04206cam a2200409Ii 45000010014000000080041000140200034000550200034000890200034001230200030001570240032001870350021002190400026002400500023002660720026002890720026003150820017003412450139003582500019004972640076005162640011005923000054006033360021006573370023006783380032007015052436007335200272031696500038034417000028034797000036035077000027035437000031035707000031036017100024036327760054036568560086037109781315743479180706s20162017fluab ob 001 0 eng d a9781315743479q(e-book : PDF) a9781317589228q(e-book: Mobi) a9781317589235q(e-book: ePub) z9781138821149q(hardback)7 a10.4324/9781315743479 2doi a(OCoLC)956521364 aFlBoTFGcFlBoTFGerda 4aHB74.P8bR688 2016 7aBUSx000000 2bisacsh 7aBUSx069030 2bisacsh04a330.01/922300aRoutledge handbook of behavioral economics /cedited by Roger Frantz, Shu-Heng Chen, Kurt Dopfer, Floris Heukelom and Shabnam Mousavi. aFirst edition. 1aBoca Raton, FL :bRoutledge, an imprint of Taylor and Francis,c[2016]. 4c©2017 a1 online resource (434 pages) :b25 illustrations atext2rdacontent acomputer2rdamedia aonline resource2rdacarrier00tpart Part I Scientists in the field of behavioral economics -- tchapter 1 The evolution of behavioural economics /rPeter E. Earl -- tchapter 2 George Katona: a founder of behavioral economics /rRichard Curtin -- tchapter 3 Ken Boulding: the image as a precursor to framing? /rStefan Kesting -- tchapter 4 Harvey Leibenstein: a first generation behavioral economist /rRoger Frantz -- tchapter 5 Herbert Simon’s behavioral economics /rEsther-Mirjam Sent -- tchapter 6 Reinhard Selten, the dualist /rRosemarie Nagel -- tchapter 7 Gerd Gigerenzer and Vernon Smith: ecological rationality of heuristics in psychology and economics /rShabnam Mousavi -- tchapter 8 Richard Thaler’s behavioral economics /rFloris Heukelom -- tchapter 9 Daniel Kahneman and the behavioral economics of cognitive mistakes /rFloris Heukelom -- tchapter 10 George Katona’s contributions to the start of behavioral economics /rHamid Hosseini -- tchapter 11 Behavioural rules: Veblen, Nelson–Winter, Ostrom and beyond /rGeorg Blind -- tchapter 12 Generating meso behaviour /rManuel Scholz-Wa¨ckerle -- tchapter 13 Schumpeter, Kirzner, Knight, Simon, and others: behavioral economics and entrepreneurship /rThomas Grebel and Michael Stu¨tzer -- tchapter 14 A bounded rationality assessment of the new behavioral economics /rMorris Altman -- tpart Part II Specific domains of behavioral economics -- tchapter 15 Behaviorally informed regulation, part 1 /rCass R. Sunstein -- tchapter 16 Behaviorally informed regulation, part 2 /rCass R. Sunstein -- tchapter 17 Ignorance: literary light on decision’s dark corner /rDevjani Roy -- tchapter 18 Smart societies /rShu-Heng Chen -- tchapter 19 Behavioural macroeconomics: time, optimism and animal spirits /rMichelle Baddeley -- tchapter 20 Rethinking behavioral economics through fast-and-frugal heuristics /rShabnam Mousavi -- tchapter 21 Computational behavioral economics /rShu-Heng Chen -- tchapter 22 Emotions in economy /rNina Bandelj -- tchapter 23 Morality as a variable constraint on economic behavior /rDaniel Friedman -- tchapter 24 Behavioral political economy /rGigi Foster -- tchapter 25 Behavioural labor economics /rXianghong Wang -- tchapter 26 Behavioural education economics /rSean Leaver -- tchapter 27 Behavioral innovation economics /rJason Potts -- tchapter 28 Economic behaviour and agent-based modelling /rMatthias Mueller.3 aThere is no doubt that behavioral economics is becoming a dominant lens through which we think about economics. Behavioral economics is not a single school of thought but representative of a range of approaches, and uniquely, this volume presents an overview of them. 0aEconomicsxPsychological aspects.1 aFrantz, Roger,eeditor.1 aChen, Shu-Heng,d1959-eeditor.1 aDopfer, Kurt,eeditor.1 aHeukelom, Floris,eeditor.1 aMousavi, Shabnam,eeditor.2 aTaylor and Francis.08iPrint version: z9781138821149w(DLC) 201600497240uhttps://www.routledgehandbooks.com/doi/10.4324/9781315743479zClick here to view.