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Addiction and cue-triggered decision processes

[PDF] from stanford.edu
BD Bernheim… - American Economic Review, 2004 - JSTOR
We propose a model of addiction based on three premises:(i) use among addicts is
frequently a mistake;(ii) experience sensitizes an individual to environmental cues that
trigger mistaken usage;(iii) addicts understand and manage their susceptibilities. We ...
Cited by 323 - Related articles - Get it from MIT Libraries - All 34 versions

Self-control in decision-making involves modulation of the vmPFC valuation system

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TA Hare, CF Camerer… - Science, 2009 - sciencemag.org
Abstract Every day, individuals make dozens of choices between an alternative with higher
overall value and a more tempting but ultimately inferior option. Optimal decision-making
requires self-control. We propose two hypotheses about the neurobiology of self-control:(i) ...
Cited by 216 - Related articles - All 38 versions

Behavioral public economics: Welfare and policy analysis with non-standard decision-makers

[PDF] from stanford.edu
BD Bernheim… - 2005 - nber.org
This paper has two goals. First, we discuss several emerging approaches to applied welfare
analysis under non-standard (" behavioral") assumptions concerning consumer choice. This
provides a foundation for Behavioral Public Economics. Second, we illustrate applications ...
Cited by 140 - Related articles - Library Search - BL Direct - All 30 versions

Beyond revealed preference: choice theoretic foundations for behavioral welfare economics

[PDF] from oxfordjournals.org
BD Bernheim… - 2008 - nber.org
We propose a broad generalization of standard choice-theoretic welfare economics that
encompasses a wide variety of non-standard behavioral models. Our approach exploits the
coherent aspects of choice which those positive models typically attempt to capture. It ...
Cited by 141 - Related articles - Library Search - BL Direct - All 45 versions

Adjusting to a new technology: experience and training

[PDF] from harvard.edu
E Helpman… - 1998 - nber.org
In this paper we study how aggregate output responds to the arrival of a new General
Purpose Technology (GPT) by looking at adjustment mechanisms that operate through labor
markets. We show that under a wide set of circumstances the arrival of a new GPT that ...
Cited by 123 - Related articles - Library Search - BL Direct - All 27 versions

Experiments testing multiobject allocation mechanisms

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JO Ledyard, D Porter… - Journal of Economics & …, 1997 - Wiley Online Library
This paper reports the results of over 130 auctions conducted under controlled conditions to
examine the robustness of several auction mechanisms to allocate multiple objects. The
simultaneous discrete auction process used by the Federal Communications Commission ...
Cited by 120 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 8 versions

Forward and backward intergenerational goods: Why is social security good for the environment?

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A Rangel - The American Economic Review, 2003 - ingentaconnect.com
Abstract: This paper studies the ability of nonmarket institutions to invest optimally in forward
intergenerational goods (FIGs), such as education and the environment, when agents are
selfish or exhibit paternalistic altruism. We show that backward intergenerational goods ( ...
Cited by 108 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 14 versions

Toward choice-theoretic foundations for behavioral welfare economics

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BD Bernheim… - The American economic review, 2007 - JSTOR
Interest in behavioral economics has grown in recent years, stimulated largely by
accumulating evidence that the standard model of consumer decision making provides an
inadequate, positive description of human behavior. Behavioral models are increasingly ...
Cited by 61 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 28 versions

Addiction and cue-conditioned cognitive processes

[PDF] from 192.5.14.43
BD Bernheim… - 2002 - nber.org
We propose an economic theory of addiction based on the premise that cognitive
mechanisms such as attention affect behavior independently of preferences. We argue that
the theory is consistent with foundational evidence (eg from neurosciencee and ...
Cited by 51 - Related articles - Library Search - BL Direct - All 21 versions

Neural computations associated with goal-directed choice

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A Rangel… - Current opinion in neurobiology, 2010 - Elsevier
In goal-directed decision-making, animals choose between actions that are associated with
different reward outcomes (eg, foods) and with different costs (eg, effort). Rapid advances
have been made over the past few years in our understanding of the computations ...
Cited by 56 - Related articles - All 9 versions

