Journal of the Economic Science Association

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When the eyes say buy: visual fixations during hypothetical consumer choice improve prediction of actual purchases
Journal of the Economic Science Association - Tập 5 Số 1 - Trang 112-122 - 2019
Taisuke Imai, Min Jeong Kang, Colin F. Camerer
JUST VENMO ME: Does form of payment affect risk taking and intertemporal choice?
Journal of the Economic Science Association - Tập 8 - Trang 16-33 - 2022
Jessica B. Hoel, Prachi Jain, Bridget Galaty
We use an experiment to examine whether form of payment (cash or mobile money) affects estimates of intertemporal choice and risk taking. We find that form of payment does not affect temporal discounting and risk taking. Given that participants prefer payment via mobile money, the results suggest that there are minimal concerns with using mobile money to pay participants in experimental studies.
A method to estimate mean lying rates and their full distribution
Journal of the Economic Science Association - - 2018
Ellen Garbarino, Robert Slonim, Marie Claire Villeval
Symmetric experimental designs: conditions for equivalence of panel data estimators
Journal of the Economic Science Association - Tập 2 Số 1 - Trang 85-95 - 2016
Ronald L. Oaxaca, David L. Dickinson
Fair weather avoidance: unpacking the costs and benefits of “Avoiding the Ask”
Journal of the Economic Science Association - Tập 1 Số 1 - Trang 8-14 - 2015
Hannah Trachtman, Andrew Steinkruger, Mackenzie Wood, Adam Wooster, James Andreoni, James J. Murphy, Justin M. Rao
Adding household surveys to the behavioral economics toolbox: insights from the SOEP innovation sample
Journal of the Economic Science Association - - Trang 1-16 - 2023
Urs Fischbacher, Levent Neyse, David Richter, Carsten Schröder
While laboratory and field experiments are the major items in the toolbox of behavioral economists, household panel studies can complement them and expand their research potential. We introduce the German Socio-Economic Panel’s Innovation Sample (SOEP-IS), which offers researchers detailed panel data and the possibility to collect personalized experimental and survey data for free. We discuss what SOEP-IS can offer to behavioral economists and illustrate a set of design ideas with examples. Although we build our discussion on SOEP-IS, our purpose is to provide a guide that can be generalized to other household panel studies as well.
Hot versus cold behavior in centipede games
Journal of the Economic Science Association - Tập 6 - Trang 226-238 - 2020
Bernardo García-Pola, Nagore Iriberri, Jaromír Kovářík
There is a long-standing unresolved debate in game theory and experimental economics regarding the behavioral equivalence of the direct-response method (hot play) and the strategy method (cold play). Using a unified experimental framework, we compare behavior elicited via both methods in four different Centipede Games that differ in their incentives to take or pass, in the evolution of those incentives over decision nodes, and in the asymmetry of the incentives across the two player roles. Out of the four Centipede Games, we find that both methods yield statistically different behavior in two of them, while in the remaining two we cannot reject the same behavior across the hot and cold methods. Whenever the behavior diverges, hot play consistently makes individuals stop earlier. These findings should shift the question from whether both methods are generically behaviorally equivalent to under which conditions they are (not) and why.
Guilt averse or reciprocal? Looking at behavioral motivations in the trust game
Journal of the Economic Science Association - Tập 4 - Trang 1-14 - 2018
Yola Engler, Rudolf Kerschbamer, Lionel Page
For the trust game, recent models of belief-dependent motivations make opposite predictions regarding the correlation between back transfers and second-order beliefs of the trustor: while reciprocity models predict a negative correlation, guilt-aversion models predict a positive one. This paper tests the hypothesis that the inconclusive results in the previous studies investigating the reaction of trustees to their beliefs are due to the fact that reciprocity and guilt aversion are behaviorally relevant for different subgroups and that their impact cancels out in the aggregate. We find little evidence in support of this hypothesis and conclude that type heterogeneity is unlikely to explain previous results.
The digit ratio (2D:4D) and economic preferences: no robust associations in a sample of 330 women
Journal of the Economic Science Association - - 2019
Elle Parslow, Eva Ranehill, Niklas Zethraeus, Liselott Blomberg, Bo von Schoultz, Angelica Lindén Hirschberg, Magnus Johannesson, Anna Dreber
Abstract Many studies report on the association between 2D:4D, a putative marker for prenatal testosterone exposure, and economic preferences. However, most of these studies have limited sample sizes and test multiple hypotheses (without preregistration). In this study we mainly replicate the common specifications found in the literature for the association between the 2D:4D ratio and risk taking, the willingness to compete, and dictator game giving separately. In a sample of 330 women we find no robust associations between any of these economic preferences and 2D:4D. We find no evidence of a statistically significant relation for 16 of the 18 total regressions we run. The two regression specifications which are statistically significant have not previously been reported and the associations are not in the expected direction, and therefore they are unlikely to represent a real effect.
Experimental guidance for eliciting beliefs with the Stochastic Becker–DeGroot–Marschak mechanism
Journal of the Economic Science Association - Tập 4 Số 1 - Trang 15-28 - 2018
Ingrid Burfurd, Tom Wilkening
Tổng số: 120   
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