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Columbia Business School Research

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At the Forefront of Their Fields
The Columbia Advantage

At Columbia Business School, our faculty members are at the forefront of research in their respective fields, offering innovative ideas that directly impact business practice today. A glance at our publication on faculty research, CBS Insights, will give you a sense of the breadth and immediacy of the insight our professors provide.

Columbia Business School in conjunction with the Office of the Dean provides its faculty, PhD students, and other research staff with resources and cutting edge tools and technology to help push the boundaries of business research.

Specifically, our goal is to seamlessly help faculty set up and execute their research programs. This includes, but is not limited to:

  • Highly skilled staff of full-time predoctoral fellows, summer research interns, and part-time research assistants
  • Access to centralized funding from the Dean's office and external grants to support research activities
  • Providing a state-of-the-art high-performance grid computing environment
  • Acquisition of proprietary data sets and access to various databases
  • Leading library which provides faculty with latest tools and techniques to enable digital scholarship

All these activities help to facilitate and streamline faculty research, and that of the doctoral students working with them.

Search the repository

Type
Journal Article
Date
2016

The impact of pharmaceutical innovation on premature cancer mortality in Switzerland, 1995–2012

Author
Lichtenberg, Frank

The premature cancer mortality rate has been declining in Switzerland, but there has been considerable variation in the rate of decline across cancer sites (e.g., breast or digestive organs). I analyze the effect that pharmaceutical innovation had on premature cancer mortality in Switzerland during the period 1995-2012 by investigating whether the cancer sites that experienced more pharmaceutical innovation had larger declines in premature mortality, controlling for the number of people diagnosed and mean age at diagnosis.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Management Science

Monopoly pricing in the presence of social learning

Author
Crapis, Davide, Marco Scarsini, Costis Maglaras, and Bar Ifrach

A monopolist offers a product to a market of consumers with heterogeneous quality preferences. Although initially uninformed about the product quality, they learn by observing past purchase decisions and reviews of other consumers. Our goal is to analyze the social learning mechanism and its effect on the seller's pricing decision. This analysis borrows from the literature on social learning and on pricing and revenue management.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
The Economic Journal

Changing Tastes and Effective Consistency

Author
Selden, Larry and Xiao Wei

In a single commodity setting with changing tastes, an individual's consumption plan can be obtained using naive or sophisticated choice. We provide two sufficient conditions for when (i) the solutions are unique and agree and (ii) the common plan is representable by a non-changing tastes utility. Because the solution is not revised over time, the plan and associated preferences are referred to as being effectively consistent. Afriat-style revealed preference tests are derived.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Southern California Law Review

Quieting the Shareholders' Voice: Empirical Evidence of Pervasive Bundling in Proxy Solicitations

Author
Cox, James, Colleen Honigsberg, and Randall Thomas
<p>The integrity of shareholder voting is critical to the legitimacy of corporate law. One threat to this process is proxy �bundling,�� or the joinder of more than one separate item into a single proxy proposal.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes

Self-as-object and self-as-subject in the workplace

Author
Brockner, Joel and B.M. Wiesenfeld
Drawing on James's (1890) age-old distinction between the "Me-self" and the "I-self," we discuss the implications of two self-processes (self-as-object and self-as-subject, respectively) for organizational behavior. The self-as-object is primarily concerned with thinking about oneself in valued ways, whereas the self-as-subject is primarily concerned with behavioral self-regulation.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016

The impact of pharmaceutical innovation on cancer mortality in Belgium, 2004-2012

Author
Lichtenberg, Frank

Cancer mortality declined in Belgium during the period 2004–2012, but there was considerable variation in the rate of decline across cancer sites (breast, lung, etc.). I analyze the effect that pharmaceutical innovation had on cancer mortality in Belgium, by investigating whether the cancer sites that experienced more pharmaceutical innovation had larger subsequent declines in mortality, controlling for changes in cancer incidence. The measures of mortality analyzed – premature (before ages 75 and 65) mortality rates and mean age at death – are not subject to lead-time bias.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Journal of Monetary Economics

Phasing Out the GSEs

Author
Elenev, Vadim, Tim Landvoigt, and Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh
We develop a new model of the mortgage market where both borrowers and lenders can default. Risk tolerant savers act as intermediaries between risk averse depositors and impatient borrowers. The government plays a crucial role by providing both mortgage guarantees and deposit insurance. Underpriced government mortgage guarantees lead to more and riskier mortgage originations as well as to high financial sector leverage. Mortgage crises occasionally turn into financial crises and government bailouts due to the fragility of the intermediaries' balance sheets.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Current Opinion in Psychology

