Note: This workshop was jointly held with Modarn Economics Study Group in Graduate School of Economics and Business Administration and Center for Experimental Research in Social Sciences, Hokkaido University. 
								  
								  Date: August 7, 2008
 (Thursday) 16:00-18:00 
								  Location: Hokkaido University, The Humanities and Social Science Building, room W309 
								  Speakers: Nathan Berg (University of Texas-Dallas) 
								     
Participants: Toshio Yamagishi, Tatsuya Kameda, Susumu Ohnuma, Yoichi Hizen, Others (16 participants): Total 20 participants 
								  Contents:
								     
								    In economics, the normative criteria are  overwhelmingly axioms of self consistency.   But recent studies show many observations of beliefs or choices that  depart from normative consistency axioms. Professor Berg talked about several  different research projects centered on the theme of empirical normative  economics; 1) economists’ beliefs about risks of cancer, 2) food price data,  grocery stores’ location choice, and 3) time inconsistency, risk attitudes, and  payoffs (experimental data). He showed that consistency describes poorly what  successful professionals, successful firms, and successful (high-payoff)  experimental subjects do. It implies that normative consistency axioms should  be modified. 
                                     
                                       
									   
								     
 
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