language Understanding Innovations (SLU-Innovations) team in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Since joining the Alexa organization, he has focused on designing NLU models for scalability and speed. Some of his more recent research focuses on Trustworthy Machine Learning with emphasis on privacy preserving techniques, fairness and federated learning. He received his PhD from the University of Southern California in 2016 on interpreting non-verbal communications in human interaction. He has published several papers at avenues such as EMNLP, ACL, NAACL, ACM Facct and IEEE-Transactions. He is also co-inventor on ten patent pending technologies at Amazon.

Portrait

Shih-Fu Chang, PhD

Dean of Columbia Engineering and Morris A. and Alma Schapiro Professor

ROUND TABLE: Responsible AI - Fairness

Shih-Fu Chang is Dean of Columbia Engineering and Morris A. and Alma Schapiro Professor. He leads the education, research, and innovation mission of the School and has greatly contributed to its growth and advancement, propelling it to be one of the top engineering programs in the nation.


As one of the most influential experts in multimedia, computer vision and artificial intelligence, his research has led to development of innovative image search tools, which have been used by major media companies and law enforcement agencies in fighting online human trafficking crimes. He has also launched AI tools for online disinformation detection and attribution.


Dean Chang is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Association for Computing Machinery, and IEEE, and an elected member of Academia Sinica. He received the Great Teacher Award from the Society of Columbia Graduates and is director of the Columbia Center of AI Technology in collaboration with Amazon.

Call for Talks

An introductory paragraph set in a slightly larger size can help provide a rhythm to the typography and help increase the legibility of the page.

Columbia CryptoEconomics Workshop 2025 (CCE'25)


Economics and incentives are a critical part of the design of modern layer-1 blockchain protocols such as Ethereum. For example, scarce resources like blockspace require careful pricing. Block rewards, transaction fees, and maximal extracted value (MEV) must be shared across the stakeholders in the system, and participants must be incentivized appropriately. Subtle game theory governs the interactions between block builders, block proposers, and end users. Many of these economic and game-theoretic challenges are specific to the blockchain application domain, necessitating new models, new mechanisms, and new analysis frameworks.


This two-day workshop will bring together practitioners, researchers, and academics to discuss challenges, recent progress, and opportunities in the economics of blockchain protocols. The workshop will consist of invited keynote presentations, contributed talks, and panel discussions.


Confirmed Speakers:

Orestis Alpos (Common Prefix)

Ben Berger (Offchain Labs)

Austin Campbell (NYU / Zero Knowledge Consulting)

Andrea Canidio (CoW Protocol)

Panos Chatzigiannis (Visa Research)

Lioba Heimbach (Category Labs)

David Hoffman (Bankless)

Kamilla Kara (Aarhus University)

Cole Kennelly (Volmex Labs)

Kshitij Kulkarni (Succinct)

Andy Lewis-Pye (London School of Economics)

Thomas Li (Courant Institute)

Akaki Mamageishvili (Offchain Labs)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Noam Nisan (Hebrew University of Jerusalem/Starkware)

Mallesh Pai (Rice University/Tempo)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)

Joshua Rudolf (Ethereum Foundation)

Alexander Shamis (Subzero Labs)

Clara Shikhelman (Chaincode Labs)

Maria Inês Silva (Ethereum Foundation)

Srivatsan Sridhar (Stanford)

Sarisht Wadhwa (Duke University)

Kyriaki Zioga (Archimedes Research Unit)

 

Hosts: 
Columbia-Ethereum Research Center on Blockchain Protocol Design
Briger Family Digital Finance Lab at Columbia Business School


Organizers:

Justin Drake (Ethereum Foundation)

Ciamac Moallemi (Columbia Business School/Paradigm)

Barnabé Monnot (Ethereum Foundation)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)


 

WATCH THE 2023 WORKSHOP DAY 1 & 2 VIDEOS HERE
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Call for Talks

An introductory paragraph set in a slightly larger size can help provide a rhythm to the typography and help increase the legibility of the page.

Columbia CryptoEconomics Workshop 2025 (CCE'25)


Economics and incentives are a critical part of the design of modern layer-1 blockchain protocols such as Ethereum. For example, scarce resources like blockspace require careful pricing. Block rewards, transaction fees, and maximal extracted value (MEV) must be shared across the stakeholders in the system, and participants must be incentivized appropriately. Subtle game theory governs the interactions between block builders, block proposers, and end users. Many of these economic and game-theoretic challenges are specific to the blockchain application domain, necessitating new models, new mechanisms, and new analysis frameworks.


This two-day workshop will bring together practitioners, researchers, and academics to discuss challenges, recent progress, and opportunities in the economics of blockchain protocols. The workshop will consist of invited keynote presentations, contributed talks, and panel discussions.


