Decision Economics: In the Tradition of Herbert A. Simon's Heritage (e-bog) af -
Corchado, Juan M. (redaktør)

Decision Economics: In the Tradition of Herbert A. Simon's Heritage e-bog

875,33 DKK (inkl. moms 1094,16 DKK)
The special session on Decision Economics (DECON) is a scientific forum held annually and intended to share ideas, projects, research results, models and experiences associated with the complexity of behavioural decision processes and socioeconomic phenomena. DECON 2017 was held at the Polytechnic of Porto, ISEP, Portugal, as part of the 14th International Conference on Distributed Computing an...
E-bog 875,33 DKK
Forfattere Corchado, Juan M. (redaktør)
Forlag Springer
Udgivet 13 juni 2017
Genrer Economic theory and philosophy
Sprog English
Format pdf
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9783319608822
The special session on Decision Economics (DECON) is a scientific forum held annually and intended to share ideas, projects, research results, models and experiences associated with the complexity of behavioural decision processes and socioeconomic phenomena. DECON 2017 was held at the Polytechnic of Porto, ISEP, Portugal, as part of the 14th International Conference on Distributed Computing and Artificial Intelligence. For the second consecutive year, the Editors of this book have drawn inspiration from Herbert A. Simon's immense body of work and argue that Simon precipitated something akin to a revolution in microeconomics focused on the concept of decisionmaking. Further, it is worth noting that the recognition of relevant decisionmaking takes place in a range of critical subject areas and research fields, including economics, finance, information systems, small and international business management, operations, and production. Therefore, decisionmaking issues are of fundamental importance in all branches of economics addressed both deductively and inductively. Not surprisingly, the study of decisionmaking has seen growing empirical research efforts in the economic literature over the last sixty years and, more recently, a variety of insightful cuttingedge experimental, behavioural and computational approaches. Additionally, the awareness regarding generalizations and reductions to express economic concepts has led, on the one hand, to an increasing risk of spreading the language of mathematics as a rhetorical tool and, on the other hand, to an oversimplification and overlooking of some crucial details, especially when it comes to human decisions and, hence, economic behaviour. That awareness, however, has helped to produce an extraordinary volume of empirical research aimed at discovering how economic agents cope with complex decisions. In this sense, the international scientific community acknowledges Herbert A. Simon's research endeavours to understand the processes involved in economic decisionmaking and their implications for the advancement of economic professions. Within the field of decisionmaking, indeed, Simon's rejection of the standard decisionmaking models used in neoclassical economics inspired social scientists worldwide to develop research programmes in order to study decisionmaking empirically. The main achievements concern decisionmaking for individuals, firms, markets, governments, institutions, and, last but not least, science and research.