The power of the last word in legislative policy making

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BD Bernheim, A Rangel… - Econometrica, 2006 - Wiley Online Library
We examine legislative policy making in institutions with two empirically relevant features:
agenda setting occurs in real time and the default policy evolves. We demonstrate that these
institutions select Condorcet winners when they exist, provided a sufficient number of ...
Cited by 51 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 18 versions

Neural evidence for inequality-averse social preferences

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E Tricomi, A Rangel, CF Camerer… - Nature, 2010 - nature.com
A popular hypothesis in the social sciences is that humans have social preferences to
reduce inequality in outcome distributions because it has a negative impact on their
experienced reward 1, 2, 3. Although there is a large body of behavioural and ...
Cited by 54 - Related articles - All 16 versions

[PDF] Can Market and Voting Institutions Generate Optimal Intergenerational Risk Sharing?

[PDF] from nber.org
A Rangel… - 2001 - nber.org
We study economies confronted with generational risks. Such risks are shocks that affect all
the members of a generation but have a smaller effect on other generations. They include
the risk of having a bear market during the years one saves for retirement, being the age ...
Cited by 37 - Related articles - View as HTML - Library Search - BL Direct - All 14 versions

Dissociating valuation and saliency signals during decision-making

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A Litt, H Plassmann, B Shiv… - Cerebral Cortex, 2011 - Oxford Univ Press
Abstract There is a growing consensus that the brain computes value and saliency-like
signals at the time of decision-making. Value signals are essential for making choices.
Saliency signals are related to motivation, attention, and arousal. Unfortunately, an ...
Cited by 30 - Related articles - All 6 versions

[PDF] From neuroscience to public policy: a new economic view of addiction

[PDF] from stanford.edu
D Bernheim… - Swedish Economic Policy Review, 2005 - stanford.edu
Abstract A growing consensus in neuroscience regarding how addictive substances affect
the brain supports the view that the consumption of addictive substances is sometimes
rational, and sometimes a cue-triggered mistake. Neuroscientists have gained ...
Cited by 26 - Related articles - View as HTML - BL Direct - All 4 versions

A neural basis for the effect of candidate appearance on election outcomes

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ML Spezio, A Rangel, RM Alvarez… - Social Cognitive …, 2008 - scan.oxfordjournals.org
Abstract Election outcomes correlate with judgments based on a candidate's visual
appearance, suggesting that the attributions viewers make based on appearance, so-called
thin-slice judgments, influence voting. Yet, it is not known whether the effect of ...
Cited by 25 - Related articles - All 22 versions

Forward and backward intergenerational goods: a theory of intergenerational exchange

[PDF] from stanford.edu
A Rangel - 2000 - nber.org
This paper develops a theory of intergenerational exchange for generations that are either
selfish or have non-dynastic altruism. The main building blocks of the theory are forward and
backward intergenerational goods (FIGs and BIGs) and the relationship between them. A ...
Cited by 25 - Related articles - Library Search - BL Direct - All 15 versions

Biasing simple choices by manipulating relative visual attention

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KC Armel, A Beaumel… - … and Decision Making, 2008 - authors.library.caltech.edu
Several decision-making models predict that it should be possible to affect real binary
choices by manipulating the relative amount of visual attention that decision-makers pay to
the two alternatives. We present the results of three behavioral experiments testing this ...
Cited by 21 - Related articles - All 24 versions

The computation and comparison of value in goal-directed choice

A Rangel - Neuroeconomics: Decision Making and the Brain. …, 2008 - books.google.com
Neuroconomics studies the neurobiological and computational basis of value-based
decision making. As the name suggests, these types of decisions involve the computation
and comparison of values. This gives rise to one of the most basic questions in the field: ...
Cited by 18 - Related articles - All 2 versions

