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Lecture notes Psychology and Economic Behavior ()

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A summary of all lectures, including examples and extensions of the slides!

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June 11, 2024
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2023/2024
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Table of contents
LECTURE 1 INTRODUCTION TO PEB................................................................................................................ 3
Economic Psychology vs behavioral economics...................................................................................................4
Cumulative prospect theory.................................................................................................................................6
Summary..............................................................................................................................................................7

LECTURE 2 MONEY, MATERIALISM & POVERTY..............................................................................................8
Overview the lecure..............................................................................................................................................8
Priming Money.....................................................................................................................................................9
Psychology of Scarcity: what does it mean not to own enough?.......................................................................11
Summary questions............................................................................................................................................11

LECTURE 3 ECONOMIC BEHAVIOR ACROSS THE LIFESPAN.............................................................................12
Overview of the lecture......................................................................................................................................12
Socioemotional Selectivity Theory......................................................................................................................15
Example exam questions....................................................................................................................................15

LECTURE 4 PROSOCIAL BEHAVIOR................................................................................................................ 16
What is prosocial behavior?...............................................................................................................................16
Temporal myopia and uncertainty.....................................................................................................................18
Summary............................................................................................................................................................20

LECTURE 5 FINANCIAL RISK TAKING.............................................................................................................. 21
The efficient market hypothesis.........................................................................................................................21
Summary............................................................................................................................................................23
Example exam questions....................................................................................................................................23

LECTURE 6 UNDERSTANDING THE ECONOMY...............................................................................................24
Mental accounting in the context of gains & losses..........................................................................................25
How lay people understand economy................................................................................................................26
Examples:...........................................................................................................................................................27

LECTURE 7 SAVING & DEBT.......................................................................................................................... 28
1-1. Influencing internal (reflective) Motivation................................................................................................28
1-2. Influencing Reflective Motivation...............................................................................................................29
2. Influencing Automatic Motivation.................................................................................................................29
3-1. Influencing Social and Physical Opportunities............................................................................................31
3-2. Influencing decision making environment..................................................................................................31
Hyperbolic discounting.......................................................................................................................................31
Framing effects in intertemporal choice............................................................................................................32


1

, 2-2: We will need to borrow money to start our own business.........................................................................33




2

, LECTURE 1 INTRODUCTION TO PEB
Everyday economic decision making  setting goals, cognitive and emotional processes,
making choices, habits, physical and mental consequences of decisions.
Eg.: do you get coffee, do you cook at home, do you go out to eat, do you drink a glass of
wine every day, do you go to the same store, do you go by bike or car.

Economic approach: constructing a model that achieves an optimal outcome for an
‘average’ person
Psychological approach: investigating decision making processes of behaviors,
intentions/attitudes to behave in certain ways, given a wide range of
individual differences (values, beliefs, tendencies, traits, states, etc.)

How can psychology contribute to the “average man” in economic decisions?
Economic assumptions vs reality
 Stable preferences (changes over time and over situations)
 Self-interest (different interests play a role)
 Maximization (not always maximizing utility)
 No cognitive limitations (Not a supercomputing machine)
 Unlimited will-power (Not always a motivated person)
 Complete information (rarely the case of market transparency)
 Long time perspective (not always a far-sighted person)

Faces are important for human perceptions (specific brain area). Recognition of faces and
emotions everywhere, secondary processes happen right away (good/friend vs bad/foe).
We don’t have the same recognition for faces we don’t see every day, which will
confuse the secondary processes (for example upside down, or an extra mouth)

Adam Smith: The Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759) Introducing psychological concepts
into economic situations. For example: importance of perspective taking, social interactions
on trading, connection between self and other well-being.
George Katona and Herbert Simon: Real-life events are better predicted by empirical data,
compared to theoretical modelling.

Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky
 Heuristics and Biases in judgement
 Prospect Theory
 Risk aversion for losses
Richard Thaler
 Mental accounting
 Fairness
 Self-control




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