School of Business and Economics
Economic Psychology
Full course description
Increasingly, economists are discovering insights from psychology as a means to enrich their models of economic behaviour. The importance of this is illustrated by the fact that the Nobel prize winner in economics in 2002 was the distinguished psychologist Daniel Kahneman. He characterizes his research as a quest for the ‘logic of the irrational’. Adam Smith already recognized that economic, just like other, behaviour is motivated by an intriguing blend of ‘rational’ considerations and ‘irrational’ sentiments. The great challenge is to investigate the implications of the latter motives for economics.This course aims to give an intensive introduction into this field. After a review of basic principles of rational decision-making under uncertainty, the first part of the course gives an overview of psychological research related to judgment and decision-making. Examples include insights from psychology on how decision-makers assess probabilities and how they evaluate the outcomes resulting from their decisions. Actual patterns of judgment and decision-making are compared to basic principles of rational decision-making in order to detect systematic behavioral regularities and biases of real decision-makers. The second part of the course deals with examples of how psychological regularities influence economic decision-making in the field and the importance of these regularities for law and policy. Finally, the course gives an introduction to the field of neuroeconomics.
Course objectives
Acquiring a structured insight into the important roles of psychological factors and processes in judgment and decision-making of economic agentsLearning about the relations between psychology and economics
Learning about practical implications of insights into behavioral regularities
Prerequisites
Basic understanding of microeconomics (level comparable to: course Economics and Business), probability theory and mathematics (level comparable to course QM2)An advanced level of English
Recommended reading
Hastie, Reid and Robyn M. Dawes. Rational choice in an uncertain world: The psychology of judgment and decision making. Sage, 2010.Articles and chapters from books.
EBC2103
Period 2
28 Oct 2024
20 Dec 2024
ECTS credits:
6.5Instruction language:
EnglishCoordinator:
Teaching methods:
Lecture(s), Presentation(s), Work in subgroupsAssessment methods:
Participation, Presentation, Written exam