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Type
Journal Article
Date
2011
Journal
Quarterly Journal of Economics

Why Do Mothers Breastfeed Girls Less Than Boys? Evidence and Implications for Child Health in India

Author
Jayachandran, Seema
Breastfeeding is negatively associated with future fertility both because nursing temporarily reduces fecundity and because mothers generally stop nursing upon a subsequent pregnancy. If parents have a fertility preference for sons, as is common in developing countries such as India, they will wean daughters more quickly to "try again" for a boy, potentially increasing girls' exposure to contaminated food and water as an unintended consequence.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2011
Journal
Harvard Business Review

Why fair bosses fall behind

Author
Wiesenfeld, B., N. Rothman, S. Wheeler-Smith, and Adam Galinsky

The article discusses research that shows managers who are perceived as being tough and wielding power are more likely to be promoted than others. The author cites the example of drug maker Pfizer, where in 2001 the no-nonsense Hank McKinnell was hired as chief executive instead of the more collegial Karen Katen. In 2006 Pfizer got rid of McKinnel for poor performance.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Economic Psychology

Fairness Perceptions and Prosocial Emotions in the Power to Take

Author
van Winden, Frans

This experimental study investigates how behavior changes after receiving punishment. The focus is on how proposers in a power-to-take game adjust their behavior depending on their fairness perceptions, their experienced emotions, and their interaction with responders. We find that fairness plays an important role: proposers who take what they consider to be an unfair amount experience higher intensities of prosocial emotions (shame and guilt), particularly if they are punished. This emotional experience induces proposers to lower their claims.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Effective Executive

Organizing for Marketing ROI

Author
Sexton, Don

Many companies do not know their marketing ROI because their organizations are not set up to evaluate marketing ROI.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Administrative Science Quarterly

Organizing the In-Between: The Population Dynamics of Network Weaving Organizations in the Global Interstate Network

Author
Ingram, Paul and Magnus Thor Torfason

This article examines the population dynamics and viability of network weavers, which are organizations that provide network relations for others. An analysis of the population dynamics of the intergovernmental organizations (IGOs) that are the basis of the interstate networks that influenced global economic relations, peace, and democracy in the 1815–2000 period show that IGO founding and failure depends on the ease and value of specific interstate relations.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
<a href="http://ejcr.org/">Journal of Consumer Research</a>

Regulatory Focus, Regulatory Fit, and the Search and Consideration of Choice Alternatives

Author
Pham, Michel Tuan and Hannah Chang

This research investigates the effects of regulatory focus on alternative search and consideration set formation in consumer decision making. Results from three experiments yield two primary findings. First, promotion‐focused consumers tend to search for alternatives at a more global level, whereas prevention‐focused consumers tend to search for alternatives at a more local level. Second, promotion‐focused consumers tend to have larger consideration sets than do prevention‐focused consumers.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Empirical Finance

Stock and Bond Returns with Moody Investors

Author
Bekaert, Geert, Eric Engstrom, and Steven Grenadier

<p>We present a tractable, linear model for the simultaneous pricing of stock and bond returns that incorporates stochastic risk aversion. In this model, analytic solutions for endogenous stock and bond prices and returns are readily calculated. After estimating the parameters of the model by the general method of moments, we investigate a series of classic puzzles of the empirical asset pricing literature.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Public Economics

Stuck in the Middle: Impacts of Grade Configuration in Public Schools

Author
Lockwood, Benjamin and Jonah Rockoff

We examine the implications of separating students of different grade levels across schools for the purposes of educational production. Specifically, we find that moving students from elementary to middle school in 6th or 7th grade causes significant drops in academic achievement. These effects are large (about 0.15 standard deviations), present for both math and English, and persist through grade 8, the last year for which we have achievement data. The effects are similar for boys and girls, but stronger for students with low levels of initial achievement.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

An upside to bicultural identity conflict: Resisting groupthink in cultural ingroups

Author
Mok, Aurelia and Michael Morris

Bicultural individuals differ in the degree to which their cultural identities are integrated versus conflicting—Bicultural Identity Integration (BII). Studies of judgment find that biculturals with less integrated identities (low BIIs) tend to defy salient cultural norms, whereas those with highly integrated identities (high BIIs) conform. This study examined biculturals' judgment in a group decision-making context, focusing on individuals' reactions to consensus in cultural ingroups. Results showed that low (vs.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Management and Organization Review