The agentic-communal model of power: Implications for consumer behavior

Author
Rucker, Derek D. and Adam Galinsky

This paper presents an Agentic-Communal Model of Power as a means to understand how power shapes and guides consumer behavior. We present theoretical arguments and review empirical data that reveal how the possession of power can produce a more agentic orientation within consumers, whereas the lack of power can produce a more communal orientation within consumers. As a consequence of either an increased agentic or communal orientation, psychological states of power and powerlessness affect a wide variety of consumer behaviors ranging from gift giving to persuasion to consumer misconduct.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes

Saving the Masses: The Impact of Perceived Efficacy on Charitable Giving to Single vs. Multiple Beneficiaries

Author
Sharma, Eesha and Vicki Morwitz

People are more generous toward single than toward multiple beneficiaries, and encouraging greater giving to multiple targets is challenging. We identify one factor, perceived efficacy, which enhances generosity toward multiple beneficiaries. We investigate relationships between perceived self-efficacy (believing one can take steps to make an impact), response efficacy (believing those steps will be effective), and charitable giving.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

Decision Comfort

Author
Parker, Jeffrey, Donald Lehmann, and Yi Xie

Contemporary consumer behavior research largely conceptualizes post-decision evaluation processes in terms of decision confidence, anticipated regret and satisfaction, and decision and consumption satisfaction. The current research broadens this view, arguing that people additionally experience varying degrees of decision comfort that are distinct from other post-decision evaluations.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
American Economic Review

Do Schools Matter for High Math Achievement? Evidence from the American Mathematics Competitions

Author
Ellison, Glenn and Ashley Swanson
This paper uses data from the American Mathematics Competitions to examine the rates at which different high schools produce high-achieving math students. There are large differences in the frequency with which students from seemingly similar schools reach high achievement levels. The distribution of unexplained school effects includes a thick tail of schools that produce many more high-achieving students than is typical. Several additional analyses suggest that the differences are not primarily due to unobserved differences in student characteristics.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Journal of Banking and Finance

Estimating the Risk-Return Trade-off with Overlapping Data Inference

Author
Hedegaard, Esben and Robert Hodrick

Investigations of the basic risk-return trade-off for the market return typically use maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) with a monthly or quarterly horizon and data sampled to match the horizon even though daily data are available. We develop an overlapping data inference methodology for such models that uses all of the data while maintaining the monthly or quarterly forecasting period. Our approach recognizes that the first order conditions of MLE can be used as orthogonality conditions of the generalized method of moments (GMM).

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Journal of Finance

Local Currency Sovereign Risk

Author
Du, Wenxin and Jesse Schreger

We introduce a new measure of emerging market sovereign credit risk: the local currency credit spread, defined as the spread of local currency bonds over the synthetic local currency risk-free rate constructed using cross-currency swaps. We find that local currency credit spreads are positive and sizable. Compared with credit spreads on foreign-currency-denominated debt, local currency credit spreads have lower means, lower cross-country correlations, and lower sensitivity to global risk factors.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
American Economic Review

Rational Inattention and Organizational Focus

Author
Dessein, Wouter, Andrea Galeotti, and Tano Santos

This paper studies optimal communication flows in organizations. A production process can be coordinated ex ante, by letting agents stick to a prespecified plan of action. Alternatively, agents may adapt to task-specific shocks, in which case tasks must be coordinated ex post, using communication. When attention is scarce, an optimal organization coordinates only a few tasks ex post. Those tasks are higher performing, more adaptive to the environment, and influential. Hence, scarce attention requires setting priorities, not just local optimization.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
American Economic Review

Too-Systemic-to-Fail: What Option Markets Imply About Sector-Wide Government Guarantees

Author
Kelly, Bryan, Hanno Lustig, and Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh
We examine the pricing of financial crash insurance during the 2007-2009 financial crisis in U.S. option markets, and we show that a large amount of aggregate tail risk is missing from the cost of financial sector crash insurance during the crisis. The difference in costs between out-of-the-money put options for individual banks and puts on the financial sector index increases fourfold from its pre-crisis 2003-2007 level.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Journal of Banking and Finance

What Do Asset Prices Have to Say About Risk Appetite and Uncertainty?

