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[未归类] 求行为经济的排名或者哪些学校比较好,谢谢!!! [复制链接]

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发表于 2009-6-5 00:00:05 |显示全部楼层
想知道一下行为经济的排名,因为发现好像不是很多学校都有阿,难道要自学心理然后申请纯经济的博士。。。。。?疑惑中,,,,望解答,谢谢
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发表于 2009-6-5 01:28:45 |显示全部楼层
行为经济学不用学心理。要看这个方向如何,只要看有没有比较大的实验室就好了。我个人记得北美CMU有,Pittsburgh有,Caltech有,好像哈佛和NYU不一定有实验室但也有人做。

欧洲也挺多,譬如Fehr所在的瑞士Zurich,德国的Bonn,荷兰U Amsterdam,Tilburg U,西班牙UAB,我知道的并不全的说。
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先帝尝问于诸葛武侯曰:“知天何与逆天难?”
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荣誉版主 Economist

发表于 2009-6-5 01:36:17 |显示全部楼层
或者,一个大概的看法是,看Economnic Science Association的committee member都是哪个学校的,以及Experimental economics的编委们。

https://www.economicscience.org/esa/executives.html
先帝尝问于诸葛武侯曰:“知天何与逆天难?”
对曰:“知天易,逆天难。”

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发表于 2009-6-5 08:03:30 |显示全部楼层
a........................感谢的泪流满面阿,太感谢版主的详尽揭示了。鞠躬。。。。
前途对每个人意义都不同

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发表于 2009-6-6 04:19:31 |显示全部楼层
行为经济学和实验经济学还不完全一样的。有些做理论为主的行为经济学家,不能够把他们称为实验经济学家。比如Harvard的Daivid Leibson做很多行为方面的理论研究,但ESA的editor board就没有他。还有像Arie Rubstinein等人,不能够说他们是实验经济学家,但是他们也做行为决策研究。参加了一天seminar脑子有点不清楚了,说得不对的地方请各位指正。

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荣誉版主 Economist

发表于 2009-6-6 17:01:04 |显示全部楼层
我非常同意Leibson是行为经济学家,只是对Rubinstein有点保留,因为如果研究bounded rationality理论的都算行为的话,那萨金特也算了,可能Becker也算了。不过那个ESA我说得确实太不严谨了,因为好像ESA的board连Fehr和List都没有。
先帝尝问于诸葛武侯曰:“知天何与逆天难?”
对曰:“知天易,逆天难。”

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Economist

发表于 2009-6-6 22:00:37 |显示全部楼层
不是有人说“行为经济学”本身这个词就很有歧义吗?经济学家不研究行为还研究什么:shutup:

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发表于 2009-6-7 09:51:03 |显示全部楼层
是啊, 但是我真是觉得研究的角度非常有趣,而且我自己很喜欢。 谢谢楼上各位的指导, 我看的文章可能是篇理论的, 我再去自己好好多了解一下。
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发表于 2009-6-7 10:41:30 |显示全部楼层
本帖最后由 GRE 于 2009-6-7 10:45 编辑

Yale's Marketing Dept-Behavioral Economics
My untangiable dream.....

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荣誉版主 Economist

发表于 2009-6-22 03:12:48 |显示全部楼层
我在一个国外Phd论坛上找到的,比较详细的一个回答:

I'll use this as a starting point, though you should be able to find some good threads on the subject using the search function. As a general comment, you should looking into Marketing PhD programs (consumer behavior) to see if you find those interesting, as the field is largely at the intersection of psychology and economics, though not necessarily the same as what you see behavioral economists doing.

===============
Overall strong programs
===============

CMU - Social and Decision Sciences PhD (not the economics PhD)

Caltech - Social Sciences PhD

Chicago GSB has tons of good faculty (check MOB and Marketing PhD programs)

Harvard/HBS - some big names in both schools; Cass Sunstein at HLS now if your're into behavioral law and econ.

