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Faculty AI Research

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes

Who you are is where you are: Antecedents and consequences of locating the self in the brain or the heart

Author
Adam, H., O. Obodaru, and Adam Galinsky

Eight studies explored the antecedents and consequences of whether people locate their sense of self in the brain or the heart. In Studies 1a–f, participants' self-construals consistently influenced the location of the self: The general preference for locating the self in the brain rather than the heart was enhanced among men, Americans, and participants primed with an independent self-construal, but diminished among women, Indians, and participants primed with an interdependent self-construal.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
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Author
Abad, Mary
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

A Bounded Rationality Model of Information Search and Choice in Preference Measurement

Author
Yang, Cathy, Olivier Toubia, and Martijn De Jong

It is becoming increasingly easier for researchers and practitioners to collect eye tracking data during online preference measurement tasks. We develop a dynamic discrete choice model of information search and choice under bounded rationality, that we calibrate using a combination of eye-tracking and choice data. Our model extends the directed cognition model of Gabaix et al. (2006) by capturing fatigue, proximity effects, and imperfect memory encoding and by estimating individual-level parameters and partworths within a likelihood-based, hierarchical Bayesian framework.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General

Anxious and egocentric: How specific emotions influence perspective taking

Author
Todd, A., M. Forstmann, P. Burgmer, A. Brooks, and Adam Galinsky

People frequently feel anxious. Although prior research has extensively studied how feeling anxious shapes intrapsychic aspects of cognition, much less is known about how anxiety affects interpersonal aspects of cognition. Here, we examine the influence of incidental experiences of anxiety on perceptual and conceptual forms of perspective taking.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Management Science

Differentiation with User-Generated Content

Author
Sarvary, Miklos and Kaifu Zhang

This paper studies the competition between Web 2.0 communities in a game theoretic framework. We model three important features of these institutions: (i) firms' content is usually user-generated; (ii) consumers' content preferences are governed by local network effects, and (iii) consumers have strong tendencies to multi-home. Our analyses reveal that ex-ante identical community sites can acquire differentiated market positions that spontaneously emerge from user-generated content.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015

Executive Compensation: A General Equilibrium Perspective

Author
Donaldson, John and Jean-Pierre Danthine
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General

Exploring the secrecy burden: Secrets, preoccupation, and perceptual judgments

Author
Slepian, Michael, N.P. Camp, and E.J. Masicampo
Recent work suggests that secrecy is perceived as burdensome. A secrecy–burden relationship would have a number of consequences for cognitive, perceptual, social, and health psychology, but the reliability of these influences, and potential mechanisms that support such influences are unknown. Across 4 studies, the current work examines both the reliability of, and mechanisms that support, the influence of secrecy processes upon a judgment that varies with diminished resources (i.e., judgments of hill slant).
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Management Science

On the (Surprising) Sufficiency of Linear Models for Dynamic Pricing with Demand Learning

Author
Besbes, Omar and Assaf Zeevi

We consider a multi-period single product pricing problem with an unknown demand curve. The seller's objective is to adjust prices in each period so as to maximize cumulative expected revenues over a given finite time horizon; in so doing, the seller needs to resolve the tension between learning the unknown demand curve, and earning revenues by solving the dynamic optimization problem.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Finance

On the Design of Contingent Capital with a Market Trigger

Author
Sundaresan, M. Suresh and Zhenyu Wang

Contingent capital (CC), which intends to internalize the costs of too-big-to-fail in the capital structure of large banks, has been under intense debate by policy makers and academics. We show that CC with a market trigger, in which direct stake-holders are unable to choose optimal conversion policies, does not lead to a unique competitive equilibrium, unless value transfer at conversion is not expected ex-ante. The "no value transfer" restriction precludes penalizing bank managers for taking excessive risk.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Management Science

Repeated Auctions with Budgets in Ad Exchanges: Approximations and Design

Author
Balseiro, Santiago R. and Omar Besbes

Ad Exchanges are emerging Internet markets where advertisers may purchase display ad placements, in real-time and based on specific viewer information, directly from publishers via a simple auction mechanism. Advertisers join these markets with a pre-specified budget and participate in multiple second-price auctions over the length of a campaign. This paper studies the competitive landscape that arises in Ad Exchanges and the implications for publishers' decisions.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015