Economic choices can be made using only stimulus values

[HTML] from pnas.org
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K Wunderlich, A Rangel… - Proceedings of the …, 2010 - National Acad Sciences
Abstract Decision-making often involves choices between different stimuli, each of which is
associated with a different physical action. A growing consensus suggests that the brain
makes such decisions by assigning a value to each available option and then comparing ...
Cited by 21 - Related articles - All 16 versions

How to protect future generations using tax base restrictions

[PDF] from espol.edu.ec
A Rangel - 2002 - nber.org
This paper studies constitutional restrictions on the tax base that protect future generations
from expropriation and improve the optimality of investment in Intergenerational Public
Goods (IPGs). The choice of the tax base matters because it affects how intergenerational ...
Cited by 19 - Related articles - Library Search - All 19 versions

[CITATION] Choice-theoretic foundations for behavioral welfare economics

BD Bernheim… - The Methodologies of Modern Economics. Oxford …, 2008
Cited by 16 - Related articles

Using neural measures of economic value to solve the public goods free-rider problem

[PDF] from nyu.edu
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I Krajbich, C Camerer, J Ledyard… - Science, 2009 - sciencemag.org
Abstract Every social group needs to decide when to provide public goods and how to
allocate the costs among its members. Ideally, this decision would maximize the group's net
benefits while also ensuring that every individual's benefit is greater than the cost he or ...
Cited by 12 - Related articles - All 16 versions

Search dynamics in consumer choice under time pressure: An eye-tracking study

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E Reutskaja, R Nagel, CF Camerer… - The American …, 2011 - ingentaconnect.com
Abstract: We study decisions that involve choosing between different numbers of options
under time pressure using eye-tracking to monitor the search process of the subjects. We
find that subjects are quite adept at optimizing within the set of items that they see, that the ...
Cited by 14 - Related articles - All 6 versions

Pavlovian processes in consumer choice: The physical presence of a good increases willingness-to-pay

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B Bushong, LM King, CF Camerer… - The American …, 2010 - ingentaconnect.com
Abstract: This paper describes a series of laboratory experiments studying whether the form
in which items are displayed at the time of decision affects the dollar value that subjects
place on them. Using a Becker-DeGroot auction under three different conditions—(i) text ...
Cited by 13 - Related articles - All 9 versions

Optimal reward harvesting in complex perceptual environments

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V Navalpakkam, C Koch… - Proceedings of the …, 2010 - National Acad Sciences
Abstract The ability to choose rapidly among multiple targets embedded in a complex
perceptual environment is key to survival. Targets may differ in their reward value as well as
in their low-level perceptual properties (eg, visual saliency). Previous studies investigated ...
Cited by 12 - Related articles - All 20 versions

[CITATION] Beyond Revealed Preferences: Choice Theoretic Foundations for Behavioral Welfare Economics

BD Bernheim, A Rangel… - 2008 - National Bureau of Economic …
Cited by 10 - Related articles - Get it from MIT Libraries - Library Search

The impact of computation time and experience on decision values

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KC Armel… - The American Economic Review, 2008 - JSTOR
Montague 2007). This raises a question with important implications for economics: How
does the brain compute the values that guide decisions (henceforth called decision values)
and what are the properties of those processes? Important andmore concrete examples of ...
Cited by 10 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 15 versions

[CITATION] Social security reform: Efficiency gains or intergenerational redistribution

A Rangel - unpublished paper, Harvard University, 1997
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[PDF] Noncontractible Quality and Organization Form in the US Hospital Industry

[PDF] from mecon.gov.ar
KA Hassett, RG Hubbard, R Carson… - … , Graduate School of …, 2000 - cdi.mecon.gov.ar
ABSTRACT Despite the widespread attention paid to the determinants of equilibrium
ownership structures and organizational form in private, for-profit firms, much less attention
has been paid to equilibrium choices of not-for-profit versus for-profit status. We examine ...
Cited by 9 - Related articles - All 3 versions

[CITATION] Behavioral public economics: welfare and policy analysis with fallible decision-makers

BD Bernheim… - Institutions and Behavioral Economics (Princeton: …, 2005
Cited by 9 - Related articles

