About this series
Cambridge Elements in Behavioural and Experimental Economics focuses on recent advances in two of the most important and innovative fields in modern economics. It aims to provide better understanding of economic behavior, choices, strategies and judgements, particularly through the design and use of laboratory experiments. This includes both behavioral economics and studies at the border between economics and psychology, but also experimental tests of economic models, and experiments aimed to testbed policy tools. The series will also publish contributions on the methodology of experiments, covering in particular the empirical evidence about trade-offs to solve when designing an experiment.
About the editors
Nicolas Jacquemet is a full professor at University Paris-1 Panthéon Sorbonne and the Paris School of Economics. His research combines experimental methods and econometrics to study discrimination, the effect of personality traits on economic behaviour, the role of social pre-involvement in strategic behaviour and experimental game theory. His research has been published in Econometrica, Management Science, Games and Economic Behavior, the Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, the Journal of Health Economics, and the Journal of Economic Psychology.
Olivier L'Haridon is a full professor at the Université de Rennes I, France. His research combines experimental methods and decision theory, applied in the study of individual decision making as affected by uncertainty. His work has been published in American Economic Review, Management Science, the Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, Theory and Decision, Experimental Economics, the Journal of Health Economics, and the Journal of Economic Psychology.
Contact the editors
If you would like more information about this series, or are interested in writing an Element, please contact Nicolas Jacquemet [email protected] and Olivier L’Haridon [email protected].