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Laboratory experimentation in economics
Each of the chapters in this volume concerns some aspect of economists' use of controlled experiments. Since the mid-1970s this kind of work has been transformed from a seldom encountered curiosity to a small but well-established and growing part of the economic literature. This transformation has been rapid. For example, when I began my own experimental work about a dozen years ago, it was most convenient to publish the results in journals of psychology and business. Today it is no longer unusual for controlled experiments to be reported in any of the major American economics journals. Experimental work has become well enough represented in the literature so that, in 1985, the Journal of Economic Literature established a separate bibliographic category, "Experimental Economic Methods."
However, as might be expected of any newly developing field of scientific endeavor, there are at least as many points of view about the role of experiments in economics as there are economists who conduct them. One of the reasons for this is that "economics" encompasses quite a diversity of activities and methodologies, and controlled experimentation appears to have the potential to play at least a supporting role, and in some cases a far larger part, in many of these.
At the time that I was organizing the conference that led to the publication of this volume, I was preparing a paper on experimental economics to present at one of the symposia of the Fifth World Congress of the Econometric Society, which was held in the summer of
1985. (World congresses are held every five years and are organized around a group of symposia on significant recent advances. A sign of the times, and of the distance experimental economics has come in so short a time, is the fact that this was the first such symposium to be devoted to experimentation.)
ALVIN E. ROTH - Personal Name
1st Edtion
13 978-0-521-33392-4
NONE
Laboratory experimentation in economics
Management
English
Cambridge University Press
2005
New York,
1-229
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