Confirmed Speakers:

Orestis Alpos (Common Prefix)

Ben Berger (Offchain Labs)

Austin Campbell (NYU / Zero Knowledge Consulting)

Andrea Canidio (CoW Protocol)

Panos Chatzigiannis (Visa Research)

Lioba Heimbach (Category Labs)

David Hoffman (Bankless)

Kamilla Kara (Aarhus University)

Cole Kennelly (Volmex Labs)

Kshitij Kulkarni (Succinct)

Andy Lewis-Pye (London School of Economics)

Thomas Li (Courant Institute)

Akaki Mamageishvili (Offchain Labs)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Noam Nisan (Hebrew University of Jerusalem/Starkware)

Mallesh Pai (Rice University/Tempo)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)

Joshua Rudolf (Ethereum Foundation)

Alexander Shamis (Subzero Labs)

Clara Shikhelman (Chaincode Labs)

Maria Inês Silva (Ethereum Foundation)

Srivatsan Sridhar (Stanford)

Sarisht Wadhwa (Duke University)

Kyriaki Zioga (Archimedes Research Unit)

 

Hosts: 
Columbia-Ethereum Research Center on Blockchain Protocol Design
Briger Family Digital Finance Lab at Columbia Business School


Organizers:

Justin Drake (Ethereum Foundation)

Ciamac Moallemi (Columbia Business School/Paradigm)

Barnabé Monnot (Ethereum Foundation)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)


 

WATCH THE 2023 WORKING SESSION VIDEOS HERE
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Call for Talks

An introductory paragraph set in a slightly larger size can help provide a rhythm to the typography and help increase the legibility of the page.

Columbia CryptoEconomics Workshop 2025 (CCE'25)


Economics and incentives are a critical part of the design of modern layer-1 blockchain protocols such as Ethereum. For example, scarce resources like blockspace require careful pricing. Block rewards, transaction fees, and maximal extracted value (MEV) must be shared across the stakeholders in the system, and participants must be incentivized appropriately. Subtle game theory governs the interactions between block builders, block proposers, and end users. Many of these economic and game-theoretic challenges are specific to the blockchain application domain, necessitating new models, new mechanisms, and new analysis frameworks.


This two-day workshop will bring together practitioners, researchers, and academics to discuss challenges, recent progress, and opportunities in the economics of blockchain protocols. The workshop will consist of invited keynote presentations, contributed talks, and panel discussions.


Confirmed Speakers:

Orestis Alpos (Common Prefix)

Ben Berger (Offchain Labs)

Austin Campbell (NYU / Zero Knowledge Consulting)

Andrea Canidio (CoW Protocol)

Panos Chatzigiannis (Visa Research)

Lioba Heimbach (Category Labs)

David Hoffman (Bankless)

Kamilla Kara (Aarhus University)

Cole Kennelly (Volmex Labs)

Kshitij Kulkarni (Succinct)

Andy Lewis-Pye (London School of Economics)

Thomas Li (Courant Institute)

Akaki Mamageishvili (Offchain Labs)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Noam Nisan (Hebrew University of Jerusalem/Starkware)

Mallesh Pai (Rice University/Tempo)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)

Joshua Rudolf (Ethereum Foundation)

Alexander Shamis (Subzero Labs)

Clara Shikhelman (Chaincode Labs)

Maria Inês Silva (Ethereum Foundation)

Srivatsan Sridhar (Stanford)

Sarisht Wadhwa (Duke University)

Kyriaki Zioga (Archimedes Research Unit)

 

Hosts: 
Columbia-Ethereum Research Center on Blockchain Protocol Design
Briger Family Digital Finance Lab at Columbia Business School


Organizers:

Justin Drake (Ethereum Foundation)

Ciamac Moallemi (Columbia Business School/Paradigm)

Barnabé Monnot (Ethereum Foundation)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)


 

VIEW 2023 EVENT PHOTOS
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Call for Talks

An introductory paragraph set in a slightly larger size can help provide a rhythm to the typography and help increase the legibility of the page.

Columbia CryptoEconomics Workshop 2025 (CCE'25)


Economics and incentives are a critical part of the design of modern layer-1 blockchain protocols such as Ethereum. For example, scarce resources like blockspace require careful pricing. Block rewards, transaction fees, and maximal extracted value (MEV) must be shared across the stakeholders in the system, and participants must be incentivized appropriately. Subtle game theory governs the interactions between block builders, block proposers, and end users. Many of these economic and game-theoretic challenges are specific to the blockchain application domain, necessitating new models, new mechanisms, and new analysis frameworks.


This two-day workshop will bring together practitioners, researchers, and academics to discuss challenges, recent progress, and opportunities in the economics of blockchain protocols. The workshop will consist of invited keynote presentations, contributed talks, and panel discussions.


