Study with Martin Vestergaard from University of Cambridge
Psychology and Neuroeconomics /Biology
Professor Martin Vestergaard
Program Background
Neuroeconomics is a new and highly interdisciplinary field,born in the border zone of social science and natural science. Many people understand it as a branch of economics, but from another point of view, it is just one of the products of neuroscience "invading" the humanities and social sciences. In recent years, "Neurology" has spread all over the field, and almost every subject of Humanties and social sciences has been labeled "Neurology", such as neuroeconomics, neuromanagement, neurolaw, neurolinguistics, neurophilosophy, even neurotheology. This kind of "invasion" is understandable, because any humanities and social sciences research are based on the understanding of the neurobiological basis of human mind, also neuroscience is the science of exploring human mind through the mechanism of molecule, neuron, neural circuit and nervous system at all levels.
40
Advanced Research & Lectures
Hours
10
Neuroeconomics & Decision Science Topics Covered
95%
Previous Students Satisfaction Rate
100%
Program Description
The research of neuroeconomics can be divided into two categories
1) Determine the neural process in the decision-making, and the standard economic model can well predict the behavior;
2)Research on "anomalies", In this case, the standard model can not predict the behavior well.
However, it seems that this emerging discipline has not clearly defined its research content, and most of the research under its definition framework can be attributed to the research topic of neuroeconomics. In the survey we found, the contents involved are all inclusive, such as reward acquisition; certainty, fuzziness and delay of satisfaction; learning and strategy; cooperative preference; utility and reward system; fairness, altruism and trust; learning, memory and knowledge; economic decision-making.

Who can join the programme?
- High school students
- University students
- Students interested in psychology, neuroeconomics, biology, or related fields


Syllabus
Programme Schedule
| Date | Time | |
| Lesson 1 | 25 July 2026 | 10am - 12pm London time |
| Lesson 2 | 01 August 2026 | 10am - 12pm London time |
| Lesson 3 | 08 August 2026 | 10am - 12pm London time |
| Lesson 4 | 15 August 2026 | 10am - 12pm London time |
| Lesson 5 | 22 August 2026 | 10am - 12pm London time |
| Lesson 6 | 29 August 2026 | 10am - 12pm London time |
| Lesson 7 | 05 September 2026 | 10am - 12pm London time |
| Lesson 8 | 12 September 2026 | 10am - 12pm London time |
| Lesson 9 | 19 September 2026 | 10am - 12pm London time |
| Lesson 10 | 26 September 2026 | 10am - 12pm London time |
Published Research Paper Option
Once students have completed the final draft of their papers, they may choose to submit their work to international academic journals indexed by CPCI or EI. We provide guidance and support throughout the submission process for these indexed publications.
The publication fee is £690 per research article, as determined by the journal. Once an article is accepted, it typically becomes searchable on Google and on the journal’s platform approximately seven months after the publication offer is made.







