IIRC neuroeconomics is quite different: it studies how humans make and represent economic decisions (eg “we’ve found an fmri signal in the orbitofrontal cortex that’s correlated with expected value of this decision”), which is different from modelling the internal physiologial functions of a body as an entire economy with various supply chains and equilibrium states.
IIRC neuroeconomics is quite different: it studies how humans make and represent economic decisions (eg “we’ve found an fmri signal in the orbitofrontal cortex that’s correlated with expected value of this decision”), which is different from modelling the internal physiologial functions of a body as an entire economy with various supply chains and equilibrium states.