The impact of pharmaceutical innovation on premature mortality, cancer mortality, and hospitalization in Slovenia, 1997-2010

Author
Lichtenberg, Frank

In Slovenia during the period 2000-2010, the number of years of potential life lost before the age of 70 years per 100,000 population under 70 years of age declined 25 %. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that pharmaceutical innovation played a key role in reducing premature mortality from all diseases in Slovenia, and to examine the effects of pharmaceutical innovation on the age-standardized number of cancer deaths and on hospitalization from all diseases.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015

The impact of recent chemotherapy innovation on the longevity of myeloma patients: US and international evidence

Author
Hostenkamp, Gisela and Frank Lichtenberg

The longevity of multiple myeloma patients increased sharply since the late 1990s. This increase coincided with the introduction of several important innovations in chemotherapy for myeloma. In this study, we aim to quantify the impact of recent chemotherapy innovation on the longevity of myeloma patients using both time-series US data and longitudinal data on 38 countries.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015

The impact of biomedical innovation on longevity and health

Author
Lichtenberg, Frank

Many authors have expressed the view that a substantial portion of recent gains in longevity and health is due to biomedical research and innovation. This article describes the methodologies and findings of a number of studies based on observational data that have sought to measure the impact of biomedical innovation on the longevity and health of Americans and other populations during recent decades.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Administrative Science Quarterly

Activating brokerage: Interorganizational knowledge transfer through skilled return migration

Author
Wang, Dan

Although skilled return migrants are structurally positioned as cross-border brokers to conduct knowledge transfer from abroad to their home countries, they do not systematically do so. Using an original dataset of 4,183 former J1 Visa holders—all of whom worked in the U.S.—from 81 different countries, I argue that returnees' knowledge transfer success depends on their embeddedness in their home and host country workplaces and the evaluation of the knowledge recipients in their home country organizations.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Motivation Science

Avenues down which a self-reminding mind can wander

Author
Mason, Malia and Nicholas Reinholtz
We test the mnemonic benefit of having a mind that distracts itself with unresolved matters. In 5 studies, conducted in quasi-naturalistic settings, using both self-reported and experience-sampled measures of intention-related intrusions, we establish the reminding value entailed in mindwandering. Study 1 verifies that the mind is more likely to wander toward intentions outstanding rather than intentions bygone and provides preliminary evidence that more frequent intention-related intrusions lead to greater success at realizing the intention.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Marketing

Consumers' Response to Commercials: When the Energy Level in the Commercial Conflicts with the Media Context

Author
Puccinelli, Nancy, Keith Wilcox, and Dhruv Grewal
This research examines how media-induced consumer activation level affects consumer response to highly energetic commercials. Over six studies, including a Hulu field experiment, the authors report that consumers who are experiencing a deactivating emotion (e.g., sadness induced by a movie) find it more difficult to watch highly energetic commercials compared with consumers who are not experiencing a deactivating emotion.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
American Journal of Sociology

Do Reputation Systems Undermine Trust? Divergent Effects of Enforcement Type on Generalized Trust and Trustworthiness

Research shows that enforcing cooperation using contracts or tangible sanctions can backfire, undermining people's intrinsic motivation to cooperate: when the enforcement is removed, people are less trusting or trustworthy than when there is no enforcement to begin with. The author examines whether reputation systems have similar consequences for generalized trust and trustworthiness.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Monetary Economics

Macroeconomic Regimes

Author
Baele, Lieven, Geert Bekaert, Seonghoon Cho, Koen Inghelbrecht, and Antonio Moreno

We estimate a New-Keynesian macro model accommodating regime-switching behavior in monetary policy and in macro shocks. Key to our estimation strategy is the use of survey-based expectations for inflation and output. We identify accommodating monetary policy before 1980, with activist monetary policy prevailing most but not 100% of the time thereafter. Systematic monetary policy switched to the activist regime in the 2000-2005 period through an aggressive lowering of interest rates.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Social class, power, and selfishness: When and why upper and lower class individuals behave unethically