Confirmed Speakers:

Orestis Alpos (Common Prefix)

Ben Berger (Offchain Labs)

Austin Campbell (NYU / Zero Knowledge Consulting)

Andrea Canidio (CoW Protocol)

Panos Chatzigiannis (Visa Research)

Lioba Heimbach (Category Labs)

David Hoffman (Bankless)

Kamilla Kara (Aarhus University)

Cole Kennelly (Volmex Labs)

Kshitij Kulkarni (Succinct)

Andy Lewis-Pye (London School of Economics)

Thomas Li (Courant Institute)

Akaki Mamageishvili (Offchain Labs)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Noam Nisan (Hebrew University of Jerusalem/Starkware)

Mallesh Pai (Rice University/Tempo)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)

Joshua Rudolf (Ethereum Foundation)

Alexander Shamis (Subzero Labs)

Clara Shikhelman (Chaincode Labs)

Maria Inês Silva (Ethereum Foundation)

Srivatsan Sridhar (Stanford)

Sarisht Wadhwa (Duke University)

Kyriaki Zioga (Archimedes Research Unit)

 

Hosts: 
Columbia-Ethereum Research Center on Blockchain Protocol Design
Briger Family Digital Finance Lab at Columbia Business School


Organizers:

Justin Drake (Ethereum Foundation)

Ciamac Moallemi (Columbia Business School/Paradigm)

Barnabé Monnot (Ethereum Foundation)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)


 

READ THE 2023 EVENT RECAP
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The Forum, located on the corner of 125th Street and Broadway, is a unique community gathering space that serves as the gateway to Columbia University's developing Manhattanville campus.

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ABOUT THE HOSTS

Columbia University is one of the world's most important centers of research and at the same time a distinctive and distinguished learning environment for undergraduates and graduate students in many scholarly and professional fields. The University recognizes the importance of its location in New York City and seeks to link its research and teaching to the vast resources of a great metropolis. It seeks to attract a diverse and international faculty, staff, and student body, to support research and teaching on global issues, and to create academic relationships with many countries and regions. It expects all areas of the University to advance knowledge and learning at the highest level and to convey the products of its efforts to the world.


The Ethereum Foundation (EF) is a non-profit organization dedicated to supporting Ethereum and related technologies. The EF is not a company, or even a traditional non-profit. Their role is not to control or lead Ethereum, nor are they the only organization that funds critical development of Ethereum-related technologies. The EF is one part of a much larger ecosystem.

Details

An introductory paragraph set in a slightly larger size can help provide a rhythm to the typography and help increase the legibility of the page.

Columbia CryptoEconomics Workshop 2025 (CCE'25)


Economics and incentives are a critical part of the design of modern layer-1 blockchain protocols such as Ethereum. For example, scarce resources like blockspace require careful pricing. Block rewards, transaction fees, and maximal extracted value (MEV) must be shared across the stakeholders in the system, and participants must be incentivized appropriately. Subtle game theory governs the interactions between block builders, block proposers, and end users. Many of these economic and game-theoretic challenges are specific to the blockchain application domain, necessitating new models, new mechanisms, and new analysis frameworks.


This two-day workshop will bring together practitioners, researchers, and academics to discuss challenges, recent progress, and opportunities in the economics of blockchain protocols. The workshop will consist of invited keynote presentations, contributed talks, and panel discussions.


Confirmed Speakers:

Orestis Alpos (Common Prefix)

Ben Berger (Offchain Labs)

Austin Campbell (NYU / Zero Knowledge Consulting)

Andrea Canidio (CoW Protocol)

Panos Chatzigiannis (Visa Research)

Lioba Heimbach (Category Labs)

David Hoffman (Bankless)

Kamilla Kara (Aarhus University)

Cole Kennelly (Volmex Labs)

Kshitij Kulkarni (Succinct)

Andy Lewis-Pye (London School of Economics)

Thomas Li (Courant Institute)

Akaki Mamageishvili (Offchain Labs)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Noam Nisan (Hebrew University of Jerusalem/Starkware)

Mallesh Pai (Rice University/Tempo)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)

Joshua Rudolf (Ethereum Foundation)

Alexander Shamis (Subzero Labs)

Clara Shikhelman (Chaincode Labs)

Maria Inês Silva (Ethereum Foundation)

Srivatsan Sridhar (Stanford)

Sarisht Wadhwa (Duke University)

Kyriaki Zioga (Archimedes Research Unit)

 

Hosts: 
Columbia-Ethereum Research Center on Blockchain Protocol Design
Briger Family Digital Finance Lab at Columbia Business School


Organizers:

Justin Drake (Ethereum Foundation)

Ciamac Moallemi (Columbia Business School/Paradigm)

Barnabé Monnot (Ethereum Foundation)

Mike Neuder (Princeton University)

Tim Roughgarden (Columbia Engineering/a16z crypto)


 

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