Virtual experiments and environmental policy
We develop the concept of virtual experiments and consider their application to environmental policy. A virtual experiment combines insights from virtual reality in computer science, naturalistic decision-making from psychology, and field experiments from economics. The environmental policy applications of interest to us are the valuation of wild fire management policies such as prescribed burn. The methodological objective of virtual experiments is to bridge the gap between the artefactual controls of laboratory experiments and the naturalistic domain of field experiments or direct field studies. This should provide tools for policy analysis that combine the inferential power of replicable experimental treatments with the natural "look and feel" of a field domain. We present data from an experiment comparing valuations elicited by virtual experiments to those elicited by instruments that have some of the characteristics of standard survey instruments, and conclude that responses in the former reflect beliefs that are closer to the truth.
| Year of publication: |
2009
|
|---|---|
| Authors: | Fiore, Stephen M. ; Harrison, Glenn W. ; Hughes, Charles E. ; Rutstrm, E. Elisabet |
| Published in: |
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management. - Elsevier, ISSN 0095-0696. - Vol. 57.2009, 1, p. 65-86
|
| Publisher: |
Elsevier |
| Keywords: | Virtual reality Field experiments Laboratory experiments Risk perception Subjective beliefs Wildfires Environmental policy |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Virtual experiments and environmental policy
Fiore, Stephen M., (2009)
-
Virtual experiments and environmental policy
Fiore, Stephen M., (2009)
-
Making time for memory and remembering time in motivation theory
Fiore, Stephen M., (2008)
- More ...