Author
Dubois, David, Derek D. Rucker, and Adam Galinsky

Are the rich more unethical than the poor? To answer this question, the current research introduces a key conceptual distinction between selfish and unethical behavior. Based on this distinction, the current article offers 2 novel findings that illuminate the relationship between social class and unethical behavior. First, the effects of social class on unethical behavior are not invariant; rather, the effects of social class are moderated by whether unethical behavior benefits the self or others.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015

The impact of cardiovascular drug innovation on the longevity of elderly residents of Switzerland, 2003-2012

Author
Lichtenberg, Frank

Previous investigators have argued that one of the two most important contributors to improved human survival is the treatment of cardiovascular disease. Among Swiss inhabitants age 65 and over, 90% of the 1994-2010 decline in the overall death rate was due to the decline in the rate of deaths from diseases of the circulatory system. Little if any of the decline in cardiovascular mortality is likely to have been due to changes in behavioral risk factors, especially tobacco use and obesity.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Customer Needs and Solutions

The Long-Term Effect of Multichannel Usage on Sales

Author
Bilgicer, Tolga, Kamel Jedidi, Donald Lehmann, and Scott Neslin

The paper investigates the long-run consequences of multichannel shopping on customers' spending. Using data from a major US catalog company which introduced an online channel, our results validate previous findings that multichannel customers spend more than mono-channel customers in the short run. However, the difference in spending dissipates over time with multichannel customers reverting to their regular consumption pattern in 3 years.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Psychological Science

Anchors weigh more than power: Why absolute powerlessness liberates negotiators to achieve better outcomes

Author
Schaerer, Michael, Roderick I. Swaab, and Adam Galinsky

The current research shows that having no power can be better than having a little power. Negotiators prefer having some power (weak negotiation alternatives) to having no power (no alternatives). We challenge this belief that having any alternative is beneficial by demonstrating that weak alternatives create low anchors that reduce the value of first offers. In contrast, having no alternatives is liberating because there is no anchor to weigh down first offers.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Academy of Management Journal

Fashion with a foreign flair: Professional experiences abroad facilitate the creative innovations of organizations

Author
Godart, F., W. Maddux, A. Shipilov, and Adam Galinsky

The current research explores whether the foreign professional experiences of influential executives predict firm-level creative output. We introduce a new theoretical model, the Foreign Experience Model of Creative Innovations, to explain how three dimensions of executives' foreign work experiences — breadth, depth, and cultural distance — predict an organization's creative innovations, which we define as the extent to which final, implemented products or services are novel and useful from the standpoint of external audiences.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Tandem Anchoring: Informational and Politeness Effects of Range Offers in Social Exchange

Author
Ames, Daniel and Malia Mason
We examined whether and why range offers (e.g., "I want $7,200 to $7,600 for my car") matter in negotiations. A selective-attention account predicts that motivated and skeptical offer-recipients focus overwhelmingly on the attractive endpoint (i.e., a buyer would hear, in effect, "I want $7,200"). In contrast, we propose a tandem anchoring account, arguing that offer-recipients are often influenced by both endpoints as they judge the offer-maker's reservation price (i.e., bottom line) as well as how polite they believe an extreme (nonaccommodating) counteroffer would be.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Economic Perspectives

An assessment of TARP assistance to financial institutions

Author
Calomiris, Charles and Urooj Khan

Six years after the passage of the 2008 Troubled Asset Relief Program, commonly known as TARP, it remains hard to measure the total social costs and benefits of the assistance to banks provided under TARP programs. TARP was not a single approach to assisting weak banks but rather a variety of changing solutions to a set of evolving problems. TARP's passage was associated with significant improvements in financial markets and the health of financial intermediaries, as well as an increase in the supply of lending by recipients.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Manufacturing & Service Operations Management

An Information Stock Model of Customer Behavior in Multichannel Customer Support Services

