1: Joseph Henrich, Robert Boyd, Samuel Bowles, Colin Camerer, Ernst
Fehr, and Herbert Gintis: Introduction and Guide to the Volume
2: Joseph Henrich, Robert Boyd, Samuel Bowles, Colin Camerer, Ernst
Fehr, Herbert Gintis, and Richard McElreath: Overview and
Synthesis
3: Colin Camerer and Ernst Fehr`: Measuring Social Norms and
Preferences Using Experimental Games: A Guide for Social
Sciences
4: John Q. Patton: Coalitional Effects on Reciprocal Fairness in
the Ultimatum Game: A Case from the Ecuadorian Amazon
5: Joseph Henrich and Natalie Smith: Comparative Experimental
Evidence from Machiguenga, Mapuche, Huinca, and American
Populations Shows Substantial Variation Among Social Groups in
Bargaining and Public Goods Behavior
6: Frank Marlowe: Dictators and Ultimatums in an Egalitarian
Society of Hunter-Gatherers - the Hadza of Tanzania
7: Michael Gurven: Does Market Exposure Affect Economic Game
Behavior? The Ultimatum Game and the Public Goods Game Among the
Tsimane of Bolivia
8: David Tracer: Market Integration, Reciprocity, and Fairness in
Rural Papua New Guinea: Results from a Two-Village Ultimatum Game
Experiment
9: Francisco J. Gil-White: Ultimatum Game with an Ethnicity
Manipulation: Results from Khovdiin Bulgan Sum, Mongolia
10: Avigail Barr: Kinship, Familiarity, and Trust: An Experimental
Investigation
11: Richard McElreath: Community Structure, Mobility, and the
Strength of Norms in an Africa Society: the Sangu of Tanzania
12: Jean Ensminger: Market Integration and Fairness: Evidence from
Ultimatum, Dictator, and Public Goods Experiments in East
Africa
13: Kim Hill and Mike Gurven: Economic Experiments to Examine
Fairness and Cooperation among the Ache Indians of Paraguay
14: Michael Alvard: The Ultimatum Game, Fairness, and Cooperation
among Big Game Hunters
Joseph Henrich is Assistant Professor in the Department of
Anthropology at Emory University. As a theorist, experimentalist
and ethnographer, Henrich's work spans Anthropology, Biology, and
Economics, and he has published in the leading journals in all
three fields. As a field worker, he has conducted research in Peru
(Amazonia), Chile, the US, and Fiji. Samuel Bowles is Professor in
the Faculty of Economics at the University of Siena, and Professor
Emeritus of
Economics at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He has also
been Professor of Economics at Harvard. He is Director of the
Economics Program at the Santa Fe Institute, and Co-Coordinator of
its
Research Program in Culture and Evolutionary Dynamics. Robert Boyd
is Professor of Anthropology at UCLA. He has also been Assistant
Professor at Emory University and Duke University. He is a member
of the editorial board of Quantitative Anthropology, Associate
Editor for Evolution and Human Behaviour, and Co-director of the
McArthur Foundation Preferences Project. He has published numerous
articles and has co-authored two books on human evolution. Colin
Camerer is the Axline
Professor of Business Economics at Caltech (in Pasadena,
California), where he teaches both psychology and economics. He
worked at Kellogg, Wharton, and Chicago business schools before
Caltech. He is the co-author or
editor of three books, and the author of Behavioral Game Theory
(Princeton, 2003). Camerer was the first behavioral economist to
become a Fellow of the Econometric Society, in 1999, and was the
president of the Economic Science Association from 2001 to 2003.
Ernst Fehr is Professor of Economics and Director of the Institute
for Empirical Resarch in Economics at the University of Zürich. He
is also Director of the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for the Analysis
of Economic Growth, and
a Fellow of CEPR and CESifo. In September 1999 he was awarded the
prestigious Gossen prize of the German Economic Assocation (Verein
für Socialpolitik). Herbert Gintis is a member of the External
Faculty of the
Santa Fe Institute, Professor Emeritus of Economics at the
University of Massachusetts, and Adjunct Professor at the
Department of Politics, New York University.
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