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Experiments in financial economics [electronic resource] / edited by Sean M. Collins, R. Mark Isaac, Douglas A. Norton.

Contributor(s): Collins, Sean M. (Sean Michael), 1983- | Isaac, R. Mark (Robert Mark), 1954- | Norton, Douglas A, 1984-Material type: TextTextSeries: Research in experimental economics ; v. 16.Publication details: Bingley, U.K. : Emerald, 2013Description: 1 online resource (170 p.)ISBN: 9781783501410 (electronic bk.) :Subject(s): Business & Economics -- General | Business & Economics -- Economic Conditions | Economic theory & philosophy | Experimental economicsAdditional physical formats: No titleDDC classification: 330 LOC classification: HB131 | .E97 2013Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Experiments in financial economics : an introduction / Sean M. Collins -- Asymmetric information and bank lending : the role of formal and informal institutions (a survey of laboratory research) / Angelina Nikitenko Christie -- Strategic default with social interactions : a laboratory experiment / Jean Paul Rabanal -- Divisible-good uniform price auctions : the role of allocation rules and communication among bidders / Martin Sefton, Ping Zhang -- The dividend puzzle : a laboratory investigation / Sascha Füllbrunn, Ernan Haruvy -- An experimental analysis of myopic loss aversion / Tomoki Kitamura, Munenori Nakasato -- Does everyone accept a free lunch? Decision-making under (almost) zero-cost borrowing / Michael Insler, James Compton, Pamela Schmitt.
Summary: Research in experimental economics focuses on laboratory experimental economics, but welcomes work from authors of theoretical, empirical, or field economic research if it would be of interest to the broader experimental economics community. The goal of Research in Experimental Economics is to be complementary with, and not in competition with, traditional journals as outlets for experimental work. Research in Experimental Economics has the freedom to consider papers that may not be appropriate for traditional journals for a variety of reasons. Some examples of these strengths include: theme volumes, replication studies, research which requires longer manuscripts for presentation of data or analysis, and papers on methodological topics. The volumes of Research in Experimental Economics are not tied to specific, recurring conferences. Typically, a volume theme is established with scholars who are willing to serve as volume-specific editors. The only constraint the senior editor places on the volume editors is that the papers should undergo a formal referee process using the same quality standards as traditional journals. Recent topics have included market power, charitable contributions, and field experiments.
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Includes index.

Experiments in financial economics : an introduction / Sean M. Collins -- Asymmetric information and bank lending : the role of formal and informal institutions (a survey of laboratory research) / Angelina Nikitenko Christie -- Strategic default with social interactions : a laboratory experiment / Jean Paul Rabanal -- Divisible-good uniform price auctions : the role of allocation rules and communication among bidders / Martin Sefton, Ping Zhang -- The dividend puzzle : a laboratory investigation / Sascha Füllbrunn, Ernan Haruvy -- An experimental analysis of myopic loss aversion / Tomoki Kitamura, Munenori Nakasato -- Does everyone accept a free lunch? Decision-making under (almost) zero-cost borrowing / Michael Insler, James Compton, Pamela Schmitt.

Research in experimental economics focuses on laboratory experimental economics, but welcomes work from authors of theoretical, empirical, or field economic research if it would be of interest to the broader experimental economics community. The goal of Research in Experimental Economics is to be complementary with, and not in competition with, traditional journals as outlets for experimental work. Research in Experimental Economics has the freedom to consider papers that may not be appropriate for traditional journals for a variety of reasons. Some examples of these strengths include: theme volumes, replication studies, research which requires longer manuscripts for presentation of data or analysis, and papers on methodological topics. The volumes of Research in Experimental Economics are not tied to specific, recurring conferences. Typically, a volume theme is established with scholars who are willing to serve as volume-specific editors. The only constraint the senior editor places on the volume editors is that the papers should undergo a formal referee process using the same quality standards as traditional journals. Recent topics have included market power, charitable contributions, and field experiments.

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