 | Professor of Economics, George Mason University Verified email at gmu.edu Cited by 2530 |
K McCabe,
D Houser, L Ryan… - Proceedings of the …, 2001 - National Acad Sciences
Abstract Cooperation between individuals requires the ability to infer each other's mental
states to form shared expectations over mutual gains and make cooperative choices that
realize these gains. From evidence that the ability for mental state attribution involves the ...
D Houser… - Journal of Economics & Management …, 2006 - Wiley Online Library
1. We thank Sam Allen for research assistance with the data. Andrew Ching and Diego
Moreno provided useful thoughts on early drafts of this paper. We are grateful to two
anonymous referees and the coeditor for helpful comments.
E Xiao… - … of the National Academy of Sciences of …, 2005 - National Acad Sciences
Abstract Evolutionary theory reveals that punishment is effective in promoting cooperation
and maintaining social norms. Although it is accepted that emotions are connected to
punishment decisions, there remains substantial debate over why humans use costly ...
D Houser… - The American Economic Review, 2002 - JSTOR
There has been substantial recent interest in determining why there is cooperation in public
goods experiments even in environments that provide all subjects with the incentive to free
ride (see eg, John O. Ledyard, 1995). Theories used to explain such cooperation ...
D Houser… - University of Arizona (Tucson), …, 2000 - mason.gmu.edu
Abstract Employing a procedure suggested by a simple theoretical model of auctions in
which bidders and sellers have observable and heterogenous reputations for default, we
examine the effect of reputation on price in a data set drawn from the online auction site ...
A Gunnthorsdottir,
D Houser… - Journal of Economic Behavior & …, 2007 - Elsevier
Novel voluntary contribution mechanism experiments are used to investigate how
individuals' experience (history) and cooperative disposition and interact. We find that a
subject's initial public contribution is a useful measure of cooperative disposition. History ...
D Houser, M Keane… - Econometrica, 2004 - Wiley Online Library
Different people may use different strategies, or decision rules, when solving complex
decision problems. We provide a new Bayesian procedure for drawing inferences about the
nature and number of decision rules present in a population, and use it to analyze the ...
R Kurzban… - European Journal of Personality, 2001 - Wiley Online Library
Abstract Research using the public goods game to examine behaviour in the context of
social dilemmas has repeatedly shown substantial individual differences in patterns of
contributions to the public good. We present here a new method specifically designed to ...
D Houser,
E Xiao, K McCabe… - Games and Economic Behavior, 2008 - Elsevier
People can become less cooperative when threatened with sanctions, and previous
research suggests both “intentions” and incentives underlie this effect. We report data from
an experiment aimed at determining the relative importance of intentions and incentives in ...
AC Miu, RM Heilman… - Biological psychology, 2008 - Elsevier
Using the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) and psychophysiological correlates of emotional
responses (ie, heart rate and skin conductance), we investigate the effects of trait anxiety
(TA) on decision-making. We find that high TA is associated with both impaired decision- ...
Long-Memoried Processes, Unit Roots, and Causal Inference in Political Science John
Freeman, University of Minnesota Daniel Houser, University of Minnesota Paul M. Kellstedt, Brown
University John T. Williams, Indiana University Theory: It has been argued that because ...
D Houser… - Public Choice, 2008 - Springer
Abstract Campaign advertising can provide benefits to constituencies when used to fund the
distribution of useful information, but voters can be harmed if candidates finance such
advertising by trading policy favors to special interests in exchange for contributions. We ...
D Houser… - Journal of Business and Economic Statistics, 2004 - ASA
We use laboratory experiments to investigate the effect that assuming rational expectations
has on structural inference in a dynamic discrete decision problem. Our design induces
preferences up to the subjective rate of time preference, leaving unrestricted both this ...
Abstract Sanctions are used ubiquitously to enforce obedience to social norms. However,
recent field studies and laboratory experiments have demonstrated that cooperation is
sometimes reduced when incentives meant to promote prosocial decisions are added to ...
JR Freeman… - American Journal of Political Science, 1998 - JSTOR
Theory: The need for the development and use of a concept of joint, political-economic
equilibrium is increasingly recognized by students of democracy and markets. Yet, to date,
no adequate theoretical and methodological synthesis of this kind has been produced. ...