Berkeley - probably has the best "behavioral economics" faculty in the econ dept among all schools - Rabin, Koszegi, Malmendier, DellaVigna all come to mind immediately and cover both theory and empirical work.

Honestly, I'm not sure why MIT is even listed. They've certainly produced several great behavioral economists, but they've lost much of their behavioral faculty in recent years. Xavier Gabaix moved to, I think, NYU Stern or Columbia (but I think Stern). Dan Ariely is now at Duke, though his MIT Sloan page is still up. Shane Fredericksen (sp?) moved to Yale SOM from Sloan. Drazen Prelec seems to be the only behavioral guy still there. Of course, if you're at MIT, you can take the behavioral courses at Harvard, collaborate with Harvard faculty, and I think the behavioral seminar might be hosted jointly between Harvard and MIT, but I don't remember. Don't get me wrong... MIT is great, and you should go there over better "behavioral" programs. Ernst Fehr visits for, I think, about a month each fall but seems to spend most of his time in Zurich.

Cornell - though much of the behavioral econ faculty is in the psychology department; econ has O'Donoghue and made a few junior hires in recent years. Someone on TM mentioned they have a behavioral sequences in the PhD program now. I'll avoid the recurring debate on Cornell's PhD program and placements.

Yale / Yale SOM - I would probably lean towards SOM as having the better faculty, but I'm sure you have access to them in econ (and SOM only takes about 2 marketing students a year). Keith Chen and James Choi are at SOM. I think I've heard that Shiller teaches behavioral econ in the law school. Christine Jolls in the law school (econ PhD from MIT, I think) if you're into behavioral law and econ. I think Keith Gamble is a recent Berkeley econ PhD who is into behavioral work just got hired by Yale econ or SOM.

Off the top of my head, I'm not sure who at Michigan is doing behavioral, though someone else can comment.

UCSD / Rady - Not usually on the list of top behavioral schools, but there are a few big names in econ and Rady. One possible benefit of applying to Rady is that the PhD program is VERY new and thus probably not quite as competitive as a lot of top places, yet you have all the advantages of advisors, faculty connections, etc.

Anderson (UCLA) - Fox lab (Craig Fox) does a lot of good work. Shlomo Benartzi is in accounting but does behavioral work; coauthors some with Richard Thaler (Chicago GSB).

Fuqua (Duke) - Has a few different tracks in the b-school program that may be of interest. Some people are more into traditional decision theory, but they also have behavioral people. Ariely recently came over from MIT.

=======================
Other good programs - lower ranked
=======================

Pittsburgh - long-standing reputation as a good experimental program, though I'm not sure who's on their faculty these days

UCSB - Gary Charness is solid.

UCSC - I know they have some focus on experimental, though the primary focus is international.


=============
International schools
=============

Zurich - Ernst Fehr heads up a very active research group. Great for anyone interested in experimental/behavioral/neuro work.

Tilburg/Tinbergen - Look into TIBER at Tilburg and CREED at one of the Tinbergen Institute schools. Better option is probably Tinbergen Institute, since you have access to all the Tilburg faculty (including TIBER) and also to CREED.

Nottingham (UK) - Simon Gachter does solid work. Lesser-known department, but I know they were recently offering PhD assistantships specifically for behavioral.



That's a good start off the top of my head, and I'm sure I've missed quite a few. Part of this really also depends on where you fall on the experimental-behavioral-neuro spectrum. The three are definitely distinct fields, but many of the leading researchers cross over a few of the fields (Camerer, Fehr, and Loewenstein are probably the three most prominent that cover all three fields). So there are many more options if you're into experimental. A few others for neuro.
先帝尝问于诸葛武侯曰:“知天何与逆天难?”
对曰:“知天易,逆天难。”

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荣誉版主 Economist

发表于 2009-6-22 03:17:00 |显示全部楼层
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dairyman + 4 very helpful

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先帝尝问于诸葛武侯曰:“知天何与逆天难?”
对曰:“知天易,逆天难。”

