3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good Intro, but I wanted more, 24 April 2008
This book constitutes an incredibly good review of the history of neuroscience from Descartes, Pavlov and early theories of the brain and reflexes to more modern interpretations of the brain, neurons, neural networks, etc. It introduces the idea of neuroeconomics in a manner suitable to the layperson. If that is what Glimcher was setting out to do, then this book has achieved exactly that.
However, I believe that as a discussion of 'decisions and uncertainty' the book could have used more formalism in expressing some of its arguments, specifically in possible theories of how and why things work in the way proposed by the author. Admittedly, I could be asking too much of the field at this point as it is still in its early stages of development, but occasionally I wanted more than anecdotes and discussions of papers that the author and his co-workers had written. Again, maybe I am expecting too much, but I had thought that Neuroeconomics had accomplished more.
Thus, in my 'layperson' hat, I think the book was great. It revealed a lot of theory that I would not likely have read otherwise, though being interested in and having read of specific individuals previously.
However, in my 'economist grad student' hat, I wanted something more. It definitely warrants more research. Moreover, the fact that the book supports inter-disciplinary research and the rigour of it generally far outweighs these slight shortcomings.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A layman's introduction to the science of neuroeconomics, 12 Dec 2007
This review is from: Decisions, Uncertainty and the Brain: The Science of Neuroeconomics (Bradford Books) (Hardcover)
This book offers an outstanding survey of philosophy, psychology, brain science, economics, and the field that brings them all together, neuroeconomics. Paul W. Glimcher contends that Descartes' deterministic theory that simple behavior operates according to reflexes is influential far beyond its merits. He describes numerous experiments that support a very different understanding of behavior, which says that organisms seeking to fulfill their own goals (mostly to perpetuate their genes) must "choose" behaviors that somehow account for risk and return. In other words, they maximize "inclusive fitness" under conditions of uncertainty. Laboratory experiments and field research by behavioral ecologists lend considerable support to this view. We recommend this solid, layman's introduction to neuroeconomics and a remarkable series of discoveries.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Leaves the best till last..., 16 Aug 2010
I found this book to be a real slow-burning pleasure to read, partly because (unlike many) it becomes ever more interesting as it reaches its conclusion The combination of the visceral descriptions (and awesome monkey graphics) of the experimentation that underpins this field of study, combined with the wide-ranging philosophical narrative and the interesting synthesis of economic theory with biological models of evolution and cognitive neuroscience mean that you will not be left short of new ideas to mull over.
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