The Drift Diffusion Model can account for the accuracy and reaction time of value-based choices under high and low time pressure

[PDF] from caltech.edu
M Milosavljevic, J Malmaud, A Huth, C Koch… - 2011 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: An important open problem is how values are compared to make simple choices. A
natural hypothesis is that the brain carries out the computations associated with the value
comparisons in a manner consistent with the Drift Diffusion Model (DDM), since this model ...
Cited by 9 - Related articles - All 17 versions

[CITATION] Trading in a Pure Exchange Economy without an Auctioneer: An Experimental Approach

D Porter… - Working Papers, 1993 - ideas.repec.org
If you experience problems downloading a file, check if you have the proper application to
view it first. Information about this may be contained in the File-Format links below. In case of
further problems read the IDEAS help page. Note that these files are not on the IDEAS site ...
Cited by 8 - Related articles - Cached - Get it from MIT Libraries - Library Search - All 4 versions

[CITATION] Emotions, Cognition, and Savings: Theory and Policy

BD Bernheim… - 2003 - Mimeo, Stanford University
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Intergenerational fiscal constitutions: How to protect future generations using land taxes and federalism

[PDF] from vanderbilt.edu
JP Conley… - 2001 - nber.org
This paper studies how to design a fiscal constitution that, by capitalizing intergenerational
spillovers into land values, is able to protect future generations from expropriation and to
generate optimal investment in intergenerational public goods. In particular, we study how ...
Cited by 8 - Related articles - Library Search - BL Direct - All 17 versions

A graphical analysis of some basic results in social choice

[PDF] from psu.edu
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E Cantillon… - Social choice and welfare, 2002 - Springer
Abstract. We use a simple graphical approach to represent Social Welfare Functions that
satisfy Independence of Irrelevant Alternatives and Anonymity. This approach allows us to
provide simple and illustrative proofs of May's Theorem, of variants of classic impossibility ...
Cited by 7 - Related articles - Library Search - BL Direct - All 27 versions

Social and monetary reward learning engage overlapping neural substrates

[PDF] from caltech.edu
A Lin, R Adolphs… - Social Cognitive and …, 2011 - scan.oxfordjournals.org
Abstract Learning to make choices that yield rewarding outcomes requires the computation
of three distinct signals: stimulus values that are used to guide choices at the time of
decision making, experienced utility signals that are used to evaluate the outcomes of ...
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MAOA-L carriers are better at making optimal financial decisions under risk

[PDF] from caltech.edu
C Frydman, C Camerer… - … of the Royal …, 2011 - rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org
Abstract Genes can affect behaviour towards risks through at least two distinct
neurocomputational mechanisms: they may affect the value assigned to different risky
options, or they may affect the way in which the brain adjudicates between options based ...
Cited by 8 - Related articles - Get it from MIT Libraries - All 8 versions

[BOOK] Behavioral Public Economics

[PDF] from berkeley.edu
BD Bernheim… - 2005 - elsa.berkeley.edu
Page 1. 1 Behavioral Public Economics B. Douglas Bernheim December 8, 2011 Page
2. 2 Introduction • Behavioral economics has changed dramatically over the last 15 years –
Moved from a largely critical stance to a constructive one ...
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[CITATION] Cognition, Evaluation, and Hedonics: A Brain Processes Model of Decision-Making

BD Bernheim… - 2002 - Mimeo, Stanford University
Cited by 4 - Related articles

[CITATION] A Theory of Legislative Policy Making, Part {I}: Basic Institutions

BD Bernheim, A Rangel… - 2000 - mimeo, Stanford University
Cited by 4 - Related articles

Hypothetical and real choice differentially activate common valuation areas

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MJ Kang, A Rangel, M Camus… - The Journal of …, 2011 - neuro.cjb.net
Abstract Hypothetical reports of intended behavior are commonly used to draw conclusions
about real choices. A fundamental question in decision neuroscience is whether the same
type of valuation and choice computations are performed in hypothetical and real ...
Cited by 4 - Related articles - All 8 versions

Consciousness meets neuroeconomics: what is the value of stimulus awareness in decision making?

