Routledge Handbook of Bounded Rationality (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Viale, Riccardo
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Routledge Handbook of Bounded Rationality (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Viale, Riccardo
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The Routledge Handbook of Bounded Rationality draws together an international team of leading experts to survey the recent literature and latest developments regarding Herbert Simon's renowned theory of bounded rationality.
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The Routledge Handbook of Bounded Rationality draws together an international team of leading experts to survey the recent literature and latest developments regarding Herbert Simon's renowned theory of bounded rationality.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 680
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Dezember 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317330806
- Artikelnr.: 60094799
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 680
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Dezember 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317330806
- Artikelnr.: 60094799
Riccardo Viale is Full Professor of Cognitive Economics and Behavioural Sciences in the Department of Economics at the University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy. He is also the founder and General Secretary of the Herbert Simon Society.
1. Why bounded rationality? 2. What is bounded rationality? PART I
Naturalizing bounded rationality 3. Towards a critical naturalism about
bounded rationality 4. Bounded rationality: the two cultures 5. Seeking
rationality: $500 bills and perceptual obviousness 6. Bounded rationality,
distributed cognition, and the computational modeling of complex systems 7.
Bounded rationality and problem solving: the interpretative function of
thought 8. Simon's legacies for mathematics educators 9. Bounded knowledge
PART II Cognitive misery and mental dualism 10. Bounded rationality,
reasoning and dual processing 11. Why humans are cognitive misers and what
it means for the Great Rationality Debate 12. Bounded rationality and dual
systems 13. Models and rational deductions 14. Patterns of defeasible
inference in causal diagnostic judgment 15. Attribute-based choice PART III
Occam's razor: mental monism and ecological rationality 16. Bounded reason
in a social world 17. Rationality without optimality: bounded and
ecological rationality from a Marrian perspective 18. The winds of change:
the Sioux, Silicon Valley, society, and simple heuristics 19. Ecological
rationality: bounded rationality in an evolutionary light 20. Mapping
heuristics and prospect theory: a study of theory integration 21. Bounded
rationality for artificial intelligence 22. Psychopathological
irrationality and bounded rationality: why is autism economically rational?
PART IV Embodied bounded rationality 23. Embodied bounded rationality 24.
Extending the bounded rationality framework: bounded-resource models in
biology 25. How rationality is bounded by the brain 26. Building a new
rationality from the new cognitive neuroscience PART V Homo Oeconomicus
Bundatus 27. Modeling bounded rationality in economic theory: four examples
28. Bounded rationality, satisficing and the evolution of economic thought:
diverse concepts 29. Beyond economists' armchairs: the rise of procedural
economics 30. Bounded rationality and expectations in economics 31. Less is
more for Bayesians, too 32. Bounded rationality as the cognitive basis for
evolutionary economics 33. Beyond "bounded rationality": behaviours and
learning in complex evolving worlds PART VI Cognitive organization 34.
Bounded rationality and organizational decision making 35. Attention and
organizations 36. The bounded rationality of groups and teams 37. Cognitive
biases and debiasing in intelligence analysis PART VII Behavioral public
policies: nudging and boosting 38. "Better off, as judged by themselves":
bounded rationality and nudging 39. An alternative behavioural public
policy 40. Against nudging: Simon-inspired behavioral law and economics
founded on ecological rationality 41. Bounded rationality in political
science 42. Layering, expanding, and visualizing: lessons learned from
three "process boosts" in action 43. Cognitive and affective consequences
of information and choice overload 44. How much choice is "good enough"?:
moderators of information and choice overload
Naturalizing bounded rationality 3. Towards a critical naturalism about
bounded rationality 4. Bounded rationality: the two cultures 5. Seeking
rationality: $500 bills and perceptual obviousness 6. Bounded rationality,
distributed cognition, and the computational modeling of complex systems 7.
Bounded rationality and problem solving: the interpretative function of
thought 8. Simon's legacies for mathematics educators 9. Bounded knowledge
PART II Cognitive misery and mental dualism 10. Bounded rationality,
reasoning and dual processing 11. Why humans are cognitive misers and what
it means for the Great Rationality Debate 12. Bounded rationality and dual
systems 13. Models and rational deductions 14. Patterns of defeasible
inference in causal diagnostic judgment 15. Attribute-based choice PART III
Occam's razor: mental monism and ecological rationality 16. Bounded reason
in a social world 17. Rationality without optimality: bounded and
ecological rationality from a Marrian perspective 18. The winds of change:
the Sioux, Silicon Valley, society, and simple heuristics 19. Ecological
rationality: bounded rationality in an evolutionary light 20. Mapping
heuristics and prospect theory: a study of theory integration 21. Bounded
rationality for artificial intelligence 22. Psychopathological
irrationality and bounded rationality: why is autism economically rational?
PART IV Embodied bounded rationality 23. Embodied bounded rationality 24.
Extending the bounded rationality framework: bounded-resource models in
biology 25. How rationality is bounded by the brain 26. Building a new
rationality from the new cognitive neuroscience PART V Homo Oeconomicus
Bundatus 27. Modeling bounded rationality in economic theory: four examples
28. Bounded rationality, satisficing and the evolution of economic thought:
diverse concepts 29. Beyond economists' armchairs: the rise of procedural
economics 30. Bounded rationality and expectations in economics 31. Less is
more for Bayesians, too 32. Bounded rationality as the cognitive basis for
evolutionary economics 33. Beyond "bounded rationality": behaviours and
learning in complex evolving worlds PART VI Cognitive organization 34.
