Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Series Introduction
- Introduction
- 1 Is Experimental Economics Living Up to Its Promise?
- 2 The Relationship Between Economic Theory and Experiments
- 3 On the Relationship Between Economic Theory and Experiments
- 4 Enhanced Choice Experiments
- 5 Intelligent Design: The Relationship Between Economic Theory and Experiments: Treatment-driven Experiments
- 6 The Interplay Between Theory and Experiments
- 7 Maxims for Experimenters
- 8 What is an Economic Theory That Can Inform Experiments?
- 9 The 1-800 Critique, Counterexamples, and the Future of Behavioral Economics
- 10 A General Model for Experimental Inquiry in Economics and Social Psychology
- 11 Psychology and Economics: Areas of Convergence and Difference
- 12 The Hammer and the Screwdriver
- 13 Discussion of “ Psychology and Economics: Areas of Convergence and Difference”
- Reprint: What Do Laboratory Experiments Measuring Social Preferences Reveal About the Real World?
- 14 The Promise and Success of Lab–Field Generalizability in Experimental Economics: A Critical Reply to Levitt and List
- 15 Theory, Experimental Design, and Econometrics Are Complementary (And So Are Lab and Field Experiments)
- 16 Laboratory Experiments: The Lab in Relationship to Field Experiments, Field Data, and Economic Theory
- 17 Laboratory Experiments: Professionals Versus Students
- 18 The External Validity of Laboratory Experiments: The Misleading Emphasis on Quantitative Effects
- 19 The Lab and the Field: Empirical and Experimental Economics
- 20 On the Generalizability of Experimental Results in Economics
- Index
(p.ix) Acknowledgments
(p.ix) Acknowledgments
- Source:
- Handbook of Experimental Economic Methodology
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
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- Title Pages
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Series Introduction
- Introduction
- 1 Is Experimental Economics Living Up to Its Promise?
- 2 The Relationship Between Economic Theory and Experiments
- 3 On the Relationship Between Economic Theory and Experiments
- 4 Enhanced Choice Experiments
- 5 Intelligent Design: The Relationship Between Economic Theory and Experiments: Treatment-driven Experiments
- 6 The Interplay Between Theory and Experiments
- 7 Maxims for Experimenters
- 8 What is an Economic Theory That Can Inform Experiments?
- 9 The 1-800 Critique, Counterexamples, and the Future of Behavioral Economics
- 10 A General Model for Experimental Inquiry in Economics and Social Psychology
- 11 Psychology and Economics: Areas of Convergence and Difference
- 12 The Hammer and the Screwdriver
- 13 Discussion of “ Psychology and Economics: Areas of Convergence and Difference”
- Reprint: What Do Laboratory Experiments Measuring Social Preferences Reveal About the Real World?
- 14 The Promise and Success of Lab–Field Generalizability in Experimental Economics: A Critical Reply to Levitt and List
- 15 Theory, Experimental Design, and Econometrics Are Complementary (And So Are Lab and Field Experiments)
- 16 Laboratory Experiments: The Lab in Relationship to Field Experiments, Field Data, and Economic Theory
- 17 Laboratory Experiments: Professionals Versus Students
- 18 The External Validity of Laboratory Experiments: The Misleading Emphasis on Quantitative Effects
- 19 The Lab and the Field: Empirical and Experimental Economics
- 20 On the Generalizability of Experimental Results in Economics
- Index