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荣誉版主 Economist

发表于 2009-6-22 03:18:45 |显示全部楼层
然后我觉得这个帖子definitely miss很多欧洲的学校,譬如西班牙的学校,英国的话也应该首先mention UCL的系主任就是纯粹的实验经济学家。
先帝尝问于诸葛武侯曰:“知天何与逆天难?”
对曰:“知天易,逆天难。”

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荣誉版主 Economist

发表于 2009-6-22 03:26:03 |显示全部楼层
还有一个人大论坛上的帖子可能有帮助:

1.         http://fisher.osu.edu/fin/faculty/hirshleifer/
David Hirshleifer is an expert on various aspects of corporate finance and investments. His recent research emphasizes psychology in firms and markets, including such issues as how to measure stock market inefficiency, how mood and emotions affects stock prices, the design of trading strategies to exploit stock market mispricing, corporate financial and investment policy when stocks are mispriced, limited investor attention and the use of financial information, and the effects of managerial decision biases. He has also studied hidden information and stock returns, estimating value effects of takeovers, the sources of imitation and fads, strategies for bidder and target firms in takeover contests, risk management and determinants of futures prices, and security analysis policies and investor trading styles.

2.         http://gsb.uchicago.edu/fac/richard.thaler
Richard Thaler is an economist perhaps best known as a theorist in behavioral finance and for his collaboration with Daniel Kahneman and others in further defining that field. Thaler has also written a number of books intended for a lay reader on the subject of behavioral finance, including Quasi-rational Economics and The Winner's Curse, the latter of which contains many of his "Anomalies" columns revised and adapted for a popular audience.

3.         http://www.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/stein
Jeremy C. Stein is the Moise Y. Safra Professor of Economics at Harvard University, where he teaches courses in finance in the undergraduate and PhD programs. He is also serving as president-elect of the American Finance Association for 2007. Stein’s research has covered such topics as: behavioral finance and stock-market efficiency; corporate investment and financing decisions; risk management; capital allocation inside firms; financial intermediation; and monetary policy. He is currently a co-editor of the Journal of Economic Perspectives, and has served on the editorial boards of the American Economic Review, the Quarterly Journal of Economics, the Journal of Finance and the Journal of Financial Economics, as well as on the board of directors of the American Finance Association. He is also a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research.

4.         http://elsa.berkeley.edu/~rabin/index.html
Matthew Rabin is Edward G. and Nancy S. Jordan Professor of Economics in the Department of Economics at the University of California – Berkeley. His research is directed, among other economic fields, towards behavioral finance / economics. His works on the economics of individual self-control problems, reference-dependent preferences, fairness motives and mistakes in probabilistic reasoning. In 2001 he was awarded the John Bates Clark Medal by the American Economic Association and also the MacArthur "Genius" Fellowship.

5.         http://www.hss.caltech.edu/~camerer/camerer.html
Colin F. Camerer is a behavioral economist and a professor at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). His research is on the interface between cognitive psychology and economics. This work seeks a better understanding of the psychological and neurobiological basis of decision-making in order to determine the validity of models of human economic behavior.

6.         http://lsb.scu.edu/finance/faculty/Shefrin/Default.htm
Hersh Shefrin holds the Mario L. Belotti Chair in the Department of Finance, Leavey School of Business at Santa Clara University. He is one of the pioneers of behavioral finance.

7.         http://lsb.scu.edu/finance/faculty/statman/default.htm
Meir Statman is the Glenn Klimek Professor of Finance at the Leavey School of Business, Santa Clara University. His research focuses on behavioral finance. He attempts to understand how investors and managers make financial decisions and how these decisions are reflected in financial markets.

8.         http://www.ices-gmu.net/people.php/79151.html?menuid=/
Vernon Smith is a professor of Economics and Law at George Mason University. His research focuses on Experimental Economics, Industrial Organization, Property Rights Economics, Neuroeconomics.

9.         http://post.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/shleifer/shleifer.html
Andrei Shleifer is a professor of economics at Harvard University , His work focuses mostly on financial economics, where he has contributed to the field of behavioral finance.In recent years, his research has focused on the legal origins theory (also sometimes known as law and finance theory).

