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Leadership & Organizational Behavior

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Leadership & Organizational Behavior Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Latest on Leadership & Organizational Behavior

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Leadership Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Leadership & Organizational Behavior

What Segments Equity Markets?

Authors
Geert Bekaert, Campbell Harvey, Christian Lundblad, and Stephan Siegel
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Financial Studies

We propose a new, valuation-based measure of world equity market segmentation. While we observe decreased levels of segmentation in many developing countries, the level of segmentation is still significant. In contrast to previous research, we characterize the factors that account for variation in market segmentation both through time as well as across countries.

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Using both your head and your heart: The role of perspective taking and empathy in resolving social conflict

Authors
Adam Galinsky, D. Gilin, and W. Maddux
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Chapter
Book
The Psychology of Social Conflict and Aggression
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Do CEOs matter?

Authors
Morten Bennedsen, Francisco Perez-Gonzalez, and Daniel Wolfenzon
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Working Paper

Estimating the value of top managerial talent is a central topic of research that has attracted widespread attention from academics and practitioners. Yet, testing for the importance of chief executive officers (CEOs) on firm outcomes is challenging. In this paper we test for the impact of CEOs on performance by assessing the effect of (1) CEO deaths and (2) the death of CEOs' immediate family members (spouse, parents, children, etc).

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No mirrors for the powerful: Why dominant smiles are not processed using embodied simulation

Authors
L. Huang and Adam Galinsky
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Behavioral and Brain Sciences

A complete model of smile interpretation needs to incorporate its social context. We argue that embodied simulation is an unlikely route for understanding dominance smiles, which typically occur in the context of power. We support this argument by discussing the lack of eye contact with dominant faces and the facial and postural complementarity, rather than mimicry, that pervades hierarchical relationships.

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Can a Workplace Have an Attitude Problem? Workplace Effects on Employee Attitudes and Organizational Performance

Authors
Ann Bartel, Richard Freeman, and Morris Kleiner
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Labour Economics

Using the employee opinion survey responses from several thousand employees working in 193 branches of a major U.S. bank, we consider whether there is a distinctive workplace component to employee attitudes despite the common set of corporate human resource management practices that cover all the branches. Several different empirical tests consistently point to the existence of a systematic branch-specific component to employee attitudes.

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Risk, Uncertainty, and Option Exercise

Authors
Neng Wang and Jianjun Miao
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Economic Dynamics & Control

Many economic decisions can be described as an option exercise or optimal stopping problem under uncertainty. Motivated by experimental evidence such as the Ellsberg Paradox, we follow Knight (1921) and distinguish risk from uncertainty. To afford this distinction, we adopt the multiple-priors utility model. We show that the impact of ambiguity on the option exercise decision depends on the relative degrees of ambiguity about continuation payoffs and termination payoffs. Consequently, ambiguity may accelerate or delay option exercise.

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What Do CEOs Do?

Authors
Oriana Bandiera, Luigi Guiso, Andrea Prat, and Raffaella Sadun
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Working Paper

We develop a methodology to collect and analyze data on CEOs' time use. The idea — sketched out in a simple theoretical set-up — is that CEO time is a scarce resource and its allocation can help us identify the firm's priorities as well as the presence of governance issues. We follow 94 CEOs of top-600 Italian firms over a pre-specified week and record the time devoted each day to different work activities. We focus on the distinction between time spent with insiders (employees of the firm) and outsiders (people not employed by the firm).

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Something to lose and nothing to gain: The role of stress in the interactive effect of power and stability on risk taking

Authors
J. Jordan, Adam Galinsky, and N. Sivanathan
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Administrative Science Quarterly

The current investigation explores how power and stability within a social hierarchy interact to affect risk taking. Building on a diverse, interdisciplinary body of research, including work on non-human primates, intergroup status, and childhood social hierarchies, we predicted that the unstable powerful and the stable powerless will be more risk taking than the stable powerful and unstable powerless.

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Managing Change: Cases and Concepts

Authors
Todd Jick and M. Peiperl
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Book
Publisher
Irwin

Managing Change: Cases and Concepts, 3e by Todd Jick and Maury Peiperl is comprised of six modules that introduce common threads in the ensuing case studies and readings on organizational change. The materials in this edition — cases and readings — have been chosen and arranged to introduce change as an integrated process. Cases in the text represent a wide variety of change situations. Accompanying many cases are readings, likewise chosen to reflect a broad range of issues.

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