Asian-Americans' creative styles in Asian and American situations: Assimilative and contrastive responses as a function of bicultural identity integration

Author
Mok, Aurelia and Michael Morris

Bicultural individuals vary in the degree to which their two cultural identities are integrated. Among Asian-Americans, for instance, some experience their Asian and American sides as compatible whereas others experience them as conflicting. Past research on judgments finds this individual difference affects the way bicultural individuals respond to situations that cue their cultures.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Management and Organization Review

Creativity East and West: Perspectives and Parallels

Author
Morris, Michael and Angela Ka-yee Leung

This Editors' Forum –‘Creativity East and West’– presents five papers on the question of cultural differences in creativity from the perspective of different research literatures, followed by two integrative commentaries. The literatures represented include historiometric, laboratory, and organizational studies. Investigation of cultural influences through country comparisons and priming manipulations, focusing on how people perform creatively and how they assess creativity.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
American Economic Journal: Economic Policy

Domestic Institutions and the Bypass Effect of Financial Globalization

Author
Wei, Shang-Jin and Jiandong Ju

This paper proposes a simple model to study how domestic institutions affect patterns of international capital flows. Inefficient financial system, and poor corporate governance, may be bypassed by two-way capital flows in which domestic savings leave the country in the form of financial capital outflows but domestic investment takes place via inward FDI. While financial globalization always improves the welfare of a developed country with a good financial system, its effect is ambiguous for a developing country with an inefficient financial sector or poor corporate governance.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

Habit Formation, the Cross Section of Stock Returns and the Cash-Flow Risk Puzzle

Author
Santos, Tano and Pietro Veronesi

Non-linear external habit persistence models, which feature prominently in the recent "equity premium" asset pricing and macroeconomics literature, generate counterfactual predictions in the cross section of stock returns. In particular, we show that in the absence of cross sectional heterogeneity in firms' cash flow risk these models produce a "growth premium," that is, stocks with high price-to-fundamental ratios command a higher premium than stocks with low price-to-fundamental ratios.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Leadership Excellence

Lead by Choice

Author
Iyengar, Sheena

As Cassius said to Brutus (in Julius Caesar) Men at some time are masters of their fates: The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, But in ourselves, that we are underlings. Might you become master of your fate through choice—no matter what the stars say?

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Econometrica

Markov perfect industry dynamics with many firms

Author
Benkard, C. Lanier and Benjamin Van Roy
We propose an approximation method for analyzing Ericson and Pakes (1995)-style dynamic models of imperfect competition. We develop a simple algorithm for computing an "oblivious equilibrium," in which each firm is assumed to make decisions based only on its own state and knowledge of the long run average industry state, but where firms ignore current information about competitors' states. We prove that, as the market becomes large, if the equilibrium distribution of firm states obeys a certain "light-tail" condition, then oblivious equilibria closely approximate Markov perfect equilibria.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

My way: How strategic preferences vary by negotiator role and regulatory focus

Author
Appelt, Kirstin and E. Tory Higgins

Negotiators may use vigilant, loss-minimizing strategies or eager, gain-maximizing strategies. The present study provides evidence that preferences for these different strategies depend on negotiator role and personal orientation. In a price negotiation, buyers and prevention-focused individuals prefer vigilant strategies, whereas sellers and promotion-focused individuals prefer eager strategies.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Psychological Science

On &#34;feeling right&#34; in cultural contexts: How person-culture match affects self-esteem and subjective well-being

Author
Fulmer, C. Ashley, Michele Gelfand, Arie Kruglanski, Chu Kim-Prieto, Ed Diener, Antonio Pierro, and E. Tory Higgins

Whether one is in one’s native culture or abroad, one’s personality can differ markedly from the personalities of the majority, thus failing to match the “cultural norm.” Our studies examined how the interaction of individual- and cultural-level personality affects people’s self-esteem and well-being.We propose a person-culture match hypothesis that predicts that when a person’s personality matches the prevalent personalities of other people in a culture, culture functions as an important amplifier of the positive effect of personality on self-esteem and subjective well-being at the individ