Author
Bekaert, Geert and Marie Hoerova

Building on intuition from the dynamic asset pricing literature, we uncover unobserved risk aversion and fundamental uncertainty from the observed time series of the variance premium and the credit spread while controlling for the conditional variance, expectations about the macroeconomic outlook, and interest rates. We apply this methodology to monthly data from both Germany and the US. We find that the variance premium contains a substantial amount of information about risk aversion whereas the credit spread has a lot to say about uncertainty.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016

The Impact of Delays on Service Times in the Intensive Care Unit

Author
Chan, Carri, Vivek Farias, and Gabriel Escobar

Mainstream queueing models are frequently employed in modeling healthcare delivery in a number of settings, and further are used in making operational decisions for the same. The vast majority of these queueing models ignore the effects of delay experienced by a patient awaiting care. However, long delays may have adverse effects on patient outcomes and can potentially lead to longer lengths of stay (LOS) when the patient ultimately does receive care. This work sets out to understand these delay issues from an operational perspective.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Operations Research

Coordination with Local Information

Author
Dahleh, Munther, John Tsitsiklis, and Spyros Zoumpoulis
We study the role of local information channels in enabling coordination among strategic agents. Building on the standard finite-player global games framework, we show that the set of equilibria of a coordination game is highly sensitive to how information is locally shared among different agents. In particular, we show that the coordination game has multiple equilibria if there exists a collection of agents such that (i) they do not share a common signal with any agent outside of that collection; and (ii) their information sets form an increasing sequence of nested sets.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings

The Sovereign-Bank Diabolic Loop and ESBies

Author
Brunnermeier, Markus, Luis Garicano, Philip Lane, Marco Pagano, Ricardo Reis, Tano Santos, David Thesmar, Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh, and Dimitri Vayanos
We propose a simple model of the sovereign-bank diabolic loop, and establish four results. First, the diabolic loop can be avoided by restricting banks' domestic sovereign exposures relative to their equity. Second, equity requirements can be lowered if banks only hold senior domestic sovereign debt. Third, such requirements shrink even further if banks only hold the senior tranche of an internationally diversified sovereign portfolio — known as ESBies in the euro-area context.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
The Journal of Finance

Cream Skimming in Financial Markets

Author
Bolton, Patrick, Tano Santos, and Jose Scheinkman

We propose a model where investors can choose to acquire costly information that allows them to identify good assets and purchase them in opaque over the counter (OTC) markets. Uninformed investors trade on an organized exchange and only have access to an asset pool that has been (partially) cream-skimmed by informed dealers. We show that when the quality composition of assets for sale is fixed there is always too much information acquisition and cream skimming by dealers in equilibrium.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Psychological Science

Economic insecurity increases physical pain

Author
Chou, E., B. Parmar, and Adam Galinsky

The past decade has seen a rise in both economic insecurity and frequency of physical pain. The current research reveals a causal connection between these two growing and consequential social trends. In five studies, we found that economic insecurity produced physical pain and reduced pain tolerance. In a sixth study, with data from 33,720 geographically diverse households across the United States, economic insecurity predicted consumption of over-the-counter painkillers.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Journal of the European Economic Association

Expectations-Based Reference-Dependent Preferences and Asset Pricing

Author
Pagel, Michaela

This paper explores the quantitative asset-pricing implications of expectations-based reference-dependent preferences, as introduced by Koszegi and Rabin, in an otherwise traditional Lucas-tree m model. I find that the model easily succeeds in matching the historical equity premium and its variability when the preference parameters are calibrated in line with micro evidence. The equity premium is high because expectations-based loss aversion makes uncertain fluctuations in consumption more painful.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
The Journal of Finance

Health and Mortality Delta: Assessing the Welfare Cost of Household Insurance Choice

Author
Koijen, Ralph, Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh, and Motohiro Yogo
We develop a pair of risk measures, health and mortality delta, for the universe of life and health insurance products. A life-cycle model of insurance choice simplifies to replicating the optimal health and mortality delta through a portfolio of insurance products. We estimate the model to explain the observed variation in health and mortality delta implied by the ownership of life insurance, annuities including private pensions, and long-term care insurance in the Health and Retirement Study.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Queueing Systems

Maximum Weight Matching with Hysteresis in Overloaded Queues with Setups

Author
Chan, Carri, Mor Armony, and Nicholas Bambos

We consider a system of parallel queues where arriving service tasks are buffered, according to type. Available service resources are dynamically configured and allocated to the queues to process the tasks. At each point in time, a scheduler chooses a service configuration across the queues, in response to queue backlogs. Switching from one service configuration to another incurs a setup time, during which idling occurs and service bandwidth is lost. Such setup times are inherent in manufacturing and computer systems.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016