Full text - MIT Libraries
A Rangel - Neuron, 2008 - Elsevier
An important question in neuroeconomics is how consciousness affects decision making. In
this issue of Neuron, Pessiglione et al. take an initial step toward addressing this question by
showing that humans learn to make optimal choices in the absence of explicit knowledge ...
Cited by 4 - Related articles - All 8 versions

[CITATION] Behavioral public economics: welfare economics when individuals can make mistakes

DG Bernheim… - 2004 - Stanford University, mimeo
Cited by 5 - Related articles

[CITATION] Economic decision-making under conditions of extreme time pressure and option overload: An eyetracking study

Full text - MIT Libraries
E Reutskaja, J Pulst-Korenberg, R Nagel… - American Economic …, 2008
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Neuroeconomic Foundations of Economic ChoiceRecent Advances

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E Fehr… - The Journal of Economic Perspectives, 2011 - ingentaconnect.com
Abstract: Neuroeconomics combines methods and theories from neuroscience psychology,
economics, and computer science in an effort to produce detailed computational and
neurobiological accounts of the decision-making process that can serve as a common ...
Cited by 3 - Related articles - All 7 versions

[CITATION] Intergenerational Risk Sharing Properties of Market and Political Institutions

A Rangel… - 1998 - Stanford University, November
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Multialternative drift-diffusion model predicts the relationship between visual fixations and choice in value-based decisions

[HTML] from pnas.org
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I Krajbich… - … of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011 - National Acad Sciences
Abstract How do we make decisions when confronted with several alternatives (eg, on a
supermarket shelf)? Previous work has shown that accumulator models, such as the drift-
diffusion model, can provide accurate descriptions of the psychometric data for binary ...
Cited by 4 - Related articles - All 7 versions

Transformation of stimulus value signals into motor commands during simple choice

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TA Hare, W Schultz, CF Camerer… - Proceedings of the …, 2011 - National Acad Sciences
Abstract Decision-making can be broken down into several component processes:
assigning values to stimuli under consideration, selecting an option by comparing those
values, and initiating motor responses to obtain the reward. Although much is known ...
Cited by 6 - Related articles - All 7 versions

[PDF] Beyond Revealed Preference: Toward Choice-Theoretic Foundations for Behavioral Welfare Economics

[PDF] from stanford.edu
BD Bernheim… - Perspectives on the Future of Economics: …, 2006 - stanford.edu
Interest in behavioral economics has grown in recent years, stimulated largely by
accumulating evidence that the standard model of consumer decision-making provides an
inadequate positive description of human behavior. Scholars have proposed a variety of ...
Cited by 3 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 6 versions

Political Jurisdiction in Heterogeneous Communities

A Alesina, R Baqir, C Hoxby… - NBER WORKING …, 2000 - en.scientificcommons.org
Abstract We investigate whether political jurisdictions form in response to the trade-off
between economies of scale and the costs of a heterogeneous population. We consider
heterogeneity in income, race, ethnicity, and religion, and we test the model using ...
Cited by 3 - Related articles - Cached - BL Direct

[CITATION] Savings and Cue-Triggered Decision Processes

BD Bernheim… - 2005 - manuscript
Cited by 3 - Related articles

[CITATION] The Portuguese Armed Forces Movement: Historical Antecedents, Professional Demands, and Class Conflict

Full text - MIT Libraries
AR Bandeira - Politics & Society, 1976 - pas.sagepub.com
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[CITATION] Why Is Social Security Good for the Environment

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AF Rangel… - AER
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[PDF] Neurophysiological evidence on perception of reward and risk: Implications for trading under time pressure

[PDF] from uzh.ch
A Bollard, R Lui, AD Nursimulu, A Rangel… - 2007 - ufsp.uzh.ch
Abstract Recent neurophysiological studies reveal that risk and reward are separately
encoded in the human brain, and that the encodings display different timing patterns.
Therefore, we hypothesized that sensitivity of trading decisions to risk and reward ...
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[CITATION] Beyond revealed preference: toward foundations for behavioral welfare economics