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
American Economic Journal: Microeconomics

Organizing for Synergies

Author
Dessein, Wouter, Luis Garicano, and Robert Gertner

Large companies are usually organized into business units, yet some activities are almost always centralized in a company-wide functional unit. We first show that organizations endogenously create an incentive conflict between functional managers (who desire excessive standardization) and business-unit managers (who desire excessive local adaptation). We then study how the allocation of authority and tasks to functional and business-unit managers interacts with this endogenous incentive conflict.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Organizational Behavior

Structure and Freedom in Creativity: The Interplay between Externally Imposed Structure and Personal Cognitive Style

Author
Goldenberg, Jacob, Lilach Sagiv, Sharon Arieli, and Ayalla Goldschmidt
This research investigates how creativity is influenced by externally imposed structure (how structured the task is), internal, cognitively produced, structure (how structured the individuals' cognitive style is), and the interaction between these two factors. Reviewing past literature, we find a contradiction. Studies that focused on the situational perspective found that externally imposed structure increases creativity. In contrast, studies that focused on the individual found that systematic (structured) cognitive style decreases creativity.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010

On-line, voluntary control of human temporal lobe neurons

Author
Cerf, Moran, Nikhil Thiruvengadam, Florian Mormann, Alexander Kraskov, Rodrigo Quian Quiroga, Christof Koch, and Itzhak Fried
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Revenue and Pricing Management

Guest Editorial to a Special Issue

Author
Maglaras, Costis

This special issue features articles from the 9th Annual INFORMS Revenue Management and Pricing Section Conference at the Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University during 22–23 June 2009. The conference featured 42 half hour talks by practitioners and researchers, as well as keynote addresses by Professor Anton Kleywegt of Georgia Tech and by Dr Matthew Schrag, the Director of Operations Research and Industrial Engineering at Delta Airlines. The conference was organized by Martin Lariviere and Baris Ata.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Research in Organizational Behavior

Measuring the pulse of an organization: Integrating physiological measures into the organizational scholar's toolbox

Author
Akinola, Modupe

This goal of this chapter is to build a bridge between psychophysiology and organizational behavior in an effort to extend organizational theories and enhance the precision of organizational research. The first section describes psychophysiological systems and theories that can inform organizational scholars' understanding of the biological bases of behavior in organizations. The second section discusses the advantages and challenges associated with incorporating psychophysiological measures into organizational research.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Medical Decision Making

Effects of game-like interactive graphics on risk perceptions and decisions

Author
Ancker, J. S., Elke Weber, and Rita Kukafka
Background. Many patients have difficulty interpreting risks described in statistical terms as percentages. Computer game technology offers the opportunity to experience how often an event occurs, rather than simply read about its frequency. Objective. To assess effects of interactive graphics on risk perceptions and decisions. Design. Electronic questionnaire. Participants and setting. Respondents (n = 165) recruited online or at an urban hospital. Intervention. Health risks were illustrated by either static graphics or interactive game-like graphics.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Management Science

An Experimental Test of Advice and Social Learning

Author
Kariv, Shachar and Andrew Schotter
Social learning is the process of individuals learning by observing the actions of others. One odd aspect of the literature on social learning though is that, ironically, learning is not very social because in the real world, although people learn by observing the actions of others, they also learn from advice. This paper introduces the giving of advice into a standard social-learning problem. The experiment is designed so that both pieces of information—action and advice—are equally informative (in fact, identical) in equilibrium.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Trends in Cognitive Science

Born to Choose: The Origins and Value of the Need for Control

Author
Leotti, Lauren, Sheena Iyengar, and Kevin Ochsner

Belief in one's ability to exert control over the environment and to produce desired results is essential for an individual's well being. It has been repeatedly argued that the perception of control is not only desirable, but it is likely a psychological and biological necessity. In this article, we review the literature supporting this claim and present evidence for a biological basis for the need for control and for choice—that is, the means by which we exercise control over the environment.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Marketing Trends

Determining Marketing Accountability

Author
Sexton, Don, Kamal Sen, and Venu Gorti

Applies economic, marketing, and finance concepts to develop a metric, Customer Value Added, that explains how marketing activities drive the financial performance of an organization.  Includes empirical results for a consumer packaged goods company where Customer Value Added predicted revenue and contribution with R-squared values greater than 0.90.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Economic Policy