Political Risk and International Valuation

Author
Bekaert, Geert, Campbell Harvey, Christian Lundblad, and Stephan Siegel

Measuring the impact of political risk on investment projects is one of the most vexing issues in international business. One popular approach is to assume that the sovereign yield spread captures political risk and to augment the project discount rate by this spread. We show that this approach is flawed. While the sovereign spread is influenced by political risk, it also reflects other risks that are likely included in the valuation analysis - leading to the double counting of risks.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Journal of Technology Transfer

Shaping the Path to Inventive Activity: The Role of Past Experience in R & D Alliances

Author
Chiara DiGuardo, Maria and Kathryn Harrigan
A firm's past experiences with R&D alliances exert a positive effect on an invention's impact. Experience with R&D alliances increases the breadth of knowledge classes that firms cited in their subsequent patent applications. Past experience with R&D alliances has a non-significant effect on the breadth of different technological classes that will subsequently cite a firm's patented inventions. As expected, results suggest that —?
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

The voiced pronunciation of initial phonemes predicts the gender of names

Author
Slepian, Michael and Adam Galinsky

Although it is known that certain names gain popularity within a culture because of historical events, it is unknown how names become associated with different social categories in the first place. We propose that vocal cord vibration during the pronunciation of an initial phoneme plays a critical role in explaining which names are assigned to males versus females.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

To have control over or to be free from others? The desire for power reflects a need for autonomy

Author
Lammers, Joris, J.I. Stoker, F. Rink, and Adam Galinsky

The current research explores why people desire power and how that desire can be satisfied. We propose that a position of power can be subjectively experienced as conferring influence over others or as offering autonomy from the influence of others. Conversely, a low-power position can be experienced as lacking influence or lacking autonomy. Nine studies show that subjectively experiencing one’s power as autonomy predicts the desire for power, whereas the experience of influence over others does not.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Schmalenbach Business Review

Valuation: The State of the Art

Author
Penman, Stephen
There is a pervasive skepticism about formal valuation models, so much so that practitioners often discard them, preferring rough-cut methods such as pricing on the basis of comparables or simple P/E ratios. This paper provides a critique of standard valuation models, identifying what is being captured (and what is not being captured) in these models. The paper then strives to develop an agenda towards more robust valuation. It stresses three points. First, any valuation must be in accord with the well-established theory of finance. However, second, the valuation must also be practical.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Econometrica

A Rational Theory of Mutual Funds Attention Allocation

Author
Kacperczyk, Marcin, Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh, and Laura Veldkamp

The literature assessing whether mutual fund managers have skill typically regards market timing or stock picking skills as immutable attributes of a manager or fund. Yet, measures of these skills appear to vary over the business cycle. This paper offers a rational explanation, arguing that timing and picking are tasks. A skilled manager can choose how much of each task to attend to. Using tools from the rational inattention literature, we show that in booms, a manger should pick stocks and in recessions, he should pay more attention to his market timing.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Marketing Letters

Assessing the Enduring Impact of Influential Papers

Author
Eisend, Martin and Donald Lehmann

This paper investigates citations of influential papers in the marketing and management area. These papers are successful in terms of the direct citations they receive (i.e., primary citations). To be truly influential, however, the papers citing them must in turn be used and cited by subsequent papers (i.e., have secondary citations) to demonstrate their long-run relevance. We propose a measure of enduring impact that takes into account (1) both primary and secondary citations and (2) the number of citations in the bibliography.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

How Being Busy Can Increase Motivation and Reduce Task Completion Time

Author
Wilcox, Keith, Juliano Laran, Andrew T. Stephen, and Peter Zubcsek
This research tests the hypothesis that being busy increases motivation and reduces the time it takes to complete tasks for which people miss a deadline. This effect occurs because busy people tend to perceive that they are using their time effectively, which mitigates the sense of failure people have when they miss a task deadline. Studies 1 and 2 show that when people are busy, they are more motivated to complete a task after missing a deadline than those who are not busy, and that the perception that one is using time effectively mediates this effect.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Quarterly Journal of Economics

Measuring the Unequal Gains from Trade

Author
Fajgelbaum, Pablo and Amit Khandelwal

Individuals that consume different baskets of goods are di fferentially affected by relative price changes caused by international trade. We develop a methodology to measure the unequal gains from trade across consumers within countries. The approach requires data on aggregate expenditures and parameters estimated from a non-homothetic gravity equation. We find that trade typically favors the poor, who concentrate spending in more traded sectors.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Econometrica