D Bernheim… - This Volume, 2008
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[CITATION] ADJUSTING TO A NEW TECHNOLOGY: EXPERIENCE AND TRAINING (April)

E Helpman… - 1833
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Testing theories of investor behavior using neural data

[PDF] from stanford.edu
C Frydman, N Barberis, C Camerer, P Bossaerts… - 2011 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: We show that measures of neural activity provided by functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI) can be used to test between theories of investor behavior that are
difficult to distinguish using behavioral data alone. Subjects traded stocks in an ...
Cited by 2 - Related articles - All 10 versions

The Computation of Decision Values in Simple Economic Choice1

KC Armel, A Beaumol… - 2007 - mail.eaer.org
Abstract: We study the following two basic questions in neuroeconomics:(1) How does the
amount of time that a decision-maker spends computing decision values affect the choices
that he makes?(2) How does previous experience carrying out the decision value ...
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[CITATION] Neurometrically Informed Mechanism Design

I Krajbich, J Ledyard, CF Camerer… - California Institute of Technology …, 2010
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[CITATION] Behavioral public economics: How to do welfare analysis when individuals can make mistakes

D Bernheim… - … and Behavioral Economics, Princeton University Press …, 2005
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[PDF] Apprenticeships: Human Capital and Competitive Signaling in a Dynamic Labor Market

[PDF] from psu.edu
S Tadelis… - 2001 - Citeseer
Abstract Apprenticeships have long been a common form of training across the world. To
understand the merits of this institution, we develop an overlapping generations adverse
selection model in which apprenticeships are not only productive human capital assets, ...
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[CITATION] 1Can Market and Voting InstituM tions Generate Optimal Intergenerational Risk Sharing? 1 in: Campbell, John Y., and Feldstein, Martin (eds.), Risk …

A Rangel… - 2001 - The University of Chicago Press, pp. …
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[CITATION] Behavioral public economics: Toward welfare analysis with fallible consumers

BD Bernheim… - 2004 - forthcoming in Economic Institutions …
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[CITATION] Backward and Forward Intergenerational Goods

A Rangel - Harvard manuscript, 1997
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[CITATION] How to Protect Future Generations Using Federalism

A Rangel… - 2002 - Stanford manuscript
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[CITATION] The Results of Some Tests of Mechanism Designs for the Allocation and Pricing of Collections of Heterogeneous Items

JO Ledyard, D Porter, A Rangel… - 1996 - California Institute of Technology. …
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[CITATION] jBehavioral Public Economics: Welfare and Policy Analysis with Non $ Standard Decision $ Makers, kin Peter Diamond and Hannu Vartianen

BD Bernheim… - Institutions and Behavioral Economics, forthcoming, 2005
Cited by 2 - Related articles

[CITATION] forthcoming.“Search Dynamics in Consumer Choice under Time Pressure: An Eye-Tracking Study.”

E Reutskaja, R Nagel, C Camerer… - American Economic Review
Cited by 2 - Related articles - Get it from MIT Libraries

[CITATION] lChoice $ Theoretic Foundations for Behav $ ioral Welfare Economics. mIn Andrew Caplin and Andrew Schotter (eds.), The Method# ologies of Modern …

BD Bernheim… - 2008 - Oxford University Press, forthcoming
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Where to look? Dissociating the effect of reward, salience and attention

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V Navalpakkam, C Koch, A Rangel… - Journal of Vision, 2009 - journalofvision.org
Abstract How do distinct sensory and economic attributes like salience and reward combine
to guide where we look? Are saccadic decisions dominated by visual salience or reward?
Can saccadic decisions, like purely economic decisions, fail to maximize expected reward ...
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Consumers can make decisions in as little as a third of a second

[PDF] from upenn.edu
M Milosavljevic, C Koch… - 2012 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: We make hundreds of decisions every day, many of them extremely quickly and
without much explicit deliberation. This motivates two important open questions: What is the
minimum time required to make choices with above chance accuracy? What is the impact ...
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[CITATION] Candy wrappers are red and bright because visual saliency creates a sizable bias in consumer choices