Author
Jerath, Kinshuk, Anuj Kumar, and Serguei Netessine

We develop a model to understand and predict customers’ observed multichannel behavior in a customer support setting.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Academy of Management Proceedings

Clashing Fashions and Institutions: Mid-Life Uncertainty in Diffusing Organizational Techniques

Author
Abrahamson, Eric, S. Chang, Y. Choi, and Ivana Katic

Organizational techniques are labels, such as Reengineering, denoting linguistic prescriptions, which organizations can implement to transform organizational inputs into organizational outputs. The theory of fashions in organizational techniques tends to explain the causes of the relative transience of certain organization techniques, whereas the theory of institutions in these techniques tends to explain the causes of other techniques' relative persistence.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Cognition from on high and down low: Verticality and construal level

Author
Slepian, Michael, E.J. Masicampo, and N. Ambady
Across 7 studies, the authors examined the relationship between experiences of verticality and abstract versus concrete processing. Experiencing high, relative to low, verticality led to higher level identifications for actions (Study 1), greater willingness to delay short-term monetary gains for larger long-term monetary gains (Studies 2 and 5), and more frequent perceptions of meaningful relationships between objects and categories (Studies 3, 4, and 6), demonstrating that high verticality leads to more high-level construals.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Cognition

Connecting cognition and consumer choice

Author
Johnson, Eric
We describe what can be gained from connecting cognition and consumer choice by discussing two contexts ripe for interaction between the two fields. The first — context effects on choice — has already been addressed by cognitive science yielding insights about cognitive process but there is promise for more interaction. The second is learning and representation in choice where relevant theories in cognitive science could be informed by consumer choice, and in return, could pose and answer new questions.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Organizational Behavior

Cultural study and problem-solving gains: Effects of study abroad, openness, and choice

Author
Cho, Jaee and Michael Morris

Past research indicates that foreign experience helps problem solving because the experience of adapting ones lifestyle imparts cognitive flexibility. We propose that an independent process involves studying cultural traditions and systems, which imparts foreign concepts that enable unconventional solutions. If so, advantages on unconventionality problems should be associated with experiences studying of another culture, such as typically occurs in study-abroad programs.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Cognition

Disentangling multimodal processes in social categorization

Author
Slepian, Michael
The current work examines the role of sensorimotor processes (manipulating whether visual exposure to hard and soft stimuli encourage sensorimotor simulation) and metaphor processes (assessing whether participants have understanding of a pertinent metaphor: "hard" Republicans and "soft" Democrats) in social categorization.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Review of Economic Studies

Dissecting the Effect of Credit Supply on Trade: Evidence from Matched Credit-Export Data

Author
Schnabl, Philipp and Daniel Wolfenzon

We estimate the elasticity of exports to credit using matched customs and firm-level bank credit data from Peru. To account for non-credit determinants of exports, we compare changes in exports of the same product and to the same destination by firms borrowing from banks differentially affected by capital-flow reversals during the 2008 financial crisis. We find that credit shocks affect the intensive margin of exports, but have no significant impact on entry or exit of firms to new product and destination markets.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Review of Accounting Studies

Does the Director Election System Matter? Evidence from Majority Voting

Author
Ertimur, Yonca and David Oesch
We examine the effect of a change in the director election system — the switch from a plurality voting standard to a more stringent standard known as majority voting (MV). Using a regression discontinuity design, we document abnormal returns of 1.43-1.60% around annual meeting dates where shareholder proposals to adopt MV are voted upon, suggesting that shareholders perceive the adoption of MV to be value enhancing.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Review of Corporate Finance Studies

Dynamic Investment, Capital Structure, and Debt Overhang

Author
Sundaresan, M. Suresh, Neng Wang, and Jinqiang Yang

We develop a dynamic contingent-claim framework to model S. Myers's idea that a firm is a collection of growth options and assets in place. The firm's composition between assets in place and growth options evolves endogenously with its investment opportunity set and its financing of growth options, as well as its dynamic leverage and default decisions. The firm trades off tax benefits with the potential financial distress and endogenous debt-overhang costs over its life cycle.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Review of Financial Studies

