
A new academic field, neuroeconomics, has emerged at the border of the social and natural sciences. In Foundations of Neuroeconomic Analysis, Paul Glimcher argues that a meaningful interdisciplinary synthesis of the study of human and animal choice is not only desirable, but also well underway, and so it is time to formally develop a foundational approach for the field. He does so by laying the philosophical and empirical groundwork and integrating the theory of choice and valuation with the relevant physical constraints and mechanisms.While there has been an intense debate about the value and prospects of neuroeconomics, Glimcher argues that existing data from neuroeconomics' three parent fields, neuroscience, psychology and economics, already specify the basic features of the primate choice mechanism at all three levels of analysis. His central argument is that combining these three disciplines gives us enough insight to define many of the fundamental features of decision making that have previously eluded scholars working within each individual field.With this in mind, Glimcher provides a comprehensive overview of the neuroscience, psychology, and economics of choice behavior, which will help readers from many disciplines to grasp the rich interconnections between these fields and see how their data and theory can interact to produce new insights, constraints, and questions. The book is divided into four main sections that address key barriers to interdisciplinary cohesion. The first section defines the central philosophical issues that neuroeconomics must engage. The theory of knowledge already tells us much about how different disciplines interact, and in this section, Glimcher reviews those constraints and lays a philosophical foundation for future neuroeconomic discourse. This section concludes with both a defense of neoclassical economics and a spirited attack on Milton Friedman's insistence that economics must not be constrained by the study of mechanism.
Can the integration of neuroscience, psychology, and economics provide a unified, foundational framework for understanding human and animal decision-making? Paul W. Glimcher, a prominent researcher in the field, argues that existing empirical data from these three parent disciplines already contain the necessary components to define the primate choice mechanism. By synthesizing these fields, he seeks to overcome historical barriers to interdisciplinary cohesion and establish a formal, rigorous basis for neuroeconomic analysis.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students frequently identify this work as a foundational text for the emerging field of neuroeconomics. Readers often note the academic density of the prose, which requires a strong background in at least one of the three parent disciplines to fully grasp the theoretical arguments presented.
Page Count:
487
Publication Date:
2010-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190453958
ISBN-13:
9780190453954
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