Results 261 to 270 of about 87,126 (304)
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2006 IEEE International Test Conference, 2006
This paper raises the issue of why test engineers often do not act in ways which test economics says are optimal. The new field of behavioral economics explains why people often do not act in their economic self interest, and the authors propose that some of the same principles, applied to testing, can explain some of the behavior of test engineers ...
Scott Davidson 0001 +2 more
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This paper raises the issue of why test engineers often do not act in ways which test economics says are optimal. The new field of behavioral economics explains why people often do not act in their economic self interest, and the authors propose that some of the same principles, applied to testing, can explain some of the behavior of test engineers ...
Scott Davidson 0001 +2 more
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2014
This book presents a history of behavioral economics. The recurring theme is that behavioral economics reflects and contributes to a fundamental reorientation of the epistemological foundations upon which economics had been based since the days of Smith, Ricardo, and Mill.
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This book presents a history of behavioral economics. The recurring theme is that behavioral economics reflects and contributes to a fundamental reorientation of the epistemological foundations upon which economics had been based since the days of Smith, Ricardo, and Mill.
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The Behavioral Economics of Behavioral Law & Economics
Review of Behavioral Economics, 2018Behavioral Law & Economics (BLE) has loudly proclaimed its victory over traditional law & economics methodologies. Nowhere has this proclamation been so loud or self-certain as with respect to claims about consumer financial decision-making.
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SSRN Electronic Journal, 2005
Abstract This paper is concerned with defining the characteristics of behavioral economics (BE), identifying the different strands of BE, and carefully comparing BE to mainstream economics (ME). The job of comparison is first to identify the key dimensions (related to its approach to science) along which BE, and its different strands, differs from ME,
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Abstract This paper is concerned with defining the characteristics of behavioral economics (BE), identifying the different strands of BE, and carefully comparing BE to mainstream economics (ME). The job of comparison is first to identify the key dimensions (related to its approach to science) along which BE, and its different strands, differs from ME,
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The Behavioral Economics of Violence
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2004Abstract: From the viewpoint of teleological behaviorism the first question to ask in attempting to understand any behavior, including violent behavior, is: What are its contingencies of reward and punishment? Or, to put the question in economic terms: What are the short‐term and long‐term costs and benefits that such behavior entails?
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Behavioral economics and the economics of Keynes
The Journal of Socio-Economics, 2009The aim of this paper is two-fold: it first evaluates some of the psychological insights offered by Keynes in his economic theories, and secondly it weighs up these insights in the light of recent research in behavioral and experimental economics. We found that many of the psychological ideas set forth by Keynes in his economic works, especially in The
Wesley Pech, Marcelo Milan
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The Behavioral Economics of Effort
Although response effort is considered a dimension of the cost to obtain reinforcement, little research has examined the economic impact of effort on demand for food. The goal of the present study was to explore the relationship between effort and demand.openaire +1 more source
From economic behavior to behavioral economics: The behavioral uprising in economics
Journal of Behavioral Economics, 1984Benjamin Gilad +2 more
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The Psychology and the Economics of Economic Behavior
Contemporary Psychology: A Journal of Reviews, 1991Originally published in Contemporary Psychology: APA Review of Books, 1991, Vol 36(5), 416. Reviews the book, Advances in Behavioral Economics, Vol. 2 edited by Leonard Green and John H. Kagel (1990). The editors have created a spirited contribution to the potentially important interface between economics and psychology.
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Behavioral labor economics [PDF]
Behavioral economics has in recent decades emerged as a prominent set of methodological developments that have attracted considerable attention both within and outside the economics profession. The time is therefore auspicious to assess behavioral contributions to particular subfields of economics such as labor economics.
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