M Milosavljevic, V Navalpakkam, C Koch… - 2011 - Working Paper, California Institute of …
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Relative visual saliency differences induce sizable bias in consumer choice

[PDF] from stanford.edu
M Milosavljevic, V Navalpakkam, C Koch… - Journal of Consumer …, 2011 - Elsevier
Consumers often need to make very rapid choices among multiple brands (eg, at a
supermarket shelf) that differ both in their reward value (eg, taste) and in their visual
properties (eg, color and brightness of the packaging). Since the visual properties of ...
Cited by 1 - Related articles - Get it from MIT Libraries - All 4 versions

Democratic Policy Making with Real-Time Agenda Setting: Part 1

[PDF] from harvard.edu
BD Bernheim, A Rangel… - 2002 - nber.org
We examine democratic policy-making in a simple institution with real-time agenda setting.
Individuals are recognized sequentially. Once recognized, an individual makes a proposal,
which is immediately put to a vote. If a proposal passes, it supercedes all previously ...
Cited by 1 - Related articles - Library Search - BL Direct - All 20 versions

[CITATION] Behavioral Public Economics: How to Do Welfare Analysis When People Can Make Mistakes

D Bernheim… - 2005 - Economic Institutions and …
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[CITATION] The Ideological Struggle in Chile: The Middle Class and the Military

AR Bandeira, B Studies… - 1975 - getcited.org
An academic directory and search engine.
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[CITATION] A modification of the Diffusion Decision Model is necessary to explain value-based choice

M Milosavljevic, A Huth, C Koch…
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[PDF] Can Income Redistribution Be Privatized?

[PDF] from nber.org
EFP Luttmer, M Feldstein, M Ghatak, L Katz… - 2001 - nber.org
Abstract Income redistribution can be viewed as a process that screens individuals based on
their innate ability and then transfers income conditional on ability. In this paper, I develop a
mechanism that privatizes income redistribution. This mechanism implements the income ...
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[PDF] TECHNICAL WORKING PAPER SERIES

[PDF] from ulb.ac.be
E Cantillon… - 2001 - dipot.ulb.ac.be
ABSTRACT We use a simple graphical approach to represent Social Welfare Functions that
satisfy Independence of Irrelevant Alternatives and Anonymity. This approach allows us to
provide simple and illustrative proofs of May, s Theorem, of variants of classic impossibility ...
Related articles - View as HTML - All 3 versions

[CITATION] Department of Economics Stanford University and NBER

A Rangel - 2002
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[PDF] Watching the Neighborhood: An assessment of small arms and ammunition

[PDF] from comunidadesegura.org.br
P Dreyfus… - comunidadesegura.org.br
... Júlio César Purcena, Researcher, Small Arms Control Project, Viva Rio Luis Carlos Silveira,
Field Researcher, Viva Rio COORDINATOR OF THE SMALL ARMS CONTROL PROJECT: Antonio
Rangel Bandeira EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF VIVA RIO: Rubem César Fernandes ...
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[CITATION] CHOICE-THEORETIC

BD BERNHEIM, A RANGEL - The foundations of …, 2008 - Oxford University Press, USA
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Further details and local arrangements are available at http://nasm2008. googlepages.

Full text - MIT Libraries
A Yaron, A Pricing, A Rangel, B McCallum… - …, 2008 - Wiley Online Library
THE 2008 ECONOMETRIC SOCIETY AUSTRALASIAN MEETING will be held in on 9–11
July, 2008 in Wellington, New Zealand and serves as a symposium to mark the life and work
of AWH Phillips. The New Zealand Association of Economists (NZAE) and the ...
All 2 versions

[CITATION] Why Candy Wrappers Should Be Red and Bright: The Effects of Visual Saliency Bias on Every-Day Consumer Choices

M Milosavljevic, V Navalpakkam, C Koch, A Rangel…
Related articles

[CITATION] Italics indicate bibliography citations.

