Skip to main content
Official Logo of Columbia Business School
Academics
  • Visit Academics
  • Degree Programs
  • Admissions
  • Tuition & Financial Aid
  • Campus Life
  • Career Management
Faculty & Research
  • Visit Faculty & Research
  • Academic Divisions
  • Search the Directory
  • Research
  • Faculty Resources
  • Teaching Excellence
Executive Education
  • Visit Executive Education
  • For Organizations
  • For Individuals
  • Program Finder
  • Online Programs
  • Certificates
About Us
  • Visit About Us
  • CBS Directory
  • Events Calendar
  • Leadership
  • Our History
  • The CBS Experience
  • Newsroom
Alumni
  • Visit Alumni
  • Update Your Information
  • Lifetime Network
  • Alumni Benefits
  • Alumni Career Management
  • Women's Circle
  • Alumni Clubs
Insights
  • Visit Insights
  • Digital Future
  • Climate
  • Business & Society
  • Entrepreneurship
  • 21st Century Finance
  • Magazine
CBS Landing Image
Faculty & Research
  • Academic Divisions
  • Search the Faculty
  • Research
  • Faculty Resources
  • News
  • More 

Decision Making & Negotiations

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

Jump to main content

Latest on Decision Making & Negotiations

No articles have been found by those filters.

Pagination

  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Current page 3

Decision Making & Negotiations

Decision Making & Negotiations Research

Mortgage Rates, Household Balance Sheets, and the Real Economy

Authors
Ben Keys, Tomasz Piskorski, Amit Seru, and Vincent Yao
Date
September 1, 2014
Format
Working Paper

This paper investigates the impact of lower mortgage rates on household balance sheets and other economic outcomes during the housing crisis. We use proprietary loan-level panel data matched to consumer credit records using borrowers' Social Security numbers, which allows for accurate measurement of the effects. Our main focus is on borrowers with agency loans, which constitute the vast majority of U.S. mortgage borrowers.

Read More about Mortgage Rates, Household Balance Sheets, and the Real Economy

Something to Chew On: The Effects of Oral Haptics on Mastication, Orosensory Association, and Calorie Estimation

Authors
Dipayan Biswas, Courtney Szocs, Aradhna Krishna, and Donald Lehmann
Date
August 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

This research examines how oral haptics (due to hardness/softness or roughness/smoothness) related to foods influence mastication (i.e., degree of chewing) and orosensory perception (i.e., orally perceived fattiness), which in turn influence calorie estimation, subsequent food choices, and overall consumption volume. The results of five experimental studies show that, consistent with theories related to mastication and orosensory perception, oral haptics related to soft (vs. hard) and smooth (vs. rough) foods lead to higher calorie estimations.

Read More about Something to Chew On: The Effects of Oral Haptics on Mastication, Orosensory Association, and Calorie Estimation

Time-Varying Fund Manager Skill

Authors
Marcin Kacperczyk, Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh, and Laura Veldkamp
Date
August 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Journal of Finance

We propose a new definition of skill as a general cognitive ability to either pick stocks or time the market at different times. We find evidence for stock picking in booms and for market timing in recessions. Moreover, the same fund managers that pick stocks well in expansions also time the market well in recessions. These fund managers significantly outperform other funds and passive benchmarks. Our results suggest a new measure of managerial ability that gives more weight to a fund's market timing in recessions and to a fund's stock picking in booms.

Read More about Time-Varying Fund Manager Skill

Information aggregation and allocative efficiency in smooth markets

Authors
Kris Iyer, Ramesh Johari, and Ciamac Moallemi
Date
July 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

Recent years have seen extensive investigation of the information aggregation properties of markets. However, relatively little is known about conditions under which a market will aggregate the private information of rational risk averse traders who optimize their portfolios over time; in particular, what features of a market encourage traders to ultimately reveal their private information through trades? We consider a market model involving finitely many informed risk-averse traders interacting with a market maker.

Read More about Information aggregation and allocative efficiency in smooth markets

Choosing a Digital Content Strategy: How Much Should be Free?