Prices, Markups and Trade Reform

Author
De Loecker, Jan, Pinelopi Goldberg, Amit Khandelwal, and Nina Pavcnik

This paper examines how prices, markups and marginal costs respond to trade liberalization. We develop a framework to estimate markups from production data with multi-product firms. This approach does not require assumptions on the market structure or demand curves faced by firms, nor assumptions on how firms allocate their inputs across products. We exploit quantity and price information to disentangle markups from quantity-based productivity, and then compute marginal costs by dividing observed prices by the estimated markups.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Production and Operations Management

Product Assortment and Price Competition under Multinomial Logit Demand

Author
Besbes, Omar and Denis Saure

The role of assortment planning and pricing in shaping sales and profits of retailers is well documented and studied in monopolistic settings. However, such a role remains relatively unexplored in competitive environments. In this paper, we study equilibrium behavior of competing retailers in two settings: i.) when prices are exogenously fixed, and retailers compete in assortments only; and ii.) when retailers compete jointly in assortment and prices.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Administrative Science Quarterly

The Specialist Discount: Negative Returns for MBAs with Focused Profiles in Investment Banking

Author
Merluzzi, J. and Damon Phillips
When is being specialized detrimental? Leveraging scholarship that links the sociological notion of identity to the advantages of labor market specialization, we provide arguments and evidence to understand when labor market specialization disadvantages job candidates. Specifically, we formulate three conditions under which specialization becomes disadvantageous, and then test this in a context that exemplifies these conditions: the market for graduating MBAs. Using rich data on two graduating cohorts in 2008 and 2009 from a top-tier U.S.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016

Value Gaps and Profitability

Author
Stuart, Harborne

In the value-based approach to business strategy, a firm’s value creation with a buyer—i.e., its value gap—is an important measure. In many formal and informal results, firm profitability depends on whether the firm can identify buyer segments in which it has the largest value gap—namely, a value-gap advantage. These results typically assume, either explicitly or implicitly, that firms have constant marginal costs.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016

The Great and the Small: The Impact of Collective Action on the Evolution of Interlock Networks after the Panic of 1907

Author
Yue, Lori

Conventional research in organizational theory highlights the role of board interlocks in facilitating business collective action. In this article, I propose that business collective action affects the evolutionary path of interlock networks. In particular, large market players’ response after a collective action to the classic problem of the "exploitation" of the great by the small provides a mechanism for interlocks to evolve.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
AEJ: Economic Policy

A Contribution to the Empirics of Reservation Wages

Author
Krueger, Alan
This paper provides evidence on the behavior of reservation wages over the spell of unemployment using high-frequency longitudinal data. Using data from our survey of unemployed workers in New Jersey, where workers were interviewed each week for up to 24 weeks, we find that self-reported reservation wages decline at a modest rate over the spell of unemployment, with point estimates ranging from 0.05 to 0.14 percent per week of unemployment. The decline in reservation wages is driven primarily by older individuals and those with personal savings at the start of the survey.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Psychological Science

Internalized impressions: The link between apparent facial trustworthiness and deceptive behavior is mediated by targets' expectations of how they will be judged

Author
Slepian, Michael and Daniel Ames

Researchers have debated whether a person’s behavior can be predicted from his or her face. In particular, it is unclear whether people’s trustworthiness can be predicted from their facial appearance. In the present study, we implemented conceptual and methodological advances in this area of inquiry, taking a new approach to capturing trustworthy behavior and measuring targets’ own self-expectations as a mediator between consensual appearance-based judgments and the trustworthiness of targets’ behavior.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Psychological Science

Status decreases dominance in the West but increases dominance in the East

Author
Lee, Alice J., S. Yu, and Adam Galinsky

In the experiments reported here, we integrated work on hierarchy, culture, and the enforcement of group cooperation by examining patterns of punishment. Studies in Western contexts have shown that having high status can temper acts of dominance, suggesting that high status may decrease punishment by the powerful. We predicted that high status would have the opposite effect in Asian cultures because vertical collectivism permits the use of dominance to reinforce the existing hierarchical order.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

The Common Factor in Idiosyncratic Volatility: Quantitative Asset Pricing Implications

Author
Herskovic, Bernard, Bryan Kelly, Hanno Lustig, and Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh
We show that firms' idiosyncratic volatility obeys a strong factor structure and that shocks to the common factor in idiosyncratic volatility (CIV) are priced. Stocks in the lowest CIV-beta quintile earn average returns 5.4% per year higher than those in the highest quintile. The CIV factor helps to explain a number of asset pricing anomalies. We provide new evidence linking the CIV factor to income risk faced by households. These three facts are consistent with an incomplete markets heterogeneous-agent model.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

