This chapter discusses methodological differences in the way economists and psychologists typically conduct experiments. The main argument is that methodological differences spring from basic differences in the way knowledge is created and cumulated in the two fields-especially the important role of simple, formal theory in economics which is largely absent in psychology.
CITATION STYLE
Camerer, C. (1997). Rules for Experimenting in Psychology and Economics, and Why They Differ. In Understanding Strategic Interaction (pp. 313–327). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-60495-9_25
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