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Applying experimental methods has become one of the most powerful
and versatile ways to obtain economic insights, and experimental
economics has especially supported the development of behavioral
economics. The Art of Experimental Economics identifies and reviews
20 of the most important papers to have been published in
experimental economics in order to highlight the power and methods
of this area, and provides many examples of findings in behavioral
economics that have extended knowledge in the economics discipline
as a whole. Chosen through a combination of citations,
recommendations by scholars in the field, and voting by members of
leading societies, the 20 papers under review - some by Nobel
prize-winning economists - run the full gamut of experimental
economics from theoretical expositions to applications
demonstrating experimental economics in action. Also written by a
leading experimental economist, each chapter provides a brief
summary of the paper, makes the case for why that paper is one of
the top 20 in the field, discusses the use made of the experimental
method, and considers related work to provide context for each
paper. These reviews quickly expose readers to the breadth of
application possibilities and the methodological issues, leaving
them with a firm understanding of the legacy of the papers'
contributions. This text provides a survey of some of the very best
research in experimental and behavioral economics and is a valuable
resource for scholars and economics instructors, students seeking
to develop capability in applying experimental methods, and
economics researchers who wish to further explore the experimental
approach.
Applying experimental methods has become one of the most powerful
and versatile ways to obtain economic insights, and experimental
economics has especially supported the development of behavioral
economics. The Art of Experimental Economics identifies and reviews
20 of the most important papers to have been published in
experimental economics in order to highlight the power and methods
of this area, and provides many examples of findings in behavioral
economics that have extended knowledge in the economics discipline
as a whole. Chosen through a combination of citations,
recommendations by scholars in the field, and voting by members of
leading societies, the 20 papers under review - some by Nobel
prize-winning economists - run the full gamut of experimental
economics from theoretical expositions to applications
demonstrating experimental economics in action. Also written by a
leading experimental economist, each chapter provides a brief
summary of the paper, makes the case for why that paper is one of
the top 20 in the field, discusses the use made of the experimental
method, and considers related work to provide context for each
paper. These reviews quickly expose readers to the breadth of
application possibilities and the methodological issues, leaving
them with a firm understanding of the legacy of the papers'
contributions. This text provides a survey of some of the very best
research in experimental and behavioral economics and is a valuable
resource for scholars and economics instructors, students seeking
to develop capability in applying experimental methods, and
economics researchers who wish to further explore the experimental
approach.
Trust and Reciprocity explores the contributions of behavioral
economics, laboratory experiments, and field experiments to our
understanding of the economics of trust, trustworthiness, and
reciprocal behavior. The monograph begins with a general summary
presenting the evolution of trust and reciprocity, departing from
pure self-interest in the understanding of ""homo economicus"".
Next, an exploration of the games and academic contributions that
isolate preferences (including social preferences, altruism,
inequality aversion, and guilt aversion) from pledges of trust and
from reciprocal behavior provides a foundation for behavior that is
often misidentified as trust or conditional upon the actions of
another. The monograph concludes with a summary of theory and
experiments that have identified trust and reciprocity in economics
and human behavior.
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