RM Heilman, LG Crişan,
D Houser, M Miclea… - Emotion, 2010 - psycnet.apa.org
Abstract 1. It is well established that emotion plays a key role in human social and economic
decision making. The recent literature on emotion regulation (ER), however, highlights that
humans typically make efforts to control emotion experiences. This leaves open the ...
D Houser, D Schunk… - Journal of economic behavior & …, 2010 - Elsevier
The role of trust in promoting economic activity and societal development has received
considerable academic attention by social scientists. A popular way to measure trust at the
individual level is the so-called “investment game”(Berg et al., 1995). It has been widely ...
E Xiao… - University of Pennsylvania, 2007 - socionet.org
Abstract: Research in economics and psychology has established that informal sanctions,
particularly expressions of negative emotion, can enforce fair economic exchange. However,
scholars are only beginning to understand the reasons informal sanctions affect economic ...
E Xiao… - Journal of Economic Psychology, 2009 - Elsevier
Research in economics and psychology has established that informal non-monetary
sanctions, particularly expressions of negative emotion or disapproval, can enforce fair
economic exchange. Scholars, however, are only beginning to understand the reasons ...
D Houser… - … Center for Economic Science, Greg Mason …, 2003 - 129.3.20.41
Abstract: We design a novel sequential public goods experiment to study reciprocity, or
conditional cooperation. In contrast to the standard simultaneous contribution game, our
sequential design provides direct evidence on how subjects condition their own ...
D Houser… - Experimental Economics, 2011 - Springer
Abstract The role of natural language communication in economic exchange has been the
focus of substantial experimental analysis. Recently, scholars have taken the important step
of investigating whether certain types of communication (eg, promises) might affect ...
J Geweke,
D Houser… - A companion to theoretical …, 2001 - Wiley Online Library
Over the last decade econometric inference based on simulation techniques has become
increasingly common, particularly for latent variable models. The reason is that such models
often generate econometric objective functions that embed high-order integrals, and ...
D Houser… - Journal of Comparative Economics, 2001 - Elsevier
We develop a dynamic, stochastic, computable general equilibrium model of political
approval management and fiscal policy in order to analyze how political approval
management affects United States' Presidential and United Kingdom's parliamentary ...
D Houser, D Schunk… - 2006 - epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de
Abstract The relationship between trust and risk is a topic of enduring interest. Although
there are substantial differences between the ideas the terms express, many researchers
from different disciplines have pointed out that these two concepts become very closely ...
D Houser - Journal of econometrics, 2003 - Elsevier
This paper empirically implements a dynamic, stochastic model of life-cycle labor supply and
human capital investment. The model allows agents to be forward looking. But, in contrast to
prior literature in this area, it does not require that expectations be formed “rationally”. By ...
D Houser, A Bechara, M Keane, K McCabe… - Games and Economic …, 2005 - Elsevier
In many research contexts it is useful to group experimental subjects into behavioral “types.”
Usually, this is done by pre-specifying a set of candidate decision-making heuristics and
assigning each subject to a heuristic in that set. Such approaches might perform poorly ...
SF Brosnan,
D Houser, K Leimgruber… - Evolution and Human …, 2010 - Elsevier
Prosocial decisions may lead to unequal payoffs among group members. Although an
aversion to inequity has been found in empirical studies of both human and nonhuman
primates, the contexts previously studied typically do not involve a trade-off between ...
E Xiao… - Journal of Public Economics, 2011 - Elsevier
We report data from public goods games showing that privately-implemented punishment
reduces cooperation in relation to a baseline treatment without punishment. When that same
incentive is implemented publicly, however, cooperation is sustained at significantly ...
In the 1980s political scientists were introduced to vector autoregression (Sims, 1980). In the
years that followed, they used this method to evaluate competing theories (Goldstein and
Freeman, 1990, 199l; Freeman and Alt, 1994; Williams, 1990) and to test the validity of the ...
D Houser… - Journal of Economic Psychology, 2009 - Elsevier
Systematic differences in decision making between genders have been discovered in both
competitive and pro-social environments. These contexts, however, have been previously
studied in isolation while in naturally occurring settings pro-social and competitive ...
D Houser, S Vetter… - 2011 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: We present evidence from a laboratory experiment showing that individuals who
believe they were treated unfairly in an interaction with another person are more likely to
cheat in a subsequent unrelated game. Specifically, subjects first participated in a dictator ...
