ECO 363 Behavioral Economics
How do limitations in the ability to think and know affect economic decision making? Are
people really as rational as economists often assume them to be? Behavioral economics studies
how cognitive limitations, biases, social influence, uncertainty, and emotions affect economic
decision making of individuals. A brief overview of how economists use experimental methods in
laboratory environments to study experimental economics will be covered and the implications of
behavioral economics on policy will be explored. Prerequisite:
ECO 210 or permission of the
instructor. Liberal Arts Core/University Requirements Designation: SS-2. (3)