In economics agents are assumed to choose on the basis of rational calculations aimed at the maximization of their pleasure or profit. Formally, agents are said to manifest transitive and consistent preferences in attempting to maximize their utility in the presence of several constraints. They operate according to the choice imperative: given a set of alternatives, choose the best. This imperative works well in a static and simplistic framework, but it may fail or vary when 'the best' is changing continuously. This approach has been questioned by a descriptive approach that springing from th
Theories of rational decision normally distinguish basic and other preferences, using only the forme...
Standard decision theory, or rational choice theory, is often interpreted to be a theory of instrume...
Standard decision theory, or rational choice theory, is often interpreted to be a theory of instrume...
A Decision Maker (DM) must choose at discrete moments from a finite set of actions that result in ra...
Recent results in complexity theory suggest that various economic theories require agents to solve c...
Recent results in complexity theory suggest that various economic theories require agents to solve c...
It seems inconsistent to model boundedly rational action choice by assuming that the agent chooses t...
Decision theory faces a number of problematic gambles which challenge it to say what value an ideal ...
Decision theory faces a number of problematic gambles which challenge it to say what value an ideal ...
This book offers a rigorous, concise, and nontechnical introduction to some of the fundamental insig...
In economic theory, an agent chooses from available alternatives—modeled as a set. In decisions in t...
In economic theory, an agent chooses from available alternatives—modeled as a set. In decisions in t...
Economic theorists characterize an individual decision maker using three basic con-cepts: (1) A coll...
Theories of rational decision normally distinguish basic and other preferences, using only the forme...
Theories of rational decision normally distinguish basic and other preferences, using only the forme...
Theories of rational decision normally distinguish basic and other preferences, using only the forme...
Standard decision theory, or rational choice theory, is often interpreted to be a theory of instrume...
Standard decision theory, or rational choice theory, is often interpreted to be a theory of instrume...
A Decision Maker (DM) must choose at discrete moments from a finite set of actions that result in ra...
Recent results in complexity theory suggest that various economic theories require agents to solve c...
Recent results in complexity theory suggest that various economic theories require agents to solve c...
It seems inconsistent to model boundedly rational action choice by assuming that the agent chooses t...
Decision theory faces a number of problematic gambles which challenge it to say what value an ideal ...
Decision theory faces a number of problematic gambles which challenge it to say what value an ideal ...
This book offers a rigorous, concise, and nontechnical introduction to some of the fundamental insig...
In economic theory, an agent chooses from available alternatives—modeled as a set. In decisions in t...
In economic theory, an agent chooses from available alternatives—modeled as a set. In decisions in t...
Economic theorists characterize an individual decision maker using three basic con-cepts: (1) A coll...
Theories of rational decision normally distinguish basic and other preferences, using only the forme...
Theories of rational decision normally distinguish basic and other preferences, using only the forme...
Theories of rational decision normally distinguish basic and other preferences, using only the forme...
Standard decision theory, or rational choice theory, is often interpreted to be a theory of instrume...
Standard decision theory, or rational choice theory, is often interpreted to be a theory of instrume...