D Houser… - Experimental Business Research, 2005 - Springer
Late bidding in online auctions has attracted substantial theoretical and empirical attention.
This paper reports the results of a controlled field experiment on late bidding behavior. Pairs
of $50 gift certificates were auctioned simultaneously on Yahoo! Auctions, using a ...
A Gunnthorsdottir,
D Houser, K McCabe… - 2000 - Citeseer
It is well known that property rights can privatize incentives for the provision of goods that
provide public benefits. Unfortunately, it is often infeasible to implement a property rights
system which truly privatizes incentives by making benefits proportional to investments. 1 ...
AC Miu, M Miclea… - Neuroeconomics (Advances in …, 2008 - emeraldinsight.com
Purpose – This chapter focuses on individual differences in anxiety, by reviewing its
neurobiology, cognitive effects, with an emphasis on decision-making, and recent developments
in neuroeconomics. ... Methodology – A review and discussion of anxiety and decision- ...
JJ Bial,
D Houser… - Draft dated June, 2001 - Citeseer
We have benefited from comments by Doug Allen, Robert Fischman, Ron Johnson, Thomas
Lyon, John McGinnis, Gordon Tullock, and participants at the Conference of the International
Association for the Study of Common Property, Bloomington, June 2000 and at the ...
L Hao… - GMU Working Paper in Economics No. 10-12, 2010 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: The auction design literature makes clear that theoretically equivalent mechanisms
can perform very differently in practice. Though of equal importance, much less is known
about the empirical performance of theoretically equivalent mechanisms for belief ...
D Houser… - Journal of economic behavior & …, 2010 - econpapers.repec.org
By Daniel Houser and Erte Xiao; Understanding context effects.
D Houser, DH Reiley… - … manuscript, University of …, 2008 - msk.socionet.ru
Abstract: A long literature in psychology, as well as a more recent theory literature in
economics, suggests that prolonged exposure to a tempting stimulus can eventually lead
people to―succumb‖ to that temptation. Here we develop a model for decision under ...
Embodied brain activity leads to emergent computations that determine individual decisions.
In turn, individual decisions, in the form of messages sent to an institution, lead to emergent
computations that determine group-level outcomes. Computations can be understood in ...
D Houser, D Schunk… - Analyse & Kritik, 2007 - analyse-und-kritik.net
Abstract: For an economist, ultimate goals of neuroeconomic research include improving
economic policy analysis. One path toward this goal is to use neuroeconomic data to
advance economic theory, and productive efforts have been made towards that end. ...
D Houser - Unpublished manuscript, University of Arizona, 1998 - econ.arizona.edu
A substantial amount of recent empirical research has analyzed models of life-cycle labor
supply that include human capital. Such research has typically taken dogmatic stands on the
way people form expectations. In principle, however, inferences about human capital's ...
D Houser, K McCabe… - Journal of economic behavior & …, 2005 - Citeseer
Before addressing Joseph Henrich's evolutionary explanation for altruism, it is important to ask
whether the existing evidence taken in its entirety actually suggests that preferences are
non-selfish in the standard game-theoretic (myopic) sense. Our own research corrobo- ...
D Houser… - Economics Letters, 2010 - Elsevier
We report data from a laboratory experiment using dictator games to inform individual
preferences over punishment outcomes. We find that many people punish after receiving
disadvantageous outcomes, and those who do systematically prefer to use punishment to ...
[CITATION] Fairness, competition and gender: Evidence from German schoolchildren
D Houser… - 2007 - Unpublished
[CITATION] Temptation, Commitment, and Self-control in the Laboratory
D Houser, D Schunk, J Winter… - 2009 - mimeo, ICES, George Mason …
D Houser, M Keane, K McCabe… - Manuscript, University of …, 2001 - econ.arizona.edu
The question “how do people behave when placed in environments where optimal decision
making would require solution of complex optimization problems?” is of fundamental
importance to economic analysis. Predictions of individual and market behavior can differ ...
D Houser, B Sands… - Journal of Economic Behavior & …, 2009 - Elsevier
The millions of deaths that occurred during China's great famine of 1959–1961 were the
result of one of the world's greatest civil demographic disasters. Two primary hypotheses
have been advanced to explain the famine. One is that China experienced three ...