Inflation and the Inflation Risk Premium

Author
Bekaert, Geert and Xiaozheng Wang

This article starts by discussing the concept of "inflation hedging" and provides estimates of "inflation betas" for standard bond and well-diversified equity indices for over 45 countries. We show that such standard securities are poor inflation hedges. Expanding the menu of assets to Treasury bills, foreign bonds, real estate and gold improves matters but inflation risk remains difficult to hedge. We then describe how state-of-the-art term structure research has tried to uncover estimates of the inflation risk premium, the compensation for bearing inflation risk.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Social and Personality Psychology Compass

Motivation in Mental Accessibility: Relevance of a Representation (ROAR) as a New Framework

Author
Eitam, Baruch and E. Tory Higgins

The notion of accessibility of mental representations has been invaluable in explaining and predicting human thought and action. Focusing on social cognition, we review the large corpus of data that has accumulated since the first models of mental activation dynamics were outlined. We then outline a framework that we call Relevance of a Representation (or ROAR for short), the main tenant of which is that not all stimulated representations are in fact activated (i.e., influence thought and action processes).

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

Motivational Compatibility and Choice Conflict

Author
Kivetz, Ran and Cecile K. Cho
For most forms of conscious consumer choice, product attributes serve as the means that consumers use to accomplish their goals. Because there is competition between products in the marketplace, consumption decisions typically present conflict between means to achieve a goal. In this paper we examine the consequences of conflict between regulatory means on consumers' decisions and show that the resolution depends upon whether the means—that is, the attributes—are compatible with the consumer's regulatory orientation.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

Shaping Customer Satisfaction through Self-Awareness Cues

Author
Pham, Michel Tuan, Caroline Goukens, Donald Lehmann, and Jennifer Stuart

Six studies show that subtle contextual cues that increase customers' self-awareness can be used to influence their satisfaction with service providers holding the objective service delivery constant. Self-awareness cues tend to increase customers' satisfaction when the outcome of a service interaction is unfavorable, but tend to decrease customers' satisfaction when the outcome of the interaction is favorable. This is because higher self-awareness increases customers' tendency to attribute outcomes to themselves as opposed to the provider.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Social Psychological and Personality Science

Specialization in Relational Reasoning: The Efficiency, Accuracy, and Neural Substrates of Social versus Non-Social Inferences

Author
Mason, Malia, Joe Magee, and Louise Nind
Although deduction can be applied both to associations between nonsocial objects and to social relationships among people, the authors hypothesize that social targets elicit specialized cognitive mechanisms that facilitate inferences about social relations. Consistent with this view, in Experiments 1a and 1b the authors show that participants are more efficient and more accurate at inferring social relations compared to nonsocial relations. In Experiment 2 they find direct evidence for a specialized neural apparatus recruited specifically for social relational inferences.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
The Review of Economic Studies

Why Has House Price Dispersion Gone up?

Author
Van Nieuwerburgh, Stijn and Pierre-Olivier Weill
We set up and solve a spatial, dynamic equilibrium model of the housing market based on two main assumptions: households with heterogenous abilities flow in and out metropolitan areas in response to local wage shocks, and the housing supply cannot adjust instantly because of regulatory constraints. In our equilibrium, house prices compensate for cross-sectional productivity differences. We increase productivity dispersion in the calibrated model in order to match the 30-year increase in cross-sectional wage dispersion that we document based on metropolitan-level data.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Strategic Marketing

Be Precisely Effective, Part II

Author
Sexton, Don

How to view pricing, cross-selling, and customer loyalty during difficult economic times.  (Reprinted from "Marketing in Difficult Times," Effective Executive, July, 2009, pp. 11-18.)