Enlarging the Contracting Space: Collateral Menus, Access to Credit, and Economic Activity

Author
Campello, Murillo
Recent reforms across Eastern European countries have given more flexibility and information to parties to engage in secured debt transactions. The menu of assets legally accepted as collateral was enlarged to include movable assets (e.g., machinery and equipment). Generalized difference-in-differences tests show that firms operating more movable assets borrowed more as a result. Those firms also invested more, hired more, and became more efficient and profitable following the changes in the contracting environment.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Operations Research

Error Theory for Elimination by Aspects

Author
Kohli, Rajeev and Kamel Jedidi
Elimination by aspects (EBA) is a random utility model that is considered to represent the choice process used by consumers more faithfully than logit and probit models. One limitation of the model is that it does not have a known error theory. We show that EBA can be derived by assuming that aspects have random utilities with independent, extreme value distributions. Multinomial logit and rank-ordered logit models are special cases of EBA.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
American Psychologist

Facebook as a Research Tool for the Social Sciences: Opportunities, Challenges, Ethical Considerations, and Practical Guidelines

Author
Kosinski, M., Sandra Matz, Samuel Gosling, V. Popov, and D. Stillwell

Facebook is rapidly gaining recognition as a powerful research tool for the social sciences. It constitutes a large and diverse pool of participants, who can be selectively recruited for both online and offline studies. Additionally, it facilitates data collection by storing detailed records of its users' demographic profiles, social interactions, and behaviors. With participants' consent, these data can be recorded retrospectively in a convenient, accurate, and inexpensive way.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
American Economic Review

Feedback Effects, Asymmetric Trading, and the Limits to Arbitrage

Author
Edmans, Alex, Itay Goldstein, and Wei Jiang

We analyze strategic speculators' incentives to trade on information in a model where firm value is endogenous to trading, due to feedback from the financial market to corporate decisions. Trading on private information reveals this information to managers and improves their real decisions, enhancing fundamental value. While this feedback effect increases the profitability of buying on good news, it reduces the profitability of selling on bad news, and thus has an asymmetric effect on trading behavior.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Accounting Horizons

Financial Engineering and the Arms Race between Accounting Standard Setters and Preparers

Author
Dye, R., Jonathan Glover, and S. Sunder

This essay analyzes some problems that accounting standard setters confront in erecting barriers to managers bent on boosting their firms' financial reports through financial engineering (FE) activities. It also poses some unsolved research questions regarding interactions between preparers and standard setters. It starts by discussing the history of lease accounting to illustrate the institutional disadvantage of standard setters relative to preparers in their speeds of response.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Consumer Psychology

From experiential psychology to consumer experience

Author
Schmitt, Bernd, J. Josko Brakus, and Lia Zarantonello

We comment on Gilovich and colleagues' program of research on happiness resulting from experiential versus material purchases, and critique these authors' interpretation that people derive more happiness from experiences than from material possessions. Unlike goods, experiences cannot be purchased, and possessions versus experiences do not seem to form the endpoints of the same continuum.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
New England Journal of Medicine

Healthcare.gov 3.0 — Behavioral Economics and Insurance Exchanges

Author
Ubel, Peter, David Comerford, and Eric Johnson

In October 2013, the Affordable Care Act introduced a new insurance market — state and federal exchanges where people can purchase health insurance for themselves or their families. Although the rollout of the exchanges was disastrous, around-the-clock efforts fixed many of the biggest technical problems, and nearly 7 million people purchased insurance in the new market.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Hierarchical cultural values predict success and fatality in high-stakes teams

Author
Anicich, Eric M., Roderick I. Swaab, and Adam Galinsky

Functional accounts of hierarchy propose that hierarchy increases group coordination and reduces conflict. In contrast, dysfunctional accounts claim that hierarchy impairs performance by preventing low-ranking team members from voicing their potentially valuable perspectives and insights. The current research presents evidence for both the functional and dysfunctional accounts of hierarchy within the same dataset. Specifically, we offer empirical evidence that hierarchical cultural values affect the outcomes of teams in high-stakes environments through group processes.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Academy of Management Proceedings

