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Organizations & Markets

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

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Latest on Organizations & Markets

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Organizations & Markets Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Organizations & Markets

Professed impressions: What people say about others affects onlookers' perceptions of speakers' power and warmth

Authors
Daniel Ames, Emily Bianchi, and Joe Magee
Date
January 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

During a conversation, it is common for a speaker to describe a third-party that the listener does not know. These professed impressions not only shape the listener's view of the third-party but also affect judgments of the speaker herself. We propose a previously unstudied consequence of professed impressions: judgments of the speaker's power. In two studies, we find that listeners ascribe more power to speakers who profess impressions focusing on a third-party's conscientiousness, compared to those focusing on agreeableness.

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The effect of drug vintage on survival: Micro evidence from Puerto Rico's Medicaid program

Authors
Frank Lichtenberg
Date
January 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Advances in health economics and health services research

Using micro data on virtually all of the drugs and diseases of over 500,000 people enrolled in Puerto Rico's Medicaid program, the impact of the vintage (original FDA approval year) of drugs used to treat a patient on the patient's three-year probability of survival, controlling for demographic characteristics (age, sex, and region), utilization of medical services, and the nature and complexity of illness are examined. It is found that people using newer drugs during January-June, 2000, were less likely to die by the end of 2002, conditional on the covariates.

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Particle Learning and Smoothing

Authors
Michael Johannes, Carlos Carvalho, Hedibert Lopes, and Nicholas Polson
Date
January 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Statistical Science

Particle learning (PL) provides state filtering, sequential parameter learning and smoothing in a general class of state space models. Our approach extends existing particle methods by incorporating the estimation of static parameters via a fully-adapted filter that utilizes conditional sufficient statistics for parameters and/or states as particles. State smoothing in the presence of parameter uncertainty is also solved as a by-product of PL. In a number of examples, we show that PL outperforms existing particle filtering alternatives and proves to be a competitor to MCMC.

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Activists, categories, and markets: Racial diversity and protests against Wal-Mart store openings in America

Authors
Hayagreeva Rao, Lori Qingyuan Yue, and Paul Ingram
Date
January 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Research in the Sociology of Organizations

Identity movements rely on a shared "we-feeling" amongst a community of participants. In turn, such shared identities are possible when movement participants can self-categorize themselves as belonging to one group. We address a debate as to whether community diversity enhances or impedes such protests, and investigate the role of racial diversity since it is a simple, accessible, and visible basis of community diversity and social categorization.

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Institutional Rivalry and the Entrepreneurial Strategy of Economic Development: Business Incubator Foundings in Three States

Authors
Paul Ingram, Jiao Luo, and Joseph Eshun
Date
January 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Research in the Sociology of Work

It is now widely accepted that the institutional interventions of states are a foundational influence on the dynamics of organizational forms. But why do states act? In this paper, we apply the behavioral theory of the firm to develop an explanation of state actions based on the fact that they are boundedly rational rivals. The instrument of state competition we examine is the founding of business incubators, a primary tool in the entrepreneurial strategy of economic development.

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Cultural conditioning: Understanding interpersonal accommodation in India and the United States in terms of the modal characteristics of interpersonal influence situations

Authors
Michael Morris, N.V.R. Naidu, Satishchandra Kumar, and Neha Berlia
Date
January 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

We argue that differences between the landscapes of influence situations in Indian and American societies induce Indians to accommodate to others more often than Americans. To investigate cultural differences in situation-scapes, we sampled interpersonal influence situations occurring in India and the United States from both the influencee's (Study 1) and the influencer's (Study 2) perspectives. We found that Indian influence situations were dramatically more likely than U.S. situations to feature other-serving motives and to result in positive consequences for the relationship.

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Recursive equilibrium in stochastic overlapping-generations economies

Authors
Paolo Siconolfi
Date
January 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Econometrica

We prove generic existence of recursive equilibrium for overlapping generations economies with uncertainty. "Generic" here means in a residual set of utilities and endowments. The result holds provided there is sufficient intragenerational household heterogeneity.

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The Governance of Family Firms

Authors
Morten Bennedsen and Daniel Wolfenzon
Date
January 1, 2010
Format
Chapter
Book
Corporate Governance
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Regulation 3.0 for Telecom 3.0

Authors
Eli Noam
Date
January 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Telecommunications Policy

Telecommunications infrastructure goes through technology-induced phases, and the regulatory regime follows. Telecom 1.0, based on copper wires, was monopolistic in market structure and led to a Regulation 1.0 with government ownership or control. Wireless long-distance and then mobile technologies enabled the opening of that system to one of multi-carrier provision, with Regulation 2.0 stressing privatization, entry, liberalization, and competition. But now, fiber and high-capacity wireless are raising scale economies and network effects, leading to a more concentrated market.

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