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 

Leadership & Organizational Behavior

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

Jump to main content

Latest on Leadership & Organizational Behavior

No articles have been found by those filters.

Pagination

  • First page 1
  • Ellipsis …
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Page 12
  • Page 13
  • Page 14
  • Page 15
  • Page 16
  • Page 17
  • Current page 18

Leadership Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Leadership & Organizational Behavior

To start low or to start high? The case of auctions vs. negotiations

Authors
Adam Galinsky, G. Ku, and T. Mussweiler
Date
January 1, 2009
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Current Directions in Psychological Science

We document how starting prices differentially impact outcomes in negotiations and auctions. In negotiations (where the number of actors is often predetermined), starting prices drive cognitive processes, leading individuals to selectively focus on information consistent with, and make valuations similar to, the starting value. Thus, starting high will often lead to ending high in negotiations.

Read More about To start low or to start high? The case of auctions vs. negotiations

Vicarious entrapment: Your sunk costs, my escalation of commitment

Authors
B. Gunia, N. Sivanathan, and Adam Galinsky
Date
January 1, 2009
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

Individuals often honor sunk costs by increasing their commitment to failing courses of action. Since this escalation of commitment is fueled by self-justification processes, a widely offered prescription for preventing escalation is to have separate individuals make the initial and subsequent resource allocation decisions. In contrast to this proposed remedy, four experiments explored whether a psychological connection between two decision-makers leads the second decision-maker to invest further in the failing program orchestrated by the initial decision-maker.

Read More about Vicarious entrapment: Your sunk costs, my escalation of commitment

Compensatory control: Achieving order through the mind, our institutions, and the heavens

Authors
Aaron C. Kay, J. Whitson, D. Gaucher, and Adam Galinsky
Date
January 1, 2009
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Current Directions in Psychological Science

We propose that people protect the belief in a controlled, nonrandom world by imbuing their social, physical, and metaphysical environments with order and structure when their sense of personal control is threatened. We demonstrate that when personal control is threatened, people can preserve a sense of order by (a) perceiving patterns in noise or adhering to superstitions and conspiracies, (b) defending the legitimacy of the sociopolitical institutions that offer control, or (c) believing in an interventionist God.

Read More about Compensatory control: Achieving order through the mind, our institutions, and the heavens

Counterfactual structure and learning from experience in negotiations

Authors
L. Kray, Adam Galinsky, and K. Markman
Date
January 1, 2009
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

Reflecting on the past is often a critical ingredient for successful learning. The current research investigated how counterfactual thinking, reflecting on how prior experiences might have been different, motivates effective learning from these previous experiences. Specifically, we explored how the structure of counterfactual reflection — their additive ("If only I had") versus subtractive ("If only I had not") nature — influences performance in dyadic-level strategic interactions.

Read More about Counterfactual structure and learning from experience in negotiations

Cultural borders and mental barriers: The relationship between living abroad and creativity

Authors
W. Maddux and Adam Galinsky
Date
January 1, 2009
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Despite abundant anecdotal evidence that creativity is associated with living in foreign countries, there is currently little empirical evidence for this relationship. Five studies employing a multimethod approach systematically explored the link between living abroad and creativity. Using both individual and dyadic creativity tasks, Studies 1 and 2 provided initial demonstrations that time spent living abroad (but not time spent traveling abroad) showed a positive relationship with creativity.

Read More about Cultural borders and mental barriers: The relationship between living abroad and creativity

Toward a more complete understanding of the link between multicultural experience and creativity

Authors
W. Maddux, Angela Ka-yee Leung, Chi-Yue Chiu, and Adam Galinsky
Date
January 1, 2009
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Psychologist

In our recent article (Leung, Maddux, Galinsky, & Chiu, April 2008), we presented evidence supporting the idea that multicultural experience can facilitate creativity. In a reply to that article, Rich (2009, this issue) has argued that our review, although timely and important, was somewhat limited in scope, focusing mostly on smaller forms of creativity ("little c": e.g., paper- and-pencil measures of creativity) as well as on larger forms of multicultural experience ("Big M": e.g., living in a foreign country).

Read More about Toward a more complete understanding of the link between multicultural experience and creativity

Goals gone wild: The systematic side effects of overprescribing goal setting

Authors
L. Ordóñez, M. Schweitzer, Adam Galinsky, and M. Bazerman
Date
January 1, 2009
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Academy of Management Perspectives

For decades, goal setting has been promoted as a halcyon pill for improving employee motivation and performance in organizations. Advocates of goal setting argue that for goals to be successful, they should be specific and challenging, and countless studies find that specific, challenging goals motivate performance far better than "do your best" exhortations. The authors of this article, however, argue that it is often these same characteristics of goals that cause them to "go wild."

Read More about Goals gone wild: The systematic side effects of overprescribing goal setting

On good scholarship, goal setting, and scholars gone wild

Authors
L. Ordóñez, M. Schweitzer, Adam Galinsky, and M. Bazerman
Date
January 1, 2009
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Academy of Management Perspectives

In this article, we define good scholarship, highlight our points of disagreement with Locke and Latham (2009), and call for further academic research to examine the full range of goal setting's effects. We reiterate our original claim that goal setting, like a potent medication, can produce both beneficial effects and systematic, negative outcomes, and as a result, it should be carefully prescribed and closely monitored.

Read More about On good scholarship, goal setting, and scholars gone wild

Repetitive regret, depression, and anxiety: Findings from a nationally representative survey

Authors
Neal Roese, K. Epstude, F. Fessel, M. Morrison, R. Smallman, A. Summerville, Adam Galinsky, and S. Segerstrom
Date
January 1, 2009
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology

Past research has established a connection between regret (negative emotions connected to cognitions about how past actions might have achieved better outcomes) and both depression and anxiety. In the present research, the relations between regret, repetitive thought, depression, and anxiety were examined in a nationally representative telephone survey. Although both regret and repetitive thought were associated with general distress, only regret was associated with anhedonic depression and anxious arousal.

Read More about Repetitive regret, depression, and anxiety: Findings from a nationally representative survey

Pagination

  • First page 1
  • Ellipsis …
  • Page 64
  • Page 65
  • Page 66
  • Page 67
  • Current page 68
  • Page 69
  • Page 70
  • Page 71
  • Page 72
  • Ellipsis …
  • Last page 116

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