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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.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Manufacturing & Service Operations Management

Dynamic Pricing Strategies for Multi-Product Revenue Management Problems

Author
Maglaras, Costis and Joern Meissner

Consider a firm that owns a fixed capacity of a resource that is consumed in the production or delivery of multiple products. The firm strives to maximize its total expected revenues over a finite horizon, either by choosing a dynamic pricing strategy for each product or, if prices are fixed, by selecting a dynamic rule that controls the allocation of capacity to requests for the different products.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
<a href="http://www.springer.com/mathematics/journal/10107">Mathematical Programming</a>

Efficient and fair routing for mesh networks

Author
Lodi, Andrea and Enrico Malaguti
Inspired by the One Laptop Per Child project, we consider mesh networks that connect devices that cannot recharge their batteries easily. We study how the mesh should retransmit information to make use of the energy stored in each of the nodes effectively. The solution that minimizes the total energy spent by the whole network may be very unfair to some nodes because they bear a disproportionate burden of the traffic.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
The Journal of Creative Behavior

Embeddedness and New Idea Discussion in Professional Networks: The Mediating Role of Affect-Based Trust

Author
Chua, Roy, Michael Morris, and Paul Ingram

This article examines how managers' tendency to discuss new ideas with others in their professional networks depends on the density of shared ties surrounding a given relationship. Consistent with prior research which found that embeddedness enhances information flow, an egocentric network survey of mid-level executives shows that managers tend to discuss new ideas with those who are densely embedded in their professional networks. More specifically, embeddedness increases the likelihood to discuss new ideas by engendering affect-based trust, as opposed to cognition-based trust.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Review of Financial Studies

Entrepreneurial finance and non-diversifiable risk

Author
Chen, Hui, Jianjun Miao, and Neng Wang

We develop a dynamic incomplete-markets model of entrepreneurial firms, and demonstrate the implications of nondiversifiable risks for entrepreneurs' interdependent consumption, portfolio allocation, financing, investment, and business exit decisions. We characterize the optimal capital structure via a generalized tradeoff model where risky debt provides significant diversification benefits.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Group Processes and Intergroup Relations

Expertise in your midst: How congruence between status and speech style affects reactions to unique knowledge

Author
Loyd, D.L., J. Whitson, and M.C. Thomas-Hunt
We examine how the status and speech style of experts impacts how they are perceived and their level of influence. In our experiment we manipulate whether high-status and low-status experts share their expert knowledge using a more or less powerful style of speech, and find that experts are more liked, more influential, and engender more confidence when they express themselves in a manner congruent with their status (i.e., high status with powerful speech and low status with powerless speech). We further show that liking acts as a mediator between congruence and influence.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

For god (or) country: The hydraulic relation between government instability and belief in religious sources of control

Author
Kay, Aaron C., S. Shepherd, C. Blatz, S. Chua, and Adam Galinsky

It has been recently proposed that people can flexibly rely on sources of control that are both internal and external to the self to satisfy the need to believe that their world is under control (i.e., that events do not unfold randomly or haphazardly). Consistent with this, past research demonstrates that, when personal control is threatened, people defend external systems of control, such as God and government.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

Forward Buying by Retailers

Author
Desai, Preyas and Devavrat Purohit

Conventional wisdom in marketing holds that retailer forward buying (1) is a consequence of manufacturer trade promotions and (2) stockpiling units helps the retailer but hurts the manufacturer. This paper provides a deeper understanding of forward buying by analyzing it within the context of manufacturer trade promotions, competition and demand uncertainty. We find that regardless of whether the manufacturer offers a trade promotion or not, allowing the retailer to forward buy and hold inventory for the future can, under certain conditions, be beneficial for both parties.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

From what might have been to what must have been: Counterfactual thinking creates meaning

Author
Kray, L., L. George, K. Liljenquist, Adam Galinsky, P. Tetlock, and Neal Roese

Four experiments explored whether 2 uniquely human characteristics — counterfactual thinking (imagining alternatives to the past) and the fundamental drive to create meaning in life — are causally related. Rather than implying a random quality to life, the authors hypothesized and found that counterfactual thinking heightens the meaningfulness of key life experiences. Reflecting on alternative pathways to pivotal turning points even produced greater meaning than directly reflecting on the meaning of the event itself.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of International Economics

Future Rent-Seeking and Current Public Savings

Author
Caballero, Ricardo and Pierre Yared

The conventional wisdom is that politicians' rent-seeking motives increase public debt and deficits. This is because myopic politicians face political risk and prefer to extract political rents as early as possible. In this paper we study the determination of government debt and deficits in a dynamic political economy model. We show that this conventional wisdom relies on economic volatility being low relative to political uncertainty.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
California Management Review