[CITATION] Reputation in Auctions: Theory and Evidence from eBay “, forthcoming in Journal of Economics and Management Strategy
D Houser… - 2005
[CITATION] McCabe Kevin (2004); Behavior in a dynamic decision problem: An analysis of experimental evidence using a bayesian type classification algorithm
D Houser… - Econometrica
Abstract: In randomized control laboratory experiments, we find that those primed to think
about markets exhibit more trusting behavior. We randomly and unconsciously prime
experimental participants to think about markets and trade. We then ask them to play a ...
ABSTRACT Theories put forth to explain cooperation in public goods experiments usually
assume either that subjects cooperate because they do not understand the game's
incentives or that cooperation stems from social motives such as altruism and reciprocity. ...
A Bucciol,
D Houser… - Journal of Economic Behavior & …, 2011 - Elsevier
Substantial evidence from psychology suggests that resisting temptation (exercising self-
control) in one domain subsequently reduces one's capacity to regulate behavior in other
domains. A reason is that people have limited self-regulatory resources, and self- ...
[CITATION] A Minimal Property Right System for the Sustainable Provision of Public Good
H Ameden, A Gunnthorsdottir, D Houser… - Unpublished paper. University …, 1998
J Leland,
D Houser… - Trust and entrepreneurship: a …, 2005 - books.google.com
Social scientists have long held the view that trust has a significant influence on the
economic prosperity of nations. But researchers have only recently started to find empirical
support for this belief. Up to now this empirical research has relied on measures of trust ...
Abstract: Temptation and self-control in intertemporal choice environments are receiving
increasing attention in the theoretical economics literature. Nevertheless, there remains a
scarcity of empirical evidence from controlled environments informing behavior under ...
D Houser - Eastern Economic Journal, 2010 - mason.gmu.edu
Many prominent recent contributions to economic theory [Charness and Dufwenberg, 2006;
Laibson, 1997; Camerer, 2003] are motivated by the findings of economics experiments, and
are then advanced by further experimentation [Xiao and Houser, 2005; Houser and ...
D Houser, D Levy, K Padgitt, S Peart… - 2007 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: Previous research provides compelling evidence that human leaders are sufficient
for efficiency-enhancing leadership effects on cooperation in groups, yet little is known
regarding the contexts in which human leadership is necessary in this regard. For ...
JA Aimone… - Experimental Economics, 2008 - Springer
Abstract Recent research argues “betrayal aversion” leads many people to avoid risk more
when a person, rather than nature, determines the outcome of uncertainty. However, past
studies indicate that factors unrelated to betrayal aversion, such as loss aversion, could ...
We present results from laboratory experimental elections in which voter information is
endogenously provided by candidates and voting is voluntary. We also compare
advertisements that are costless to voters with those that reduce voter payoffs. We find that ...
A Bucciol,
D Houser… - International Review of Economics, 2010 - Springer
Abstract This paper reviews key contributions to the psychology and economics literature on
willpower. Understanding how willpower develops can shed important light on time-
inconsistent economic decision making, a topic that has received substantial attention ...
Development of human societies requires cooperation among unrelated individuals and
obedience to social norms. Although punishment is widely agreed to be potentially useful in
fostering cooperation, many recent results in psychology and economics highlight ...
[CITATION] Reputation in auctions: Theory and evidence from ebay, 2000
D Houser… - University of Arizona Working Paper
DM Levy, K Padgitt, SJ Peart,
D Houser… - Journal of Economic …, 2011 - Elsevier
Previous research offers compelling evidence that leaders suffice to effect efficiency-
enhancements on cooperation, yet the source of this effect remains unclear. To investigate
whether leadership effects can be attributed exclusively to the common information that ...
[CITATION] Revisiting Kindness and Confusion in Public Goods Experiments
R Kurzban… - American Economic Review, 2005
Abstract: Status seeking and altruism have been studied extensively in adults. Here, we
report data from a field experiment studying status seeking and altruistic behavior in
children. We study a sample of German school children aged seven to ten in a natural ...
A Bucciol,
D Houser… - Working Papers, 2009 - repec.ices-gmu.org
Temptations are a largely unavoidable part of life. Resisting them is usually seen as a
virtuous behavior. Recent research in social psychology, however, suggests that using
willpower to delay gratification can detrimentally impact performance on immediately ...
X Pan… - 2011 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: Holländer (1990) argued that when non-monetary social approval from peers is
sufficiently valuable, it works to promote cooperation. Holländer, however, did not define the
characteristics of environments in which high valued approval is likely to occur. This paper ...
