Experimental and behavorial economics [electornic resources] / edited by John Morgan.
- 其他作者:
- 出版: Bingley, U.K. : Emerald 2005.
- 叢書名: Advances in applied microeconomics ,v. 13
- 主題: Business & Economics--Economics , Economics , Managerial economics , Microeconomics
- ISBN: 9781849503372
- URL:
Connect to Emerald resource
Connect to Emerald resource
- 一般註:99年度中區共購共享電子書 Gain and loss ultimatums / Nancy Buchan, Rachel Croson, Eric Johnson, George Wu -- Do liberals play nice? The effects of Party and political ideology in public goods and trust games / Lisa R. Anderson, JenniferM. Mellor, Jeffrey Milyo -- An economics wind tunnel : the science of business engineering / Kay-Yut Chen -- Experiments on auction valuationand endogenous entry / Richard Engelbrecht-Wiggans, Elena Katok -- Behavioral aspects of learning in social networks : an experimental study /Syngjoo Choi, Douglas Gale, Shachar Kariv -- Communication and efficiency in coordination game experiments / Anthony Burton, Graham Loomes, Martin Sefton -- Trust but verify : monitoring in interdependent relationships / Maurice E. Schweitzer, Teck H. Ho
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讀者標籤:
- 系統號: 000218714 | 機讀編目格式
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摘要註
As demand to substantiate predictions from economic theory with causal empirical evidence increases, economists have more and more turned towards controlled laboratory experiments. As this field has blossomed it has provided evidence confirming some of the key predictions of economic theory and exposed some of the weaker theoretical predictions. Thishas resulted in a symbiotic relationship where experimental evidence not only is used to support theoretical conclusions but has pointed economists into bold and exciting new areas of investigation. In this volume, I am proud to present someof the most stimulating work in this field. The first three chapters provide a fresh look at some of the classical issues in experimental economics. These papers provide novel insights into psychology in ultimatum games, the impact of social interaction on learning, and communication in coordination games. The next two chapters look at how experiments can illuminate our understanding of what determines trust. These papers examine how monitoring within an organization influences trust, as well as examining how individual political ideologies are related to an individuals level of trust. The final two chapters show how experiments can be fruitfully applied to vertical relationships and auction design, two of the most important areas in contemporary contract theory