Bounded rationality and organizational decision making 35. Attention and
organizations 36. The bounded rationality of groups and teams 37. Cognitive
biases and debiasing in intelligence analysis PART VII Behavioral public
policies: nudging and boosting 38. "Better off, as judged by themselves":
bounded rationality and nudging 39. An alternative behavioural public
policy 40. Against nudging: Simon-inspired behavioral law and economics
founded on ecological rationality 41. Bounded rationality in political
science 42. Layering, expanding, and visualizing: lessons learned from
three "process boosts" in action 43. Cognitive and affective consequences
of information and choice overload 44. How much choice is "good enough"?:
moderators of information and choice overload
1. Why bounded rationality? 2. What is bounded rationality? PART I
Naturalizing bounded rationality 3. Towards a critical naturalism about
bounded rationality 4. Bounded rationality: the two cultures 5. Seeking
rationality: $500 bills and perceptual obviousness 6. Bounded rationality,
distributed cognition, and the computational modeling of complex systems 7.
Bounded rationality and problem solving: the interpretative function of
thought 8. Simon's legacies for mathematics educators 9. Bounded knowledge
PART II Cognitive misery and mental dualism 10. Bounded rationality,
reasoning and dual processing 11. Why humans are cognitive misers and what
it means for the Great Rationality Debate 12. Bounded rationality and dual
systems 13. Models and rational deductions 14. Patterns of defeasible
inference in causal diagnostic judgment 15. Attribute-based choice PART III
Occam's razor: mental monism and ecological rationality 16. Bounded reason
in a social world 17. Rationality without optimality: bounded and
ecological rationality from a Marrian perspective 18. The winds of change:
the Sioux, Silicon Valley, society, and simple heuristics 19. Ecological
rationality: bounded rationality in an evolutionary light 20. Mapping
heuristics and prospect theory: a study of theory integration 21. Bounded
rationality for artificial intelligence 22. Psychopathological
irrationality and bounded rationality: why is autism economically rational?
PART IV Embodied bounded rationality 23. Embodied bounded rationality 24.
Extending the bounded rationality framework: bounded-resource models in
biology 25. How rationality is bounded by the brain 26. Building a new
rationality from the new cognitive neuroscience PART V Homo Oeconomicus
Bundatus 27. Modeling bounded rationality in economic theory: four examples
28. Bounded rationality, satisficing and the evolution of economic thought:
diverse concepts 29. Beyond economists' armchairs: the rise of procedural
economics 30. Bounded rationality and expectations in economics 31. Less is
more for Bayesians, too 32. Bounded rationality as the cognitive basis for
evolutionary economics 33. Beyond "bounded rationality": behaviours and
learning in complex evolving worlds PART VI Cognitive organization 34.
Bounded rationality and organizational decision making 35. Attention and
organizations 36. The bounded rationality of groups and teams 37. Cognitive
biases and debiasing in intelligence analysis PART VII Behavioral public
policies: nudging and boosting 38. "Better off, as judged by themselves":
bounded rationality and nudging 39. An alternative behavioural public
policy 40. Against nudging: Simon-inspired behavioral law and economics
founded on ecological rationality 41. Bounded rationality in political
science 42. Layering, expanding, and visualizing: lessons learned from
three "process boosts" in action 43. Cognitive and affective consequences
of information and choice overload 44. How much choice is "good enough"?:
moderators of information and choice overload
Naturalizing bounded rationality 3. Towards a critical naturalism about
bounded rationality 4. Bounded rationality: the two cultures 5. Seeking
rationality: $500 bills and perceptual obviousness 6. Bounded rationality,
distributed cognition, and the computational modeling of complex systems 7.
Bounded rationality and problem solving: the interpretative function of
thought 8. Simon's legacies for mathematics educators 9. Bounded knowledge
PART II Cognitive misery and mental dualism 10. Bounded rationality,
reasoning and dual processing 11. Why humans are cognitive misers and what
it means for the Great Rationality Debate 12. Bounded rationality and dual
systems 13. Models and rational deductions 14. Patterns of defeasible
inference in causal diagnostic judgment 15. Attribute-based choice PART III
Occam's razor: mental monism and ecological rationality 16. Bounded reason
in a social world 17. Rationality without optimality: bounded and
ecological rationality from a Marrian perspective 18. The winds of change:
the Sioux, Silicon Valley, society, and simple heuristics 19. Ecological
rationality: bounded rationality in an evolutionary light 20. Mapping
heuristics and prospect theory: a study of theory integration 21. Bounded
rationality for artificial intelligence 22. Psychopathological
irrationality and bounded rationality: why is autism economically rational?
PART IV Embodied bounded rationality 23. Embodied bounded rationality 24.
Extending the bounded rationality framework: bounded-resource models in
biology 25. How rationality is bounded by the brain 26. Building a new
rationality from the new cognitive neuroscience PART V Homo Oeconomicus
Bundatus 27. Modeling bounded rationality in economic theory: four examples
28. Bounded rationality, satisficing and the evolution of economic thought:
diverse concepts 29. Beyond economists' armchairs: the rise of procedural
economics 30. Bounded rationality and expectations in economics 31. Less is
more for Bayesians, too 32. Bounded rationality as the cognitive basis for
evolutionary economics 33. Beyond "bounded rationality": behaviours and
learning in complex evolving worlds PART VI Cognitive organization 34.
Bounded rationality and organizational decision making 35. Attention and
organizations 36. The bounded rationality of groups and teams 37. Cognitive
biases and debiasing in intelligence analysis PART VII Behavioral public
policies: nudging and boosting 38. "Better off, as judged by themselves":
bounded rationality and nudging 39. An alternative behavioural public
policy 40. Against nudging: Simon-inspired behavioral law and economics
founded on ecological rationality 41. Bounded rationality in political
science 42. Layering, expanding, and visualizing: lessons learned from
three "process boosts" in action 43. Cognitive and affective consequences
of information and choice overload 44. How much choice is "good enough"?:
moderators of information and choice overload