L Hao… - Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, 2011 - Springer
Abstract It is often of interest to elicit beliefs from populations that may include naïve
participants. Unfortunately, elicitation mechanisms are typically assessed by assuming
optimal responses to incentives. Using laboratory experiments with a population that ...
Abstract: We present results from laboratory experimental elections in which voter
information is endogenously provided by candidates and voting is voluntary. We also
compare advertisements that are costless to voters with those that reduce voter payoffs. ...
E Xiao… - 2006 - repository.cmu.edu
Convergent evidence for detrimental effects of punishment on cooperation has been
obtained in a wide variety of environments, ranging from American students facing
punishment in laboratory experiments, to Israeli parents facing fines for arriving late to ...
D Houser - Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science, 2003 - Wiley Online Library
Suppose a general orders his troops into battle against an approaching enemy and valiantly
leads the charge himself. One of his soldiers takes advantage of the momentary confusion
surrounding the order by slipping away from the battlefield to an area of relative safety. ...
L Hao… - Working Papers, 2011 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: We report data from a two-stage prediction game, where the accuracy of
predictions (in the first stage) regarding die roll outcomes (in the second stage) is rewarded
using a proper scoring rule. Thus, given the opportunity to self-report the die roll outcomes ...
Abstract: Structural econometric methods that assume agents have rational expectations are
often criticized. Yet, little is known about the relative costs and benefits of adopting
alternative empirical strategies. This paper compares three procedures for inference about ...
D Houser, A Bechara… - Games and …, 2004 - research.economics.unsw.edu.au
Abstract: In many research contexts it is necessary to group experimental subjects into
behavioral “types.” Usually, this is done by pre-specifying a set of candidate decisionmaking
heuristics and then assigning each subject to the heuristic that best describes his/her ...
D Houser, S Ludwig… - 2009 - socialpolitik.ovgu.de
Abstract We consider two-candidate elections in which voters are uncertain about
candidates' qualities and candidates can inform voters of their quality by sending
advertisements. We compare campaigns where advertising must be true to campaigns ...
D Houser, S Ludwig… - 2009 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: We examine the effect of deceptive advertising on voting decisions in elections. We
model two-candidate elections in which 1) voters are uncertain about candidates' attributes;
and 2) candidates can inform voters of their attributes by sending advertisements. We ...
DE Houser, SRPDS Rassenti, D Porter… - 2010 - dtic.mil
Page 1. QUANTITATIVE RESOURCE ALLOCATION MECHANISMS: ALLOCATION MECHANISMS:
EXPERIMENTAL ANALYSES Daniel E. Houser, Ph.D. dhouser@gmu.edu; 703.993.4856 (office);
703.625.5637 (cell) ICES, MSN 1B2, 4400 University Drive, Fairfax, VA. 22030 ...
[CITATION] A Study of projects initiated with public law 89-10 Title I funds in Missouri that were but are not now supported by federal funds
JD Houser - 1970 - Kansas State College of Pittsburg
M Cipriani, A Fostel… - 2012 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: This is the first paper to test the asset pricing implication of leverage in a laboratory.
We show that as theory predicts, leverage increases asset prices: when an asset can be
used as collateral (ie, when the asset can be bought on margin), its price goes up. This ...
J Dickhaut,
D Houser, JA Aimone, D Tila… - Working …, 2008 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: A continuing goal of experiments is to understand risky decisions when the
decisions are important. Often a decision's importance relates to the magnitude of the
associated monetary stake. Khaneman and Tversky (1979) argue that risky decisions in ...
DS Houser, SA Morris, HD Webb, AIG Insurance… - Policy - carneylaw.com
Page 1. INSURER FAIR CONDUCT NOTICE 6/13/2008 - 7/25/2008 Sorted by Insurer Name
Date Of Receipt By OIC Postmark Date INS CO Complainant/ Insured Complainant Attorney Line
of Ins RCW/WAC Unreasonable Denial of Claim 7/23/2008 7/21/2008 ...
J Winter… - 2004 - en.scientificcommons.org
Abstract We use a laboratory experiment to investigate the effect that assuming rational
expectations has on structural inference on a dynamic discrete choice decision problem. Our
experimental design induces preferences up to each subject's subjective rates of time ...