Global Customer Management Programs: How to Make Them Really Work

Author
Capon, Noel

Identifying the right business model for addressing global customers and formalizing that model into a global customer management program is a key task for any firm with global aspirations. The key success factor is embedding the program firmly within the firm's corporate strategy. Simply leveraging domestic or regional account management into such a program will not deliver the desired results. Based on extensive research with a global company database, this article presents a framework for successfully introducing a global customer management program.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Foundations and Trends in Finance

Hedge Fund Activism: A Review

Author
Brav, Alon, Wei Jiang, and Hyunseob Kim

This article reviews shareholder activism by hedge funds. We first describe the nature and characteristics of hedge fund activism, including the objectives, tactics, and choices of target companies. We then analyze possible value creation brought about by activist hedge funds, both for shareholders in the target companies and for investors in the hedge funds. The evidence generally supports the view that hedge fund activism creates value for shareholders by effectively influencing the governance, capital structure decisions, and operating performance of target firms.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
strategy+business

How Aha! Really Happens

Author
Duggan, William
The theory of intelligent memory suggests that companies relying on conventional creativity tools are getting shortchanged.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
International Journal of Business Anthropology

How Anthropologists Can Succeed in Business: Mediating Multiple Worlds of Inquiry

Author
Morais, Robert and Timothy de Waal Malefyt

Marketing research and advertising strategic planning offer viable and financially attractive career options for anthropologists because many businesses seek deep understandings of consumer lifestyles and brand use. As professionally trained anthropologists operating in the corporate world, we see a bright future for anthropologists, but we believe that there are merits in broadening the typical anthropological approach to incorporate additional theory and methods from other social and behavioral sciences, particularly psychology.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
MIT Sloan Management Review

How to Save Your Brand in the Face of Crisis

Author
Johar, Gita, Matthias Birk, and Sabine Einwiller

When bad things happen, companies need the right strategy for talking their way out of a mess and avoiding a calamitous pummeling of their corporate image. Choosing the best response can spell the difference between a brand's survival — even enhancement — and its irreversible tarnishing.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Research in the Sociology of Organizations

Identity sequences and the early adoption pattern of a jazz canon, 1920&ndash;1929

Author
Kahl, Steven, Young-Kyu Kim, and Damon Phillips
We explore how the long-run success of cultural products is affected by the identities of the product's originators and early adopters. Using U.S. jazz recordings from 1920–1929, we found that songs were more likely to be later covered from 1944 to 2004 if they followed a pattern of having black originators and white early adopters. Moreover, we provide evidence that this pattern is independent of a song's commercial success, resources available to a song's originators, and group level indicators such as size and experience.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Self and Identity

Implicit Measures Reveal Evidence of Personal Discrimination

Author
Krieger, Nancy and M. R. Banaji
A well-known result, the person-group discrimination discrepancy (PGDD), shows that members of disadvantaged groups believe that other members of their social groups are discriminated against, but that they themselves are not. In this paper, we test whether this explicit self-protective strategy is also obtained on indirect measures of personal discrimination.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Quarterly Journal of Economics

Imported Intermediate Inputs and Domestic Product Growth: Evidence from India

Author
Goldberg, Penny, Amit Khandelwal, Nina Pavcnik, and Petia Topalova

New goods play a central role in many trade and growth models. We use detailed trade and firm-level data from India to investigate the relationship between declines in trade costs, imports of intermediate inputs and domestic firm product scope. We estimate substantial gains from trade through access to new imported inputs. Moreover, we find that lower input tariffs account on average for 31 percent of the new products introduced by domestic firms.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Increasing or decreasing interest in activities: The role of regulatory fit

Author
Higgins, E. Tory, Joseph Cesario, Nao Hagiwara, Scott Spiegel, and Thane Pittman

What makes people’s interest in doing an activity increase or decrease? Regulatory fit theory (E. T. Higgins, 2000) provides a new perspective on this classic issue by emphasizing the relation between people’s activity orientation, such as thinking of an activity as fun, and the manner of activity engagement that the surrounding situation supports.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Monetary Economics

Inflation and the Stock Market: Understanding the &#39;Fed Model&#39;

Author
Bekaert, Geert and Eric Engstrom

The so-called Fed model postulates that the dividend or earnings yield on stocks equals the yield on nominal Treasury bonds, or at least that they should be highly correlated. Indeed, there is a strikingly high time series correlation between the yield on nominal bonds and the dividend yield on equities. This positive correlation can be traced to the fact that both bond and equity yields comove strongly and positively with expected inflation.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Research in the Sociology of Work