How to Improve on Statistical Significance: Effect Sizes, CIs, Graphs and Baseline Models

Author
Abrahamson, Eric, S. Holloway, Andreas Schwab, and William H. Starbuck

This symposium will introduce and discuss how scholars can improve upon the Null Hypothesis Significance Tests (NHSTs), which are currently constraining the production of knowledge in management science. The extensive use of NHST in quantitative research has led to the accumulation of statistically significant results that are both too small to be practically relevant and so small that they are unlikely to replicate. In a field that aspires to provide useful advice to managers, we need to focus on practically important effects that are robust across a wide variety of settings.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015

ICU Admission Control: An Empirical Study of Capacity Allocation and Its Implication for Patient Outcomes

Author
Olivares, Marcelo, S.H. Kim, C. Chan, and G. Escobar
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Management Science

ICU Admission Control: An Empirical Study of Capacity Allocation and Its Implication for Patient Outcomes

Author
Kim, Song-Hee, Carri W. Chan, Marcelo Olivares, and Gabriel Escobar

This work examines the process of admission to a hospital’s intensive care unit (ICU). ICUs currently lack systematic admission criteria, largely because the impact of ICU admission on patient outcomes has not been well quantified. This makes evaluating the performance of candidate admission strategies difficult. Using a large patient-level data set of more than 190,000 hospitalizations across 15 hospitals, we first quantify the cost of denied ICU admission for a number of patient outcomes.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Group Processes and Intergroup Relations

Incorporating neuroendocrine methods into intergroup relations research

Author
Page-Gould, Elizabeth and Modupe Akinola

Intergroup researchers have the opportunity to access to a wide variety of methods to help deepen theoretical insights about intergroup relations. In this paper, we focus on neuroendocrine measures, as these physiological measures offer some advantages over traditional measures used in intergroup research, are noninvasive, and are relatively easy to incorporate into existing intergroup paradigms. We begin by discussing the major neuroendocrine systems in the body and their measurable biological products, emphasizing systems that have conceptual relevance to intergroup relations.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Management Science

Intertemporal Price Discrimination: Structure and Computation of Optimal Policies

Author
Besbes, Omar and Ilan Lobel

We consider the question of how should a firm optimally set a sequence of prices in order to maximize its long-term average revenue given a continuous flow of strategic customers. In particular, customers arrive over time, are strategic in timing their purchases and are heterogeneous along two dimensions: their valuation for the firm's product and their willingness to wait before purchasing or leaving. The customers' patience and valuation may be correlated in an arbitrary fashion.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
RAND Journal of Economics

Investing in a Relationship

A principal can make an investment anticipating a repeated relationship with an agent, but the agent may appropriate the returns through ex post bargaining. I study how this hold-up problem and efficiency depend on the contracting environment. When investment returns are observable, informal contracts ex post can be more efficient than formal contracts, as they induce higher investment ex ante: the principal invests not only to generate direct returns, but also to improve relational incentives.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Labor Economics

Matching Firms, Managers, and Incentives

Author
Bandiera, Oriana, Luigi Guiso, Andrea Prat, and Raffaella Sadun

We combine unique administrative and survey data to study the match between firms and managers. The data include manager characteristics, firm characteristics, detailed measures of managerial practices, and outcomes for the firm and the manager. A parsimonious model of matching and incentives generates implications that we test with our data. We use the model to illustrate how risk aversion and talent determine how firms select and motivate managers.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

Maturity Rationing and Collective Short-Termism

Author
Milbradt, Konstantin
Financing terms and investment decisions are jointly determined. This interdependence, which links firms' asset and liability sides, can lead to short-termism in investment. In our model, financing frictions increase with the investment horizon, such that financing for long-term projects is relatively expensive and potentially rationed. In response, firms whose first-best investments are long-term may adopt second-best projects of shorter maturities. This worsens financing terms for firms with shorter maturity projects, inducing them to change their investments as well.
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