JA Aimone… - 2012 - repec.ices-gmu.org
Abstract: Recent research suggests that while there are negative effects of betrayal aversion,
that the presence of betrayal-averse agents is beneficial in reducing trustees' willingness to
betray trust. If true, then many common knowledge institutions may have adopted ...
[CITATION] PUBLIC CHOICE ISSUES IN COLLECTIVE ACTION: CONSTITUENT GROUP PRESSURES AND INTERNATIONAL GLOBAL WARMING REGULATION
M Olson, K Hoffman… - wwwsrv1tmp.mitre.org
We report data from laboratory emissions allowance markets in which allowances do not
expire and can be banked between compliance periods. These periods consist of a sealed
bid auction, trading, and then compliance. The markets consist of multiple sequential ...
Abstract: Structural econometric methods that assume agents have rational expectations are
often criticized. Yet, little is known about the relative costs and benefits of adopting
alternative empirical strategies. This paper compares three procedures for inference about ...
JR Bial,
D Houser… - 2000 - en.scientificcommons.org
Abstract" There is a large and growing body of literature on scientific issues and regulatory
instruments, such as emissions permits, in international efforts to control greenhouse gas
(GHG) emissions. The underlying collective action issues have received much less ...
D Houser - Working Papers, 2011 - ideas.repec.org
HollŠnder (1990) argued that when non-monetary social approval from peers is sufficiently
valuable, it works to promote cooperation. HollŠnder, however, did not define the
characteristics of environments in which high valued approval is likely to occur. This paper ...
A Smith,
D Houser, P Leeson… - 2011 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: Violent conflict destroys resources. It generates “destruction costs.” These costs
have an important effect on individuals' decisions to cooperate or conflict. We develop two
models of conflict: one in which conflict's destruction costs are independent of individuals' ...
[CITATION] Public Implementation Eliminates DETRIMENTAL EFFECTS OF PUNISHMENT ON Human Cooperation
DHEXK MCCABE, V SMITH… - 2005 - 129.3.20.41
Abstract: People can become less cooperative when threatened with sanctions, and
researchers have pointed to both" intentions" and incentives as sources of this effect. This
paper reports data from a novel experimental design aimed at determining the relative ...
H Daniel, K Michael, M Kevin - ukpmc.ac.uk
this paper is as follows: In section 2 we give some background onthe literature on
experimental analysis of behavior in complex decision problems. Insection 3 we present our
experimental design. In section 4 we describe the Bayesianalgorithm for classifying ...
D Houser… - 2000 - econ.eller.arizona.edu
ABSTRACT The millions of deaths that occurred during China's great famine of 1959-1961
represent one of the world's greatest civil demographic disasters. Two primary hypotheses
have been advanced to explain the famine. One is that China experienced three ...
X Pan… - CESifo Economic Studies, 2011 - CESifo Group
Abstract This article examines gender differences in pro-sociality using theories from
evolutionary psychology and empirical evidence from experimental economics. Although
there has been extensive prior research in both fields, there remains a large disconnect ...
D Houser - Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2005 - ideas.repec.org
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CK Rowley… - Public Choice, 2011 - Springer
Abstract Gordon Tullock is a founding father of public choice. In an academic career that has
spanned 50 years, he forged much of the research agenda of the public choice program and
he founded and edited Public Choice, the key journal of public choice scholarship. Tullock ...
[CITATION] Were Black Workers Harmed by Industrial Segregation? The Case of Pennsylvania, 1916-1950
RS Johnson, D Houser, S Kantor…
D Houser, N Montinari… - 2012 - ideas.repec.org
Substantial research with adult populations has found that selfish impulses are less likely to
be pursued when decisions are publicly observable. To the best of our knowledge, however,
this behavioral regularity has not been systematically explored as potential solution to ...
T Blackstone,
DE Houser, S Rassenti, D Porter… - economicsystemdesign.com
MANNING TO THE EDGE: BEHAVIORAL ISSUES IN DECISION MAKING. &
RESOURCE ALLOCATION MECHANISMS. Final Report. Contract # N0018907PN653
& N0018907PPV02. Submitted To: Tanja Blackstone, Ph.D. Navy ...
D Houser, J Bial… - 2000 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: There is a large and growing literature on scientific estimates and regulatory
instruments associated with international efforts to control greenhouse gas (GHG)
emissions. The underlying collective action processes have received much less attention. ...
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