Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
1980 - 2025
Current editor(s): Houser, D. and Puzzello, D. From Elsevier Bibliographic data for series maintained by Catherine Liu (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 93, issue C, 2013
- Do higher child care subsidies improve parental well-being? Evidence from Quebec's family policies pp. 1-16

- Abel Brodeur and Marie Connolly
- Bounded awareness, heuristics and the Precautionary Principle pp. 17-31

- Simon Grant and John Quiggin
- The enemy you can’t see: An investigation of the disruption of dark networks pp. 32-50

- Michael McBride and David Hewitt
- Unequal opportunities and distributive justice pp. 51-61

- Gerald Eisenkopf, Urs Fischbacher and Franziska Föllmi-Heusi
- Strategic behavior of Federal Open Market Committee board members: Evidence from members’ forecasts pp. 62-70

- Yoshiyuki Nakazono
- Do people avoid opportunities to donate? pp. 71-77

- Mikael Knutsson, Peter Martinsson and Conny Wollbrant
- Keeping up with CEO Jones: Benchmarking and executive compensation pp. 78-100

- Ron Laschever
- Experimental evidence on dynamic pollution tax policies pp. 101-115

- Christian Vossler, Jordan Suter and Gregory Poe
- Is it really good to annuitize? pp. 116-140

- James Feigenbaum, Emin Gahramanov and Xueli Tang
- The (in)stability of social preferences: Using justice sensitivity to predict when altruism collapses pp. 141-148

- Sebastian Lotz, Thomas Schlösser, Daylian M. Cain and Detlef Fetchenhauer
- Overconfidence and asymmetric information: The case of insurance pp. 149-165

- Alvaro Sandroni and Francesco Squintani
- One nation under a groove? Understanding national identity pp. 166-185

- Andreas Georgiadis and Alan Manning
- Claims and confounds in economic experiments pp. 186-195

- Daniel Zizzo
- Studying deception without deceiving participants: An experiment of deception experiments pp. 196-204

- Federica Alberti and Werner Güth
- Do voluntary payments to advisors improve the quality of financial advice? An experimental deception game pp. 205-218

- Vera Angelova and Tobias Regner
- Do customers return excessive change in a restaurant? pp. 219-226

- Ofer Azar, Shira Yosef and Michael Bar-Eli
- Deception: The role of guilt pp. 227-232

- Pierpaolo Battigalli, Gary Charness and Martin Dufwenberg
- Sloppy work, lies and theft: A novel experimental design to study counterproductive behaviour pp. 233-238

- Michèle Belot and Marina Schröder
- The value of lies in an ultimatum game with imperfect information pp. 239-247

- Damien Besancenot, Delphine Dubart and Radu Vranceanu
- Unethical behavior in the field: Demographic characteristics and beliefs of the cheater pp. 248-257

- Alessandro Bucciol, Fabio Landini and Marco Piovesan
- When do we lie? pp. 258-265

- Alexander Cappelen, Erik Sørensen and Bertil Tungodden
- The dark side of team incentives: Experimental evidence on advice quality from financial service professionals pp. 266-272

- Anastasia Danilov, Torsten Biemann, Thorn Kring and Dirk Sliwka
- Avoiding lying: The case of delegated deception pp. 273-278

- Sanjiv Erat
- Separating Will from Grace: An experiment on conformity and awareness in cheating pp. 279-284

- Toke Reinholt Fosgaard, Lars Gaarn Hansen and Marco Piovesan
- Self-serving altruism? The lure of unethical actions that benefit others pp. 285-292

- Francesca Gino, Shahar Ayal and Dan Ariely
- Measuring lying aversion pp. 293-300

- Uri Gneezy, Bettina Rockenbach and Marta Serra-Garcia
- How luck and performance affect stealing pp. 301-304

- Christina Gravert
- The royal lie pp. 305-313

- Mareike Hoffmann, Thomas Lauer and Bettina Rockenbach
- Disclosing advisor's interests neither hurts nor helps pp. 314-320

- Huseyn Ismayilov and Jan Potters
- Fooling the Nice Guys: Explaining receiver credulity in a public good game with lying and punishment pp. 321-327

- Bernd Irlenbusch and Janna Ter Meer
- Cheating in mind games: The subtlety of rules matters pp. 328-336