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Psychological Science

The ecology of automaticity: How situational contingencies shape action semantics and social behavior

Author
Cesario, Joseph, Jason Plaks, Nao Hagiwara, Carlos Navarrete, and E. Tory Higgins
What is the role of ecology in automatic cognitive processes and social behavior? Our motivated-preparation account posits that priming a social category readies the individual for adaptive behavioral responses to that category — responses that take into account the physical environment. We present the first evidence showing that the cognitive responses (Study 1) and the behavioral responses (Studies 2a and 2b) automatically elicited by a social-category prime differ depending on a person's physical surroundings.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Accounting Horizons

A Framework for Financial Accounting Standards: Issues and a Suggested Framework

Author
Ohlson, James and Stephen Penman

This paper addresses the issues that confront the FASB and IASB in developing a new conceptual framework document. First, we suggest characteristics that a conceptual framework ought to exhibit. Most of these suggestions are based on our critique of the existing framework and the FASB-IASB work in progress. Second, we present a model framework that exhibits these characteristics. We emphasize up front that this framework is quite explicit. It goes to the heart of what a framework document should do: it places specific restrictions on what constitutes admissible accounting standards.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and Its Applications

Analysis and models of bilateral investment treaties using a social networks approach

Author
Saban, Daniela and Flavia Bonomo

Bilateral investment treaties (BITs) are agreements between two countries for the reciprocal encouragement, promotion and protection of investments in each other's territories by companies based in either country. Germany and Pakistan signed the first BIT in 1959 and since then, BITs are one of the most popular and widespread form of international agreement. In this work we study the proliferation of BITs using a social networks approach. We propose a network growth model that dynamically replicates the empirical topological characteristics of the BIT network.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Review of Financial Studies

Does Public Financial News Resolve Asymmetric Information?

Author
Tetlock, Paul

I use uniquely comprehensive data on financial news events to test four predictions from an asymmetric information model of a firm's stock price. Certain investors trade on information before it becomes public; then, public news levels the playing field for other investors, increasing their willingness to accommodate a persistent liquidity shock. Empirically, I measure public information using firms' stock returns on news days in the Dow Jones archive. I find four patterns in postnews returns and trading volume that are consistent with the asymmetric information model's predictions.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

Securitization and Distressed Loan Renegotiation: Evidence from the Subprime Mortgage Crisis

Author
Piskorski, Tomasz, Amit Seru, and Vikrant Vig

We examine whether securitization impacts renegotiation decisions of loan servicers, focusing on their decision to foreclose a delinquent loan. Conditional on a loan becoming seriously delinquent, we find a significantly lower foreclosure rate associated with bank-held loans when compared to similar securitized loans: across various specifications and origination vintages, the foreclosure rate of delinquent bankheld loans is 3% to 7% lower in absolute terms (13% to 32% in relative terms).

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Perspectives on Psychological Science

Culture and Judgment and Decision Making: The Constructivist Turn

Author
Weber, Elke and Michael Morris

Cultural influences on individual judgment and decision making are increasingly understood in terms of dynamic constructive processing and the structures in social environments that shape distinct processing styles, directing initial attentional foci, activating particular judgment schemas and decision strategies, and ultimately reinforcing some judgment and decision making (JDM) patterns over others.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Public Economics

Choice Proliferation, Simplicity Seeking, and Asset Allocation

Author
Iyengar, Sheena and Emir Kamenica

In settings such as investing for retirement or choosing a drug plan, individuals typically face a large number of options. In this paper, we analyze how the size of the choice set influences which alternative is selected. We present both laboratory experiments and field data that suggest larger choice sets induce a stronger preference for simple, easy-to-understand options.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

Consumer Expectations and Culture: The Effect of Belief in Karma in India

Author
Kopalle, Praveen, Donald Lehmann, and John Farley

In the customer expectations arena, relatively little attention has been paid to the impact on expectations of variation in cultural variables unique to a country. Here the authors focus on one country, India, and a major cultural influence there — the extent of belief in karma. Prior research in the United States suggests that disconfirmation sensitivity lowers expectations. Here the authors examine whether belief in karma and, consequently, having a long-term orientation, counteracts the tendency to lower expectations in two studies that measure and prime respondents' belief in karma.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control

Distributed Coverage Verification in Sensor Networks Without Location Information

Author
Jadbabaie, Ali
In this paper, we present three distributed algorithms for coverage verification in sensor networks with no location information. We demonstrate how, in the absence of localization devices, simplicial complexes and tools from algebraic topology can be used in providing valuable information about the properties of the cover. Our approach is based on computation of homologies of the Rips complex corresponding to the sensor network. First, we present a decentralized scheme based on Laplacian flows to compute a generator of the first homology, which represents coverage holes.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Business Research

How does perceived firm innovativeness affect the consumer?