Authors
Daniel Halbheer, Florian Stahl, and Donald Lehmann
Date
June 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
International Journal of Research in Marketing

Advertising supported content sampling is ubiquitous in online markets for digital information goods. Yet, little is known about the profit impact of sampling when it serves the dual purpose of disclosing content quality and generating advertising revenue. This paper proposes an analytical framework to study the optimal content strategy for online publishers and shows how it is determined by characteristics of both the content market and the advertising market.

Read More about Choosing a Digital Content Strategy: How Much Should be Free?

How and When Grouping Low-Calorie Options Reduces the Benefits of Providing Dish-Specific Calorie Information

Authors
Jeffrey Parker and Donald Lehmann
Date
June 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

To date the effectiveness of inducing lower-calorie choices by providing consumers with calorie information has yielded mixed results. Here four controlled experiments show that adding dish-specific calorie information to menus (calorie posting) tends to result in lower-calorie choices. However, additionally grouping low-calorie dishes into a single "low-calorie" category (calorie organizing) ironically diminishes the positive effects of calorie posting. This outcome appears to be caused by the effect that grouping low-calorie options has on consumers' consideration sets.

Read More about How and When Grouping Low-Calorie Options Reduces the Benefits of Providing Dish-Specific Calorie Information

Which Products Are Best Suited to Mobile Advertising? A Field Study of Mobile Display Advertising Effects on Consumer Attitudes and Intentions

Authors
Yakov Bart, Andrew Stephen, and Miklos Sarvary
Date
June 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

Mobile advertising is one of the fastest-growing advertising formats. In 2013, global spending on mobile advertising was approximately $16.7 billion and it is expected to exceed $62.8 billion by 2017. The most prevalent type of mobile advertising is mobile display advertising (MDA), which takes the form of banners on mobile webpages and in mobile applications. This paper examines which product characteristics are likely to be associated with MDA campaigns that are effective in increasing consumers' favorable attitudes towards products and purchase intentions.

Read More about Which Products Are Best Suited to Mobile Advertising? A Field Study of Mobile Display Advertising Effects on Consumer Attitudes and Intentions

The Red Sneakers Effect: Inferring Status and Competence from Signals of Nonconformity

Authors
Silvia Bellezza, F. Gino, and Anat Keinan
Date
June 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

This research examines how people react to nonconforming behaviors, such as entering a luxury boutique wearing gym clothes rather than an elegant outfit or wearing red sneakers in a professional setting. Nonconforming behaviors, as costly and visible signals, can act as a particular form of conspicuous consumption and lead to positive inferences of status and competence in the eyes of others. A series of studies demonstrates that people confer higher status and competence to nonconforming rather than conforming individuals.

Read More about The Red Sneakers Effect: Inferring Status and Competence from Signals of Nonconformity

Secrecy in Pension Funds Can Help Beneficiaries

Authors
Michael Weinberg
Date
May 11, 2014
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
The New York Times

Having invested multiple billion dollars of pension assets, and now teaching "Institutional Investing; Alternatives in Pension Plans," I approach this question with theoretical and empirical knowledge, and more than a modicum of trepidation.

Read More about Secrecy in Pension Funds Can Help Beneficiaries

Pagination

  • First page 1
  • Ellipsis …
  • Page 33
  • Page 34
  • Page 35
  • Page 36
  • Current page 37
  • Page 38
  • Page 39
  • Page 40
  • Page 41
  • Ellipsis …
  • Last page 149

External CSS

Homepage Breadcrumb Block

Official Logo of Columbia Business School

Columbia University in the City of New York
665 West 130th Street, New York, NY 10027
Tel. 212-854-1100

Maps and Directions
    • Centers & Programs
    • Current Students
    • Corporate
    • Directory
    • Support Us
    • Recruiters & Partners
    • Faculty & Staff
    • Newsroom
    • Careers
    • Contact Us
    • Accessibility
    • Privacy & Policy Statements
Back to Top Upward arrow
TOP

© Columbia University

  • X
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
Back to top

Accessibility Tools

English French German Italian Spanish Japanese Russian Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Arabic Bengali