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

Author
Ingram, Paul, Jiao Luo, and Joseph Eshun

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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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Operations Research

Inventory Management With an Exogenous Supply Process

Author
Yang, Nan
We study single- and multi-stage inventory systems with stochastic leadtimes. We study a class of stochastic leadtime processes, which we refer to as exogenous leadtimes. This class of leadtime processes includes as special cases all leadtime models from existing literature (such as Kaplan's leadtimes with no order crossing, see Kaplan [1970], or i.i.d. leadtimes with order crossing, among others) but is a substantially broader class. For a system with an exogenous leadtime process, we provide a method to determine base stock levels and to compute the cost of a given base stock policy.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Operations Research

Investment and market structure in industries with congestion

Author
Johari, Ramesh and Benjamin Van Roy
We analyze investment incentives and market structure under oligopoly competition in industries with congestion effects. Our results are particularly focused on models inspired by modern technology-based services, such as telecommunications and computing services. We consider situations where firms compete by simultaneously choosing prices and investments; increasing investment reduces the congestion disutility experienced by consumers.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Rivista Bancaria

Is the Price of Money Managers Too Low?

Author
Huberman, Gur

Although established money managers operate in an environment which seems competitive, they also seem to be very profitable. The present value of the expected future profits from managing a collection of funds is equal to the value of the assets under management multiplied by the profit margin, assuming that the managed funds will remain in business forever, and that there will be zero asset flow into and out of the funds, zero excess returns net of trading costs, a fixed management fee proportional to the assets under management and a fixed profit margin for the management company.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Public Economics

Job search and unemployment insurance: New evidence from time use data

Author
Krueger, Alan

This paper provides new evidence on job search intensity of the unemployed in the U.S., modeling job search intensity as time allocated to job search activities. The major findings are: 1) the average U.S.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Nature Neuroscience

Lateral prefrontal cortex and self-control in intertemporal choice

Author
Figner, Bernd, Daria Knoch, Eric Johnson, Amy R. Krosch, Sarah H. Lisanby, Ernst Fehr, and Elke Weber
Disruption of function of left, but not right, lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) with low-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) increased choices of immediate rewards over larger delayed rewards. rTMS did not change choices involving only delayed rewards or valuation judgments of immediate and delayed rewards, providing causal evidence for a neural lateral-prefrontal cortex-based self-control mechanism in intertemporal choice.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Business Ethics Quarterly

Leaving a legacy: Intergenerational allocations of benefits and burdens

Author
Wade-Benzoni, K., H. Sondak, and Adam Galinsky

In six experiments, we investigated the role of resource valence in intergenerational attitudes and allocations. We found that, compared to benefits, allocating burdens intergenerationally increased concern with one's legacy, heightened ethical concerns, intensified moral emotions (e.g., guilt, shame), and led to feelings of greater responsibility for and affinity with future generations. We argue that, because of greater concern with legacies and the associated moral implications of one's decisions, allocating burdens leads to greater intergenerational generosity as compared to benefits.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Urban Economics

Local Response to Fiscal Incentives in Heterogeneous Communities

Author
Rockoff, Jonah

I examine the impact of a property tax relief program in New York State that lowered the marginal cost of school expenditure to homeowners. I find that a typical school district, which received 20% of its revenue through the program in the school year 2001–2002, raised expenditure by 4.1% and local property taxes by 6.8% in response to the program. I then examine how the preferences of various groups of local taxpayers affect educational spending by identifying systematic variation across districts in the response to fiscal incentives.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Financial Management

Locked Up by a Lockup: Valuing Liquidity as a Real Option

Author
Bollen, Nicolas P. B.

Hedge funds often impose lockups and notice periods to limit the ability of investors to withdraw capital. We model the investor's decision to withdraw capital as a real option and treat lockups and notice periods as exercise restrictions. Our methodology incorporates time-varying probabilities of hedge fund failure and optimal early exercise. We estimate a two-year lockup with a three-month notice period costs approximately 1% of the initial investment for an investor with constant relative risk aversion utility and risk aversion of three.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
The Review of Finanical Studies

Long-Run Risk through Consumption Smoothing

Author
Kaltenbrunner, Georg
We examine how long-run consumption risk arises endogenously in a standard production economy model where the representative agent has Epstein-Zin preferences. Even when technology growth is i.i.d., optimal consumption smoothing induces highly persistent time-variation in expected consumption growth (long-run risk). This increases the price of risk when investors prefer early resolution of uncertainty, and the model can then account for the low volatility of consumption growth and the high price of risk with a low coefficient of relative risk aversion.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