10.     http://www.econ.berkeley.edu/~ulrike/index.html
Ulrike Malmendier is an Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley (since 2006). Research interests:Corporate Finance, Behavioral Finance, Behavioral Economics, Economics of Organizations, Contract Theory, Law & Finance, Economics Of Institutions, Economics And Psychology

11.     http://faculty.haas.berkeley.edu/odean/
Terrance Odean is the Willis H. Booth Professor of Banking and Finance at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley. As an undergraduate at Berkeley, Odean studied Judgment and Decision Making with the 2002 Nobel Laureate in Economics, Daniel Kahneman. This led to his current research focus on how decision making biases affect investor welfare and securities prices. His research has been cited in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Time, Newsweek, Business Week, and many other publications.

12.     http://www.economics.harvard.edu ... n/mullainathan.html
Sendhil Mullainathan is a professor of economics at Harvard University. He is a recipient of a MacArthur Foundation "genius grant" and conducts research on behavioral economics, discrimination, and corporate finance.

13.     http://elsa.berkeley.edu/~sdellavi/
Stefano Dellavigna is an Economist at the University of California, Berkeley. His research is on Psychology and Economics, Applied Micro, Media Economics, Behavioral Finance, Political Economics.

14.     http://www.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/laibson/laibson.html
David Laibson is a professor of economics at Harvard University, where he has taught since 1994. His research focuses on macroeconomics, intertemporal choice and neuroeconomics.

15.     http://www.som.yale.edu/faculty/ncb25/
Nicholas Barberis is a professor at Yale School of Management. His research focuses on behavioral finance and in particular, on applications of cognitive psychology to understanding the pricing of financial assets.

16.     http://www.econ.yale.edu/~shiller/
Robert J. Shiller,Stanley B. Resor Professor of Economics Professor, School of Management。He has written widely on financial markets, behavioral economics, macroeconomics, real estate, statistical methods, and on public attitudes, opinions, and moral judgments regarding markets.

17.     http://www.econ.yale.edu/faculty1/fang.htm
Hanming Fang, Henry Kohn Associate Professor of Economics at Yale University. Research Interests: Applied microeconomic theory, Empirical microeconomics, Behavioral economics

18.     http://cowles.econ.yale.edu/faculty/shubik.htm
Martin Shubik Seymour Knox ,Professor of Mathematical Institutional Economics  Research Interests: Theory of money and financial institutions, Behavior under risk, Economic warfare.


本文来自: 人大经济论坛 详细出处参考:http://www.pinggu.org/bbs/viewthread.php?tid=463451&page=1
先帝尝问于诸葛武侯曰:“知天何与逆天难?”
对曰:“知天易,逆天难。”

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发表于 2009-6-22 13:27:12 |显示全部楼层
版主,我对你的敬仰简直了。。。。。。。。几天没来,发现告诉了我这么多的好东西,超级感谢阿。。。。。。。。激动中,会好好研读的,我想我去的国家就是美国。
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Economist

发表于 2009-6-22 16:54:40 |显示全部楼层
Tilburg/Tinbergen - Look into TIBER at Tilburg and CREED at one of the Tinbergen Institute schools. Better option is probably Tinbergen Institute, since you have access to all the Tilburg faculty (including TIBER) and also to CREED.

好像不是这样的吧。说句实在话Tilburg和Tinbergen的联系还没有Tilburg和Maastricht的联系多呢。要看里面professor他们的research network的。Gijs van Guilen(?)和Petter Wakker他们有joint paper,但是Gijs本人又不是TIBER的。Jan Potters近两年没有和TI的人有joint paper。Sigrid和Reuben有joint paper,但是Reuben已经离开CREED好久了。
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RE: 求行为经济的排名或者哪些学校比较好,谢谢!!! [修改]

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求行为经济的排名或者哪些学校比较好,谢谢!!!
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