基本説明
The first edited reference to examine the science behind neuroeconomics, including how it influences human behavior and societal decision making from a behavioral economics point of view.
Full Description
Neuroeconomics is a new highly promising approach to understanding the neurobiology of decision making and how it affects cognitive social interactions between humans and societies/economies. This book is the first edited reference to examine the science behind neuroeconomics, including how it influences human behavior and societal decision making from a behavioral economics point of view. Presenting a truly interdisciplinary approach, Neuroeconomics presents research from neuroscience, psychology, and behavioral economics, and includes chapters by all the major figures in the field, including two Economics Nobel laureates.
Contents
Editor in ChiefAssociate Editors: Colin Camerer, CalTechErnst Fehr, University of ZurichRuss Poldrak, UCLAWolfram Schultz: Dopamine and DecisionCamillo Padua-Schioppa and John Assad: Coding Reward Value in the Orbitofrontal CortexRuss Poldrak and Craig Fox: Prospect Theory, Decision and RiskBrian Knutson and Maricio Delgado: Neural Representations of ValueElke Weber: Neural Representations of Risk and Risk AversionDavid Laibson: Decisions in Time: Temporal DiscountingGeorge Loewenstein and Jon Cohen: Multiple-Selves Approaches to the Study of DecisionPaul Glimcher: A Generalized Theory of Neural DecisionElizabeth Phelps: Fear, Emotion and DecisionMichael Platt: The Neurobiology of Social Decision in Non-Human PrimatesRead Montague: 2-person games and decisionKevin McCabe and Vernon Smith: Cooperation and Social Decision MakingErnst Fehr: Social Decision making, Trust and Inequity AversionAldo Rustichini and Andrew Caplin: Axiomatic Approaches to NeuroeconomicsColin Camerer: Games and Decision, a Neurocognitive Approach