Male susceptibility to attentional capture by power cues

Author
Mason, Malia, Shu Zhang, and Rebecca Dyer

The present investigation explores the possibility that power has increased salience among males but not females. Evidence indicates that stimuli that are self-relevant or related to chronic goals are more likely to capture attention than neutral information. Across three studies we explore the possibility that the premium males place on power influences how they attend to their environment.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
International Journal of Research in Marketing

Marketing Competition in the 21st Century

Author
Heil, Oliver, Donald Lehmann, and Stefan Stremersch

The new challenges that the 21st century brings to the field of marketing competition inspired the International Journal of Research in Marketing (IJRM) to sponsor a special section on the topic. This special section was preceded by a conference at the University of Mainz, co-sponsored by IJRM, MSI, SMU (Singapore) and the University of Mainz.

Five marked evolutions around the turn of the century present new challenges in marketing competition, which may lead to particularly fruitful streams of research.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
International Journal of Cross Cultural Management

Matching versus mismatching cultural norms in performance appraisal: Effects of the cultural setting and bicultural identity integration

Author
Mok, Aurelia, Chi-Ying Cheng, and Michael Morris

The present study examined how biculturals (Asian-Americans) adjust to differing cultural settings in performance appraisal. Biculturals vary in the degree to which their two cultural identities are compatible or oppositional — Bicultural Identity Integration (BII). The authors found that individual differences in BII interacted with the manipulation of the cultural setting (American or Asian) in determining whether employee outcomes were evaluated as matching or mismatching cultural norms.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
International Journal of Mentoring & Tutoring

Mentoring nontraditional undergraduate students: A case study in higher education

A brief narrative description of the journal article, document, or resource. The purpose of this study was to investigate an institution that has mandated mentoring as part of its mission and to examine students' perceptions of the mentoring received. The author selected Empire State College (ESC), a college that is part of the State of New York University system in the United States. Empire State is an institution with a 36-year history of mentoring nontraditional students.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Review of Economics and Statistics

Multi-product Firms and Product Turnover in the Developing World: Evidence from India

Author
Goldberg, Penny, Amit Khandelwal, Nina Pavcnik, and Petia Topalova

Recent theoretical work predicts that an important margin of adjustment to deregulation or trade reforms is the reallocation of output within firms through changes in their product mix. Empirical work has accordingly shifted its focus towards multi-product firms and their product mix decisions. Existing studies have however focused exclusively on the U.S.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Economics Letters

On-the-job search and wage dispersion: New evidence from time use data

This paper provides new evidence on time devoted to job search by the employed in the U.S. I find that search effort decreases with the current wage, with an elasticity between −0.7 and −1.3.

The PDF above is a preprint version of the article. The final version may be found at < http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.econlet.2010.08.034 >.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
<a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11142-009-9109-4">Quantitative Marketing and Economics</a>

Ownership Coordination in a Channel: Incentives, Returns, and Negotiations

Author
Biyalogorsky, Eyal
In many industries firms have to make quantity decisions before knowing the exact state of demand. In such cases, channel members have to decide which firm will own the units until demand uncertainty is resolved. The decision about who should retain ownership depends on the balance of benefit and risk to each member. Ownership, after all, is costly. Whichever member owns the units accepts the risk of loss if more units are produced than can be sold. But ownership also grants firms the flexibility to respond to demand once it becomes known by adjusting price.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Statistical Science

Particle Learning and Smoothing

Author
Johannes, Michael, Carlos Carvalho, Hedibert Lopes, and Nicholas Polson

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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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

Payoff Complementarities and Financial Fragility: Evidence from Mutual Fund Outflows

Author
Chen, Qi, Itay Goldstein, and Wei Jiang

The paper provides empirical evidence that strategic complementarities among investors generate fragility in financial markets. Analyzing mutual fund data, we find that, consistent with a theoretical model, funds with illiquid assets (where complementarities are stronger) exhibit stronger sensitivity of outflows to bad past performance than funds with liquid assets. We also find that this pattern disappears in funds where the shareholder base is composed mostly of large investors.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

Perception through a perspective-taking lens: Differential effects on judgment and behavior