W Abendroth, D Abraham… - The Challenge of …, 1985 - Ablex Publishing Corporation

Understanding how reward and saliency affect overt attention and decisions

Full text - MIT Libraries
V Navalpakkam, C Koch, A Rangel… - Journal of Vision, 2010 - journalofvision.org
Abstract The ability to rapidly choose among multiple valuable targets embedded in a
complex perceptual environment is key to survival in many animal species. Targets may
differ both in their reward value as well as in their low-level perceptual properties (eg, ...
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[HTML] Dynamic Construction of Stimulus Values in the Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex

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A Harris, R Adolphs, C Camerer… - PloS one, 2011 - dx.plos.org
Signals representing the value assigned to stimuli at the time of choice have been
repeatedly observed in ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC). Yet it remains unknown how
these value representations are computed from sensory and memory representations in ...
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[PDF] Democratic Policy Making with Reconsideration

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BD Bernheim, A Rangel… - 2001 - nyu.edu
Abstract∗ We would like to thank David Baron, Jonathan Bendor, Stephen Coate, James
Fearon, Rod Garrat, Timothy Groseclose, Gene Grossman, Jonathan Katz, Eric Maskin,
Antonio Merlo, Kent Smetters, Barry Weingast, and seminar participants at the Stanford ...
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[CITATION] The Results of Some Tests of Mechanism Designs for the Allocation and Pricing of Collections of Heterogeneous

JO Ledyard, D Porter… - Working Papers, 1996 - econpapers.repec.org
By John O. Ledyard, David Porter and Antonio Rangel; The Results of Some Tests of
Mechanism Designs for the Allocation and Pricing of Collections of Heterogeneous. ...
Heterogeneous. John O. Ledyard, David Porter and Antonio Rangel. ...
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[CITATION] Addiction and Cue-Conditioned Cognitive Processes B. Douglas Bernheim

A Rangel - NBER working paper series, 2002
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[CITATION] The Neural Basis for Self-Control-You're on a diet, but you really want a piece of that chocolate cake. What's going on in your brain as you struggle to resist …

A Rangel - Engineering and Science, 2010

[CITATION] Trade Marks: International Protection and Basic Features of the Mexican and Canadian Legal Systems

DA Rangel - 1979 - University of Toronto
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[CITATION] Decisions, Decisions: The Emerging Field of Neuroeconomics

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A Rangel - Neuron, 2007 - Elsevier
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Empathic choice involves vmPFC value signals that are modulated by social processing implemented in IPL

[PDF] from caltech.edu
V Janowski, C Camerer… - Social Cognitive and …, 2012 - scan.oxfordjournals.org
Abstract Empathic decision-making involves making choices on behalf of others in order to
maximize their well-being. Examples include the choices that parents make for their
children, as well as the decisions of a politician trying to make good choices on behalf of ...
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[PDF] HOW MARKETING ACTIONS AFFECT EXPERIENCED UTILITY

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H Plassmann, B Shiv… - … of the Society …, 2008 - journalofconsumerpsychology.org
ABSTRACT A sizable number of marketing actions attempt to influence the pleasure we
derive from consuming a good–or in other words experienced utility (EU)-by changing
properties of products, such as prices, that are unrelated to their inherent product qualities ...
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DP1930 Adjusting to a New Technology: Experience and Training

E Helpman… - 1998 - cepr.org
In this paper we study how aggregate output responds to the arrival of a new General
Purpose Technology (GPT) by looking at adjustment mechanisms that operate through
labour markets. We show that under a wide set of circumstances the arrival of a new GPT ...
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[CITATION] How does the brain make economic decisions?

A Rangel - Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2011 - Elsevier
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[CITATION] Two new 'must-have'books on functional MRI data analysis

A Rangel - Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2012 - Elsevier
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[CITATION] Optimal reward harvesting in complex perceptual environments PNAS 2010 107 (11) 5232-5237; published ahead of print March

V Navalpakkam, C Koch, A Rangel…
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