The perils of proactive churn prevention using plan recommendations: Evidence from a field experiment

Author
Iyengar, Raghuram and Martin Schleicher
Facing the issue of increasing customer churn, many services have begun recommending pricing plans to their customers. One reason behind this type of retention campaign is that customers who are on a tariff suitable for them should be less likely to churn as they derive greater benefits from the service. In this paper, the authors examine the effectiveness of such retention campaigns using a large-scale field experiment in which some customers were offered plan recommendations and some were not.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Manufacturing & Service Operations

Optimization in Online Content Recommendation Services: Beyond Click-Through-Rates

Author
Besbes, Omar, Yonatan Gur, and Assaf Zeevi

A new class of online services allows internet media sites to direct users from articles they are currently reading to other content they may be interested in. This process creates a "browsing path'' along which there is potential for repeated interaction between the user and the provider, giving rise to a dynamic optimization problem. A key metric that often underlies this recommendation process is the click-through rate (CTR) of candidate articles.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Marketing Science

A Model of Unorganized and Organized Retailing in Emerging Economies

Author
Jerath, Kinshuk, S Sajeesh, and Z. John Zhang

In the last two decades, organized retailing has transformed the retailing landscape in emerging economies, where unorganized retailing has traditionally been dominant. In this paper, we build a theoretical model of unorganized and organized retailing in emerging economies by carefully modeling key characteristics of the retailing environment, the retailers, the consumers, and product categories.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Academy of Management Review

A More Relevant Approach to Relevance in Management Studies: An Essay on Performativity

Author
Abrahamson, Eric, H. Berkowitz, and H. Dumez

In this essay, we criticize how the performativity thesis, as described and exemplified in Do Economists Make Markets, has focused primarily on the field of economics generally and business school–based financial economics consequently. By doing so the performativity literature has ignored whether, when, and how financial economics outperforms, or might be outperformed by, other business school sciences, such as management.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
PLOS ONE

Adaptive appraisals of anxiety moderate the association between cortisol reactivity and performance in salary negotiations

Author
Akinola, Modupe, Ilona Fridman, Shira Mor, Michael Morris, and Alia Crum

Prior research suggests that stress can be harmful in high-stakes contexts such as negotiations. However, few studies actually measure stress physiologically during negotiations, nor do studies offer interventions to combat the potential negative effects of heightened physiological responses in negotiation contexts. In the current research, we offer evidence that the negative effects of cortisol increases on negotiation performance can be reduced through a reappraisal of anxiety manipulation.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
American Economic Review

Adverse Selection and Auction Design for Internet Display Advertising

Author
Arnosti, Nicholas, Marissa Beck, and Paul Milgrom
We model an online display advertising environment in which "performance" advertisers can measure the value of individual impressions, whereas "brand" advertisers cannot. If advertiser values for ad opportunities are positively correlated, second-price auctions for impressions can be inefficient and expose brand advertisers to adverse selection. Bayesian-optimal auctions have other drawbacks: they are complex, introduce incentives for false-name bidding, and do not resolve adverse selection. We introduce "modified second bid" auctions as the unique auctions that overcome these disadvantages.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Management Science

Agency Selling or Reselling? Channel Structures in Electronic Retailing

Author
Jerath, Kinshuk, Vibhanshu Abhishek, and Z. John Zhang

In recent years, online retailers (also called e-tailers) have started allowing manufacturers direct access to their customers while charging a fee for providing this access, a format commonly referred to as agency selling. In this paper, we use a stylized theoretical model to answer a key question that e-tailers are facing: When should they use an agency selling format instead of using the more conventional reselling format?

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2016
Journal
Critical Care Medicine

Association Among ICU Congestion, ICU Admission Decision, and Patient Outcomes

Author
Kim, Song-Hee, Carri Chan, Marcelo Olivares, and Gabriel Escobar

Objectives: To employ automated bed data to examine whether ICU occupancy influences ICU admission decisions and patient outcomes.

Design: Retrospective study using an instrumental variable to remove biases from unobserved differences in illness severity for patients admitted to ICU.

Setting: Fifteen hospitals in an integrated healthcare delivery system in California.

Patients: Seventy thousand one hundred thirty-three episodes involving patients admitted via emergency departments to a medical service over a 1-year period between 2008 and 2009.

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