Translating upwards: linking the neural and social sciences via neuroeconomics
Abstract
The social and neural sciences share a common interest in understanding the mechanisms that underlie human behaviour. However, interactions between neuroscience and social science disciplines remain strikingly narrow and tenuous. We illustrate the scope and challenges for such interactions using the paradigmatic example of neuroeconomics. Using quantitative analyses of both its scientific literature and the social networks in its intellectual community, we show that neuroeconomics now reflects a true disciplinary integration, such that research topics and scientific communities with interdisciplinary span exert greater influence on the field. However, our analyses also reveal key structural and intellectual challenges in balancing the goals of neuroscience with those of the social sciences. To address these challenges, we offer a set of prescriptive recommendations for directing future research in neuroeconomics.
Additional Information
© 2012 Macmillan Publishers Limited. We thank M. Fan and H. Gold for assistance in data collection. For comments and discussions, we thank A. Beaulieu, M. Carter, L. Harris, L. Leydesdorff, P. Mehta, I. Rafols, C. Reeck, M. van Overveld, participants in the annual meetings of the Society for Neuroeconomics and anonymous reviewers. Funding for this research comes from an Incubator Award from the Duke Institute for Brain Sciences (S.A.H), a US National Institutes of Mental Health National Research Service Award F31‑086255 (J.A.C.), the Erasmus Research Institute of Management (C.L. and A.S.), and the Open Research Area programme from the European Science Foundation (NESSHI 464‑10‑029; C.L., A.S. and P.W.).Attached Files
Supplemental Material - nrn3354-s1.pdf
Supplemental Material - nrn3354-s10.pdf
Supplemental Material - nrn3354-s11.pdf
Supplemental Material - nrn3354-s2.pdf
Supplemental Material - nrn3354-s3.pdf
Supplemental Material - nrn3354-s4.pdf
Supplemental Material - nrn3354-s5.pdf
Supplemental Material - nrn3354-s6.pdf
Supplemental Material - nrn3354-s7.pdf
Supplemental Material - nrn3354-s8.pdf
Supplemental Material - nrn3354-s9.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 35731
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20121129-131311721
- Duke Institute for Brain Sciences Incubator
- NIH
- F31-086255
- Erasmus Research Institute of Management
- European Science Foundation Open Research Area programme
- NESSHI 464-10-029
- Created
-
2012-11-29Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2021-11-09Created from EPrint's last_modified field