- Ting Jiang
- Implicit vs. explicit deception in ultimatum games with incomplete information pp. 337-346

- Peter H. Kriss, Rosemarie Nagel and Roberto Weber
- Harmful lie aversion and lie discovery in noisy expert advice games pp. 347-362

- John Lightle
- The heritability of moral standards for everyday dishonesty pp. 363-366

- Peter J. Loewen, Christopher T. Dawes, Nina Mazar, Magnus Johannesson, Philipp Koellinger and Patrik K.E. Magnusson
- Motivation, money, prestige and cheats pp. 367-373

- David Pascual-Ezama, Drazen Prelec and Derek Dunfield
- Self-image and moral balancing: An experimental analysis pp. 374-383

- Matteo Ploner and Tobias Regner
- Nobody likes a rat: On the willingness to report lies and the consequences thereof pp. 384-391

- Ernesto Reuben and Matt Stephenson
- Deciding whether to deceive: Determinants of the choice between deceptive and honest communication pp. 392-399

- Kayo Sakamoto, Tei Laine and Ilya Farber
- Moral firmness pp. 400-407

- Shaul Shalvi and David Leiser
- Ten possible experiments on communication and deception pp. 408-413

- Joel Sobel
Volume 92, issue C, 2013
- Occupational choice and the quality of entrepreneurs pp. 1-21

- Eren Inci
- Is there a gender gap in preschoolers’ competitiveness? An experiment in the U.S pp. 22-31

- Anya C. Samak
- An afterlife capital model of religious choice pp. 32-44

- Derek Pyne
- Endogenous negative stereotypes: A similarity-based approach pp. 45-54

- Tobias Heinrich
- Intention-based reciprocity and the hidden costs of control pp. 55-65

- Ferdinand von Siemens
- Gens una sumus?!—Or does political ideology affect experts’ esthetic judgment of chess games? pp. 66-78

- Björn Frank and Stefan Krabel
- The causal effect of compulsory voting laws on turnout: Does skill matter? pp. 79-93

- Laura Jaitman
- Top guns may not fire: Best-shot group contests with group-specific public good prizes pp. 94-103

- Subhasish Chowdhury, Dongryul Lee and Roman M. Sheremeta
- Strategic ignorance in ultimatum bargaining pp. 104-115

- Julian Conrads and Bernd Irlenbusch
- Give peace a chance: The effect of ownership and asymmetric information on peace pp. 116-126

- Luis Corchon and Anil Yildizparlak
- Reference dependent altruism in demand bargaining pp. 127-140

- Yves Breitmoser and Jonathan Tan
- Can rational stubbornness explain forecast biases? pp. 141-151

- Bruno Deschamps and Christos Ioannidis
- Effort Aversion: Job choice and compensation decisions overweight effort pp. 152-162

- David Comerford and Peter A. Ubel
- Prisoners and their dilemma pp. 163-175

- Menusch Khadjavi and Andreas Lange
- Endogenous coordination and discoordination games: Multiculturalism and assimilation pp. 176-191

- John Conley and William Neilson
- Donative behavior at the end of life pp. 192-201

- Jonathan Meer and Harvey Rosen
- Eating dogfood: Examining the relative roles of reason and emotion pp. 202-213

- William Schulze, Annemie Maertens and Brian Wansink
- The influence of trust on consumer behavior: An application to recurring food risks in Canada pp. 214-223

- Yulian Ding, Michele M. Veeman and Wiktor Adamowicz
- Fiscal policy and business cycle characteristics in a heterogeneous agent macro model pp. 224-240

- Andre Neveu
- Economic crises and wellbeing: Social norms and home production pp. 241-258

- Louise Grogan and Katerina Koka
- Are you a good employee or simply a good guy? Influence costs and contract design pp. 259-272

- Brice Corgnet and Ismael Rodriguez-Lara
- Risk-taking in social settings: Group and peer effects pp. 273-283

- Spiros Bougheas, Jeroen Nieboer and Martin Sefton
- How competitive are female professionals? A tale of identity conflict pp. 284-303

- Charles Cadsby, Maroš Servátka and Fei Song
- Super-exponential bubbles in lab experiments: Evidence for anchoring over-optimistic expectations on price pp. 304-316

- A. Hüsler, D. Sornette and C.H. Hommes
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