Geetanjali remarks:
> Initially, I thought the concept felt too transactional, believing motivation for sobriety should come from within.

Yet, I was surprised to learn that contingency management is widespread, with insurance companies covering it for over 8,000 U.S.

vets.

#ContingencyManagement #Healthcare

A new thinkpiece on Policy Consequences of the New Neuroeconomics Framework.

We argue that #neuroscience provides a framework to build new models in #microeconomics with actual #policy consequences.

#addiction #ContingencyManagement
#microfinance #SunkCostFallacy #BehavioralEconomics #Neuroeconomics

A.D. Redish, H.S. Chastain, C.F. Runge, B.M. Sweis, S.E. Allen, A. Haldar (2024) Policy consequences of the new neuroeconomic framework. #arXiv unreviewed preprint.

https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.07373

Policy consequences of the new neuroeconomic framework

Current theories of decision making suggest that the neural circuits in mammalian brains (including humans) computationally combine representations of the past (memory), present (perception), and future (agentic goals) to take actions that achieve the needs of the agent. How information is represented within those neural circuits changes what computations are available to that system which changes how agents interact with their world to take those actions. We argue that the computational neuroscience of decision making provides a new microeconomic framework (neuroeconomics) that offers new opportunities to construct policies that interact with those decision-making systems to improve outcomes. After laying out the computational processes underlying decision making in mammalian brains, we present four applications of this logic with policy consequences: (1) precommitment to avoid falling into the trap of sunk costs, (2) media consequences for changes in housing prices after a disaster, (3) contingency management as a treatment for addiction, and (4) how social interactions underlie the success (and failure) of microfinance institutions.

arXiv.org