06 Príspevky v zborníkoch
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Prehliadanie 06 Príspevky v zborníkoch podľa Predmet "behaviorálna ekonómia"
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Položka Behavioral experiments in public sector(Mendelova univerzita v Brně, 2024) Murray Svidroňová, Mária; Jakuš Muthová, NikoletaIn this paper we present preliminary results of a research project aimed at mapping the preferences of young people in the areas of public sector such as housing, employment and commuting. To do so we will employ methods of behavioral economics and experiments. First of all, we did a bibliometric analysis of studies dealing with behavioral experiments in the selected areas to reveal a gap for future research. We focused on a time period of 2010–2023. For mapping we used VosViewer and data from the Web of Science database. Results indicate that even there are some experiments done in the areas of housing, employment or commuting, there is no methodology based on behavioral economics to reveal the preferences of young people in these areas.Položka Employment or business: What Slovak young adults prefer as their future career?(ReSocEM : Valencia, 2025) Murray Svidroňová, Mária; Kubák, MatúšNo preference can be precisely quantified when assessing young people's ideas about their future lives. Moreover, self-reported survey data may not fully capture the complexity of decision-making processes. In such situations, it is difficult to create a test that measures preference based on an action. To circumvent this problem, the knowledge of behavioral economics can be used. Behavioral economics focuses on individuals with limited rationality, revealing what really influences their decisions and actions. Behavioral science suggests that people are more humane and less homo economicus and thus that their decision-making is also influenced by emotions and intuition (Persky, 1995; Sunstein et al., 1998; Kahneman, 2003; Thaler, 2017; Grimmelikhuijsen, 2017). A person's decision-making is influenced by two systems of thinking, according to which he evaluates the situations in which he finds himself (Cole et al., 2025). In psychology, they are named as System 1 and System 2. Thaler and Sunstein (2009) assigned key characteristics to these systems, for the sake of this paper, the System 1 is relevant. System 1 is a fast thinking system - an automatic system. A person makes decisions based on experience, is quick and instinctive, follows innate skills.