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Entrepreneurship & Innovation

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Entrepreneurship & Innovation Faculty

Entrepreneurship & Innovation Research

When being a model minority is good . . . and bad: Realistic threat explains negativity toward Asian Americans

Authors
W. Maddux, Adam Galinsky, Amy Cuddy, and M. Polifroni
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

The current research explores the hypothesis that realistic threat is one psychological mechanism that can explain how individuals can hold positive stereotypical beliefs toward Asian Americans yet also express negative attitudes and emotions toward them. Study 1 demonstrates that in a realistic threat context, attitudes and emotions toward an anonymous group described by only positive, "model minority" attributes are significantly more negative than when the group was described using other positive attributes.

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Chameleons bake bigger pies and take bigger pieces: Strategic behavioral mimicry facilitates negotiation outcomes

Authors
W. Maddux, E. Mullen, and Adam Galinsky
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

Two experiments investigated the hypothesis that strategic behavioral mimicry can facilitate negotiation outcomes. Study 1 used an employment negotiation with multiple issues, and demonstrated that strategic behavioral mimicry facilitated outcomes at both the individual and dyadic levels: Negotiators who mimicked the mannerisms of their opponents both secured better individual outcomes, and their dyads as a whole also performed better when mimicking occurred compared to when it did not.

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Social hierarchy: The self-reinforcing nature of power and status

Authors
J. Magee and Adam Galinsky
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Academy of Management Annals

Hierarchy is such a defining and pervasive feature of organizations that its forms and basic functions are often taken for granted in organizational research. In this review, we revisit some basic psychological and sociological elements of hierarchy and argue that status and power are two important yet distinct bases of hierarchical differentiation. We first define power and status and distinguish our definitions from previous conceptualizations. We then integrate a number of different literatures to explain why status and power hierarchies tend to be self-reinforcing.

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Lacking power impairs executive functions

Authors
P. Smith, N. Jostmann, Adam Galinsky, and W. van Dijk
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Psychological Science

Four experiments explored whether lacking power impairs executive functioning, testing the hypothesis that the cognitive presses of powerlessness increase vulnerability to performance decrements during complex executive tasks. In the first three experiments, low power impaired performance on executive-function tasks: The powerless were less effective than the powerful at updating (Experiment 1), inhibiting (Experiment 2), and planning (Experiment 3).

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Lacking control increases illusory pattern perception

Authors
J. Whitson and Adam Galinsky
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Science

We present six experiments that tested whether lacking control increases illusory pattern perception, which we define as the identification of a coherent and meaningful interrelationship among a set of random or unrelated stimuli. Participants who lacked control were more likely to perceive a variety of illusory patterns, including seeing images in noise, forming illusory correlations in stock market information, perceiving conspiracies, and developing superstitions.

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The merits of unconscious thought in creativity

Authors
C.B. Zhong, A. Dijksterhuis, and Adam Galinsky
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Psychological Science

Research has yielded weak empirical support for the idea that creative solutions may be discovered through unconscious thought, despite anecdotes to this effect. To understand this gap, we examined the effect of unconscious thought on two outcomes of a remote-association test (RAT): implicit accessibility and conscious reporting of answers.

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Harnessing Power to Capture Leadership

Authors
Adam Galinsky, J. Jordan, and N. Sivanathan
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Chapter
Book
Leadership at the Crossroads

This chapter examines the relationship between the related yet distinct constructs of power and leadership. Although power (asymmetric control over valued resources) is often a foundation of leadership (influencing and motivating a group of individuals towards a common goal), we consider power to be neither a necessary nor a sufficient condition for the emergence of leadership. We distinguish power from leadership along a number of dimensions and highlight that the relationship of power to leadership lies in power's psychological effects.

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The counterfactual mind-set: A decade of research

Authors
E. Wong, Adam Galinsky, and L. Kray
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Chapter
Book
The Handbook of Imagination and Mental Stimulation
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Further ironies of suppression: Stereotype and counterstereotype accessibility

Authors
Adam Galinsky and G. Moskowitz
Date
September 1, 2007
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

Three experiments explored the accessibility of stereotypes and counterstereotypes following stereotype suppression. Using a lexical decision task, experiment 1 demonstrated that the counterstereotype showed greater accessibility following stereotype suppression compared to stereotype expressers and no prime control participants. Using a person perception task, experiment 2 revealed that suppression can make both the stereotype and the counterstereotype more accessible.

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