Skip to main content
Princeton Mobile homeCourses home
Detail

Behavioral Economics

ECO 516

1234
Info tab content
The course covers topics that incorporate findings and concepts from psychology into economic analysis, with applications to individual decisions, public goods, social norms, organizations and markets, and politics. The lectures focus primarily on formal models, but the readings tie them closely to experimental evidence. Themes include social preferences (fairness, reciprocity, intrinsic vs. extrinsic motivation); self-control; motivated beliefs (overoptimism, wishful thinking); reference-dependence (loss aversion, prospect theory); imperfect memory and attention; bounded rationality (cognitive limitations, choice overload, satisficing).
Instructors tab content
Sections tab content

Section L01