This text brings together contributions to the area of behavioural economics from a number of scholars in the field. Topics covered include "irrational" conducts; imperfect self-knowledge; imperfect memory; time and utility; and experimental practices in psychology, economics, and finance. This book is intended for economists, psychologists, biologists, zoologists, philosophers, and others interested in behavioural economics and the interface between economics and psychology.
This text brings together contributions to the area of behavioural economics from a number of scholars in the field. Topics covered include "irrational" conducts; imperfect self-knowledge; imperfect memory; time and utility; and experimental practices in psychology, economics, and finance. This book is intended for economists, psychologists, biologists, zoologists, philosophers, and others interested in behavioural economics and the interface between economics and psychology. Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Isabelle Brocas is at the Department of Economics, Columbia University. She is also a research affiliate at CEPR, and co-editor of the Annals of the Marie Curie Fellows Association. Juan D. Carrillo is Associate Professor at Columbia University Graduate School of Business. He is also a research affiliate at CEPR, and Associate Editor of the Spanish Economic Review.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction * Part I: The Causes and Consequences of 'Irrational' Conducts * 1: Roy F. Baumeister: The Psychology of Irrationality: Why people make foolish, self-defeating choices * 2: Kent Berridge: Irrational Pursuit: Hyper-incentives from a visceral brain * 3: Jonathan W. Schooler, Daniel Ariely, and George Loewenstein: The Pursuit and Assessment of Happiness May Be Self-Defeating * Part II: Imperfect Self-Knowledge and the Role of Information * 4: Andrew Caplin and John Leahy: Behavioral Policy * 5: Isabelle Brocas and Juan D. Carrillo: Information and Self-Control * 6: Ronit Bodner and Drazen Prelec: Self-Signaling and Diagnostic Utility in Everyday Decision-Making * Part III: Imperfect Memory and Limited Capacity to Process Information * 7: Itzhak Gilboa and Eva Gilboa-Schechtman: Mental Accounting and the Absentminded Driver * 8: Roland Benabou and Jean Tirole: Self-Knowledge and Self-Regulation: An economic approach * 9: Xavier Gabaix and David Laibson: A New Challenge for Economics: 'The frame problem' * Part IV: Time and Utility * 10: Daniel Kahneman: Experienced Utility and Objective Happiness: A moment-based approach * 11: Timothy D. Wilson, Daniel Gilbert, and David B. Centerbar: Making Sense: The causes of emotional evanescence * 12: Yaacov Trope and Nira Liberman: Temporal Construal Theory of Time-Dependent Preferences * Part V: Experimental Practices in Psychology, Economics, and Finance * 13: Ralph Hertwig and Andreas Ortmann: Economists' and Psychologists' Experimental Practices: How they differ, why they differ, and how they could converge * 14: Denis Hilton: Psychology and the Financial Markets: Applications to understanding and remedying irrational decision-making * 15: Ernst Fehr and Jean-Robert Tyran: What Causes Nominal Inertia? Insights from experimental economics
* Introduction * Part I: The Causes and Consequences of 'Irrational' Conducts * 1: Roy F. Baumeister: The Psychology of Irrationality: Why people make foolish, self-defeating choices * 2: Kent Berridge: Irrational Pursuit: Hyper-incentives from a visceral brain * 3: Jonathan W. Schooler, Daniel Ariely, and George Loewenstein: The Pursuit and Assessment of Happiness May Be Self-Defeating * Part II: Imperfect Self-Knowledge and the Role of Information * 4: Andrew Caplin and John Leahy: Behavioral Policy * 5: Isabelle Brocas and Juan D. Carrillo: Information and Self-Control * 6: Ronit Bodner and Drazen Prelec: Self-Signaling and Diagnostic Utility in Everyday Decision-Making * Part III: Imperfect Memory and Limited Capacity to Process Information * 7: Itzhak Gilboa and Eva Gilboa-Schechtman: Mental Accounting and the Absentminded Driver * 8: Roland Benabou and Jean Tirole: Self-Knowledge and Self-Regulation: An economic approach * 9: Xavier Gabaix and David Laibson: A New Challenge for Economics: 'The frame problem' * Part IV: Time and Utility * 10: Daniel Kahneman: Experienced Utility and Objective Happiness: A moment-based approach * 11: Timothy D. Wilson, Daniel Gilbert, and David B. Centerbar: Making Sense: The causes of emotional evanescence * 12: Yaacov Trope and Nira Liberman: Temporal Construal Theory of Time-Dependent Preferences * Part V: Experimental Practices in Psychology, Economics, and Finance * 13: Ralph Hertwig and Andreas Ortmann: Economists' and Psychologists' Experimental Practices: How they differ, why they differ, and how they could converge * 14: Denis Hilton: Psychology and the Financial Markets: Applications to understanding and remedying irrational decision-making * 15: Ernst Fehr and Jean-Robert Tyran: What Causes Nominal Inertia? Insights from experimental economics
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