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Decision Making & Negotiations

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Decision Making & Negotiations Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Decision Making & Negotiations

Decision Making & Negotiations Research

Entrenched Knowledge Structures and Consumer Response to New Products

Authors
C. Moreau, Donald Lehmann, and Arthur Markman
Date
February 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

Although diffusion models have been successfully used to predict the adoption patterns of new products and technologies, little research has examined the psychological processes underlying the individual consumers adoption decision. This study uses the knowledge transfer paradigm, studied often in the context of analogies, to demonstrate that both existing knowledge and innovation continuity are major factors influencing the consumers adoption process. In two experiments, the authors demonstrate that the relationship between expertise and adoption is relatively complex.

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Market Prominence Biases in Sponsor Identification: Processes and Consequentiality

Authors
Michel Tuan Pham and Gita Johar
Date
February 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Psychology and Marketing

It has been recently suggested that sponsor identification may be biased in favor of prominent brands. All things equal, consumers are more likely to attribute sponsorship to brands that they perceive to be more prominent in the marketplace, such as large-share brands. This article offers additional empirical evidence for this phenomenon and examines the underlying processes. The results of a controlled laboratory experiment replicate the phenomenon and show that this bias arises only when consumers are unable to retrieve the name of the sponsor directly from memory.

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Contagious Speculation and a Cure for Cancer: A Non-Event that Made Stock Prices Soar

Authors
Gur Huberman and Tomer Regev
Date
February 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

A Sunday New York Times article on a potential development of new cancer-curing drugs caused EntreMed's stock price to rise from 12.063 at the Friday close, to open at 85 and close near 52 on Monday. It closed above 30 in the three following weeks. The enthusiasm spilled over to other biotechnology stocks. The potential breakthrough in cancer research already had been reported, however, in the journal Nature, and in various popular newspapers (including the Times) more than five months earlier.

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The Idea Itself and the Circumstances of Its Emergence as Predictors of New Product Success

Authors
Jacob Goldenberg, Donald Lehmann, and David Mazursky
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

In view of the distressingly low rate of success in new product introduction, it is important to identify predictive guidelines early in the new product development process so that better choices can be made and unnecessary costs avoided. In this paper, a framework for early analysis based on the success potential embodied in the product-idea itself and the circumstances of its emergence. Based on two studies reporting actual introductions, several determinants are identified that significantly distinguish successful from unsuccessful new products in the marketplace.

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The Social Folk Theorist: Insights from Social and Cultural Psychology on the Contents and Contexts of Folk Theorizing

Authors
Daniel Ames, Eric Knowles, Michael Morris, Charles Kalish, Andrea Rosati, and Alison Gopnik
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Chapter
Book
In Intentions and Intentionality: Foundations of Social Cognition

The common image of a lone folk scientist laboring to make sense of a single agent's behavior is helpful but incomplete in its recognition of social context as it surrounds the perceiver and as it is reflected in the perceiver's folk theories. In this chapter, we review insights from social and cultural psychology that both confirm and expand the perceiver-as-scientist view. We proceed in three parts.

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Consumer Price Sensitivity and Price Thresholds

Authors
Donald Lehmann, Sunil Gupta, and Sangman Han
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Retailing

We examine consumers' price sensitivity using a new approach that incorporates probabilistic thresholds for price gains and price losses in the reference price models. We model the threshold as a function of company, competitor and consumer specific factors. Model application to scanner panel data for coffee shows that our model is superior in fit compared to ordinary logit and two existing reference price models.

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Cultural Differences in Self and the Impact of Personal and Social Influences

Authors
Sheena Iyengar and Joel Brockner
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Chapter
Book
The Practice of Social Influence in Multiple Cultures

A long and rich tradition in Western-dominated social psychology has examined the effects of people's observations of their own behavior on their subsequent attitudes and behaviors. Studies in this tradition examine and find moderating effects of various contextual factors (e.g., volition and publicness) on people's tendencies to align their attitudes/behaviors with their observed behaviors. Conversely, there has been a historical tradition for examining the effects of social influences and group pressure on human thought and behavior.

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The Important Role of Meta-analysis in International Research in Marketing

Authors
John Farley and Donald Lehmann
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
International Marketing Review

This paper considers the current thrust in marketing to create global products, brands and strategies but also to "act local" when appropriate. Deciding which elements have similar effects and which are significantly different conceptually requires meta-analysis of each of the elements. Reviews some applications of marketing meta-analysis with a focus on international research.

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The Impact of Research Design on Consumer Price-Recall Accuracy: An Integrative Review

Authors
Donald Lehmann
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science

For almost half a century, researchers have examined consumer knowledge of prices, often with disturbing and conflicting results. Although the general findings suggest that consumer knowledge of prices is poorer than assumed in neoclassical economic theory, significant variations among results exist. The authors synthesize findings from prior studies to determine the impact of research design choices on price recall accuracy measures.

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