The handbook of experimental economics
Material type:
TextPublication details: New Jersey Princeton University Press 1995Description: xvi, 721 pISBN: - 9780691058979
- 330.0724 KAG
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Indian Institute of Management LRC General Stacks | Public Policy & General Management | 330.0724 KAG (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 009109 |
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| 330.072 BOW The art and practice of economics research: lessons from leading minds | 330.072 OTS Next-generation of empirical research in economics | 330.0724 JAC Experimental economics: method and applications | 330.0724 KAG The handbook of experimental economics | 330.0724 SAK Games, decisions, and markets | 330.09 BEA Economics as science: a critical history of economic thought | 330.09 HUN History of economic thought: a critical perspective |
This book, which comprises eight chapters, presents a comprehensive critical survey of the results and methods of laboratory experiments in economics. The first chapter provides an introduction to experimental economics as a whole, with the remaining chapters providing surveys by leading practitioners in areas of economics that have seen a concentration of experiments: public goods, coordination problems, bargaining, industrial organization, asset markets, auctions, and individual decision making.
The work aims both to help specialists set an agenda for future research and to provide nonspecialists with a critical review of work completed to date. Its focus is on elucidating the role of experimental studies as a progressive research tool so that wherever possible, emphasis is on series of experiments that build on one another. The contributors to the volume—Colin Camerer, Charles A. Holt, John H. Kagel, John O. Ledyard, Jack Ochs, Alvin E. Roth, and Shyam Sunder—adopt a particular methodological point of view: the way to learn how to design and conduct experiments is to consider how good experiments grow organically out of the issues and hypotheses they are designed to investigate.
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