Latest on Entrepreneurship & Innovation
The Psychology of Success: the Personality Traits That Make or Break a Tech Startup
Lessons from Lucidian and Beyond
Expanding Entrepreneurship Ecosystems
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Business Ethics Prize Goes to KIND Snacks Founder Daniel Lubetzky
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How Ju Rhyu, Hero Cosmetics Founder, Achieved a $630 Million Exit
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Three CBS Founders Share How They're Cultivating Sustainability-Focused Startups
Leveraging Technology to Provide Leadership & Strategy & Strategy for Everyone
Entrepreneurship & Innovation Faculty
Entrepreneurship & Innovation Research
Incentive Contracts and Employee-Initiated Innovation: Evidence from the Field
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- December 7, 2018
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Journal Article
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- AAA 2019 Management Accounting Section (MAS) Meeting
Organizations often empower employees at all levels to propose innovation ideas that rely on their first-hand knowledge of their standard task (i.e. employee-initiated innovation). Many, however, struggle with motivating employees to develop innovative ideas that may benefit the firm, especially when the standard tasks for which employees are hired, measured and incentivized do not explicitly include innovation.
The shortest path to oneself leads around the world: Living abroad increases self-concept clarity
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- March 1, 2018
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Journal Article
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- Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes
The current research explores the relationship between living abroad and self-concept clarity. We conducted six studies (N = 1,874) using different populations (online panels and MBA students), mixed methods (correlational and experimental), and complementary measures of self-concept clarity (self-report and self-other congruence through 360-degree ratings). Our results indicate that living abroad leads to a clearer sense of self because it prompts self-discerning reflections on whether parts of their identity truly define who they are or merely reflect their cultural upbringing.
Polluted morality: Air pollution predicts criminal activity and unethical behavior
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- January 1, 2018
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Journal Article
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- Psychological Science
Air pollution is a serious problem that affects billions of people globally. Although the environmental and health costs of air pollution are well known, the present research investigates its ethical costs. We propose that air pollution can increase criminal and unethical behavior by increasing anxiety. Analyses of a 9-year panel of 9,360 U.S.
Multicolored Blindfolds: How Organizational Multiculturalism Can Conceal Racial Discrimination and Delegitimize Racial Discrimination Claims
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S. Gundemir and Adam Galinsky
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- January 1, 2018
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Journal Article
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- Psychological and Personality Science
Past studies have found that multicultural approaches to diversity can reduce prejudice and stimulate positive intergroup relations. The current research explored a possible negative side effect of multiculturalism: whether organizational diversity structures geared toward multiculturalism can conceal racial discrimination and delegitimize racial discrimination claims.
Why grit requires perseverance and passion to positively predict performance
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- January 1, 2018
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Journal Article
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- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Prior studies linking grit — defined as perseverance and passion for long-term goals — to performance are beset by contradictory evidence. As a result, commentators have increasingly declared that grit has limited effects. We propose that this inconsistent evidence has occurred because prior research has emphasized perseverance and ignored, both theoretically and empirically, the critical role of passion, which we define as a strong feeling toward a personally important value/preference that motivates intentions and behaviors to express that value/preference.
Moral character impression formation depends on the valence homogeneity of the context
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- January 1, 2018
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Journal Article
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- Social Psychological and Personality Science
People quickly form impressions about moral character; for example, if people learn that someone cheated, they form a negative impression about that person's character and expect that person to cheat in the future. Four studies show that the formation of such moral character impressions depends on the degree of valence homogeneity in the target's context. We argue that this is the case because the degree of homogeneity in the context (the evaluative ecology) informs perceivers about the reliability of signals.
Dynamics of communicator and audience power: The persuasiveness of competence versus warmth
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- Forthcoming
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Newspaper/Magazine Article
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- Journal of Consumer Research
The current research offers a new theoretical perspective on the relationship between power and persuasion. An agentic-communal model of power is presented that proposes power affects both the type of messages generated by communicators and the types of messages that persuade audiences. Compared to low-power and neutral states, high-power states produce a greater emphasis on information that conveys competence. As a consequence, high-power communicators generate messages with greater competence information and high-power audiences are persuaded more by competence information.
The agentic-communal model of advantage and disadvantage: How inequality produces similarities in the psychology of power, social class, gender, and race
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- January 1, 2018
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Journal Article
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- Advances in Experimental Social Psychology
This integrative review presents the Agentic-Communal Model of Advantage and Disadvantage to offer insight into the psychology of inequality. This model examines the relation between individuals' position of advantage or disadvantage in a social hierarchy and their propensity toward agency and communion. We begin by identifying and reviewing four inequalities — Resources, Opportunities, Appraisals, and Deference, or the ROAD of inequality — that are fundamental to social advantage and disadvantage.
The long shadow of rivalry: Rivalry motivates performance today and tomorrow
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- January 1, 2018
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Journal Article
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- Psychological Science
Research has established that competing head to head against a rival boosts motivation and performance. The present research investigated whether rivalry can affect performance over time and in contests without rivals. We examined the long-term effects of rivalry through archival analyses of postseason performance in multiple high-stakes sports contexts: National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Men's Basketball and the major U.S.