测量社会偏好的实验室实验揭示了现实世界的什么?

What Do Laboratory Experiments Measuring Social Preferences Reveal About the Real World?

Journal of Economic Perspectives · 2007
被引 2692 · 同刊同年前 2%
人大 A-ABS 4

中文导读

研究实验室行为能否反映现实行为,通过模型分析审视、情境和选择偏差的影响,并讨论实验室结果对自然市场的适用性。

Abstract

A critical question facing experimental economists is whether behavior inside the laboratory is a good indicator of behavior outside the laboratory. To address that question, we build a model in which the choices that individuals make depend not just on financial implications, but also on the nature and extent of scrutiny by others, the particular context in which a decision is embedded, and the manner in which participants and tasks are selected. We present empirical evidence demonstrating the importance of these various factors. To the extent that lab and naturally occurring environments systematically differ on any of these dimensions, the results obtained inside and outside the lab need not correspond. Focusing on experiments designed to measure social preferences, we discuss the extent to which the existing laboratory results generalize to naturally-occurring markets. We summarize cases where the lab may understate the importance of social preferences as well as instances in which the lab might exaggerate their importance. We conclude by emphasizing the importance of interpreting laboratory and field data through the lens of theory.

实验室实验社会偏好外部有效性情境因素