Author
Kunz, W., Bernd Schmitt, and Alan Meyer

We present a broad-based, consumer-centric view of innovation — referred to as "perceived firm innovativeness" (PFI). PFI is conceptualized as the consumer's perception of an enduring firm capability that results in novel, creative, and impactful ideas and solutions. We develop and validate a PFI scale and show that PFI impacts consumer loyalty via two processing routes: a functional-cognitive route and an affective-experiential route.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Mathematical Psychology

On the coefficient of variation as a predictor of risk sensitivity: Behavioral and neural evidence for the relative encoding of outcome variability

Author
Weber, Elke
Cox and Vjollca (2010) argue that the coefficient of variation (CV) fails as a normative criterion for risk taking in risky choice because it predicts violations of dominance. They suggest that it fails also on descriptive grounds because such violations are not observed in a study they conducted and because people's choices in two other situations were not predicted by the CV. This paper counters the normative argument by suggesting that occasional violations of dominance might be the price that organisms with only limited processing capacity pay to achieve a broad set of goals.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Review of Financial Studies

Optimal Mortgage Design

Author
Piskorski, Tomasz and Alexei Tchistyi

This article studies optimal mortgage design in a continuous-time setting with volatile and privately observable income, costly foreclosure, and a stochastic market interest rate. We show that the features of the optimal mortgage are consistent with an option adjustable-rate mortgage (option ARM). Under the optimal contract, the borrower is given discretion of how much to repay until his balance reaches a certain limit. The default rates and interest rate payment on the mortgage correlate positively with the market interest rate.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

Payoff Complementarities and Financial Fragility: Evidence from Mutual Fund Outflows

Author
Chen, Qi, Itay Goldstein, and Wei Jiang
The paper provides empirical evidence that strategic complementarities among investors generate fragility in financial markets. Analyzing mutual fund data, we find that, consistent with a theoretical model, funds with illiquid assets (where complementarities are stronger) exhibit stronger sensitivity of outflows to bad past performance than funds with liquid assets. We also find that this pattern disappears in funds where the shareholder base is composed mostly of large investors.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
The Economic History Review

Pre-Colonial Culture, Post-Colonial Economic Success? The Tswana and the African Economic Miracle

Author
Hjort, Jonas
Cultural explanations of economic phenomena have recently enjoyed a renaissance among economists. This article provides further evidence for the salience of culture through an in-depth case study of one of the fastest-growing economies in the world during the last 50 years — Botswana.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

Store Within a Store

Author
Jerath, Kinshuk and Z. John Zhang

On a visit to any major U.S. department store, consumers can observe vendor shops (typically for cosmetics, apparel, apparel accessories, electronics, and toys), each selling a particular brand exclusively and designed to reflect the image of that brand. For these vendor shops, also called boutiques or "stores within a store," retailers rent out retail space to the respective manufacturers and give them complete autonomy over retail-level decisions, such as pricing and in-store service.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
European Journal of Social Psychology

The pen is mightier than the word: Object priming of evaluative standards

Author
Rutchick, A.M., Michael Slepian, and B. Ferris
Because red pens are closely associated with error-marking and poor performance, the use of red pens when correcting student work can activate these concepts. People using red pens to complete a word-stem task completed more words related to errors and poor performance than did people using black pens (Study 1), suggesting relatively greater accessibility of these concepts. Moreover, people using red pens to correct essays marked more errors (Study 2) and awarded lower grades (Study 3) than people using blue pens.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Science

When risk seeking becomes a motivational necessity

Author
Scholer, Abigail, Xi Zou, Kentaro Fujita, Steven J. Stroessner, and E. Tory Higgins
Four studies demonstrate the importance of self-regulatory mechanisms for understanding risk-seeking behavior under loss. Findings suggest that risk seeking becomes a motivational necessity under 3 conditions: (a) when an individual is in a state of loss; (b) when the individual is in a prevention-focused regulatory state (E. T. Higgins, 1997); and (c) when the risky option alone offers the possibility of eliminating loss.
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