Author
Ku, G., C.S. Wang, and Adam Galinsky

In contrast to the view that social perception has symmetric effects on judgments and behavior, the current research explored whether perspective-taking leads stereotypes to differentially affect judgments and behavior. Across three studies, perspective-takers consistently used stereotypes more in their own behavior while simultaneously using them less in their judgments of others. After writing about an African-American, perspective-taking tendencies were positively correlated with aggressive behavior but negatively correlated with judging others as aggressive.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Perspectives on Psychological Science

Perspectives on the Ecology of Decision Modes: Reply to Comments

Author
Bennis, Will M. and Douglas L. Medin
We welcome and appreciate the insights and perspectives provided by Schwartz (2010, this issue), Tetlock and Mitchell (2010, this issue), and Bazerman and Greene (2010, this issue). Our thinking has benefited considerably from their responses, and we appreciate the opportunity to continue the discussion. In our reply, we address issues concerning the scope of moral rules and of cost-benefit analysis (CBA), including their relation to other decision modes.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Capitalism and Society

Pharmaceutical Price Discrimination and Social Welfare

Author
Lichtenberg, Frank

Price discrimination is an extremely common type of pricing strategy engaged in by virtually every business with some discretionary pricing power. The issue of whether price discrimination reduces or increases social welfare has been considered by economists since at least 1920. At that time, it was demonstrated that, under certain (restrictive) conditions, price discrimination will reduce social welfare.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Psychological Science

Power increases hypocrisy: Moralizing in reasoning, immorality in behavior

Author
Lammers, Joris, D. Stapel, and Adam Galinsky

Five studies explored whether power increases moral hypocrisy, a situation characterized by imposing strict moral standards on others but practicing less strict moral behavior oneself. In Experiment 1, compared to the powerless, the powerful condemned other people's cheating, while cheating more themselves. In Experiments 2–4, the powerful were more strict in judging others' moral transgressions but more lenient in judging their own transgressions.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Psychological Science

Power Posing: Brief Nonverbal Displays Cause Changes in Neuroendocrine Levels and Risk Tolerance

Author
Cuddy, Amy and Andy J. Yap
Humans and other animals express power through open, expansive postures, and they express powerlessness through closed, contractive postures. But can these postures actually cause power?
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Operations Research

Preface to the Special Issue on Computational Economics

Author
van Ryzin, Garrett and Kenneth Judd

Economics is the study of how scarce resources are allocated. Operations research studies how to accomplish goals in the least costly manner. These fields have much to offer each other in terms of challenging problems that need to be solved and the techniques to solve them. This was the case after World War II, partly because the individuals who went on to be the leading scholars in economics and operations research worked together during WWII. In fact, the two fields share many early luminaries, including Arrow, Dantzig, Holt, Kantorovich, Koopmans, Modigliani, Scarf, and von Neumann.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

Preferred Risk Habitat of Individual Investors

Author
Dorn, Daniel and Gur Huberman

The preferred risk habitat hypothesis, introduced here, is that individual investors select stocks whose volatilities are commensurate with their risk aversion. The data, 1995-2000 holdings of over 20,000 clients at a large German broker, are consistent with the predictions of the hypothesis: the portfolios contain highly similar stocks in terms of volatility, when stocks are sold they are replaced by stocks of similar volatilities, and the more risk averse customers indeed hold and trade into less volatile stocks.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
American Economic Journal

Present-Biased Preferences and Credit Card Borrowing

Author
Meier, Stephan and Charles Sprenger
Some individuals borrow extensively on their credit cards. This paper tests whether present-biased time preferences correlate with credit card borrowing. In a field study, we elicit individual time preferences with incentivized choice experiments, and match resulting time preference measures to individual credit reports and annual tax returns. The results indicate that present-biased individuals are more likely to have credit card debt, and to have significantly higher amounts of credit card debt, controlling for disposable income, other socio-demographics, and credit constraints.
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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

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

Author
Ames, Daniel, Emily Bianchi, and Joe Magee

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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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
The Cato Journal

Reassessing the Fed's Regulatory Role

Author
Calomiris, Charles

As we contemplate the raft of regulatory reforms currently being proposed, it is important not only to consider the content of regulation, but also its structure. In particular, it is important to ask how the role of the Fed as a regulator should change, and how the targets and the tools of monetary and regulatory policy should adapt to new regulatory mandates. For example, some reform proposals envision a dramatic expansion of Fed regulatory authority, while others do not, and some proposals envision the Fed's using monetary policy to prick asset bubbles, while others do not.

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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Econometrica

Recursive equilibrium in stochastic overlapping-generations economies

Author
Siconolfi, Paolo

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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Type
Journal Article
Date
2010
Journal
Telecommunications Policy

Regulation 3.0 for Telecom 3.0

Author
Noam, Eli

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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