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  • Search: subject:"Duhem-Quine problem"
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Year of publication
Subject
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Duhem-Quine problem 4 deception 3 experimental design 3 experimental implementation 3 financial incentives 3 experimental economics 1
Online availability
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Free 3 Undetermined 1
Type of publication
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Book / Working Paper 3 Article 1
Type of publication (narrower categories)
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Working Paper 1
Language
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English 3 Undetermined 1
Author
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Ortmann, Andreas 3 Starmer, Chris 1
Institution
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CESifo 1 School of Economics, UNSW Business School 1
Published in...
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CESifo Working Paper 1 CESifo Working Paper Series 1 Discussion Papers / School of Economics, UNSW Business School 1 Journal of Economic Methodology 1
Source
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RePEc 3 EconStor 1
Showing 1 - 4 of 4
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'The Way in Which an Experiment is Conducted is Unbelievably Important': On the Experimentation Practices of Economists and Psychologists
Ortmann, Andreas - School of Economics, UNSW Business School - 2010
To discuss experimental results without discussing how they came about makes sense when the results are robust to the way experiments are conducted. Experimental results, however, are – arguably more often than not – sensitive to numerous design and implementation characteristics such as the...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008505422
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Cover Image
The way in which an experiment is conducted is unbelievably Important: on the experimentation practices of economists and psychologists
Ortmann, Andreas - 2009
To discuss experimental results without discussing how they came about makes sense when the results are robust to the way experiments are conducted. Experimental results, however, are – arguably more often than not – sensitive to numerous design and implementation characteristics such as the...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010276095
Saved in:
Cover Image
"The Way in which an Experiment is Conducted is Unbelievably Important": On the Experimentation Practices of Economists and Psychologists
Ortmann, Andreas - CESifo - 2009
To discuss experimental results without discussing how they came about makes sense when the results are robust to the way experiments are conducted. Experimental results, however, are – arguably more often than not – sensitive to numerous design and implementation characteristics such as the...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008534052
Saved in:
Cover Image
Experiments in economics: should we trust the dismal scientists in white coats?
Starmer, Chris - In: Journal of Economic Methodology 6 (1999) 1, pp. 1-30
Is the rapid growth of experimental research in economics evidence of a new scientific spirit at work or merely fresh evidence of a misplaced desire to ape the methods of natural sciences? It is often argued that economic experiments are artificial in some sense that tends to render the results...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005462907
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