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Decision Making & Negotiations

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Decision Making & Negotiations Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Decision Making & Negotiations

Decision Making & Negotiations Research

Data and the Aggregate Economy

Authors
Cindy Chung and Laura Veldkamp
Date
June 1, 2024
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Economic Literature

Over the past decade, data has transformed everyday life. While it has changed the way people shop and businesses operate (Goldfarb and Tucker, 2019), it has only just begun to permeate economists thinking about the aggregate economy. In the early twentieth century, economists like Schultz (1943) analyzed agrarian economies and land-use issues. As agricultural productivity improved, production shifted more to manufacturing. Modern macroeconomics adapted with models featuring capital and labor, markets for goods, and equilibrium wages (Solow, 1956).

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The Language of (Non)replicable Social Science

Authors
Michal Herzenstein, Sanjana Rosario, Shin Oblander, and Oded Netzer
Date
April 19, 2024
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Psychological Science

Using publicly available data from 299 pre-registered replications from the social sciences, we find that the language used to describe a study can predict its replicability above and beyond a large set of controls related to the paper characteristics, study design and results, author information, and replication effort. To understand why, we analyze the textual differences between replicable and nonreplicable studies.

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Is Journalistic Truth Dead? Measuring How Informed Voters Are about Political News

Authors
Charles Angelucci and Andrea Prat
Date
April 1, 2024
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Economic Review

To investigate general patterns in news information in the United States, we combine a protocol for identifying major political news stories, 11 monthly surveys with 15,000 participants, and a model of news discernment. When confronted with a true and a fake news story, 47 percent of subjects confidently choose the true story, 3 percent confidently choose the fake story, and the remaining half are uncertain. Socioeconomic differences are associated with large variations in the probability of selecting the true news story.

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The New Psychology of Secrecy

Authors
Michael Slepian
Date
March 21, 2024
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Sage Journals

Nearly everyone keeps secrets, but only recently have we begun to learn about the secrets people keep in their everyday lives and the experiences people have with their secrets. Early experimental research into secrecy sought to create secrecy situations in the laboratory, but in trying to observe secrecy in real time, these studies conflated secrecy with the act of concealment. In contrast, a new psychology of secrecy recognizes that secrecy is far more than biting our tongues and dodging others’ questions.

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Work engagement and burnout in anticipation of physically returning to work: The interactive effect of imminence of return and self-affirmation

Authors
Joel Brockner and Marius van Dijke
Date
January 1, 2024
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, many employees have spent a considerable amount of time being forced to work from home (WFH). We draw on the Job Demands-Resources (JD-R) model and self-affirmation theory to study how the anticipation of returning to the physical workplace affects work engagement and burnout. We assumed that employees are conflicted about returning to work (RTW). Whereas they may look forward to RTW they also appreciate aspects of WFH which would have to be foregone.

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Automating the B2B Salesperson Pricing Decisions: A Human-Machine Hybrid Approach

Authors
Yael Karlinsky-Shichor and Oded Netzer
Date
January 1, 2024
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Marketing Science
We propose a human-machine hybrid approach to automating decision making in high human-interaction environments and apply it in the business-to-business (B2B) retail context.
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A Q Theory of Internal Capital Markets

Authors
Min Dai, Xavier Giroud, Wei Jiang, and Neng Wang
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Journal Article

We propose a tractable model of dynamic investment, spinoffs, financing, and risk management for a multi-division firm facing costly external finance. Our analysis formalizes

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Meaning of Manual Labor Impedes Consumer Adoption of Autonomous Products

Authors
Emanuel de Bellis, Gita Johar, and Nicola Poletti
Date
November 1, 2023
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing
Technologies are becoming increasingly autonomous, able to complete tasks on behalf of consumers without human intervention. For example, robot vacuums clean the floor while cooking machines implement recipes on their own. These autonomous products free consumers from daily chores that they used to perform manually. The current research suggests that some consumers derive meaning from completing such manual tasks, and that this meaning of manual labor acts as a barrier to the adoption of autonomous products.
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Dynamic Banking and the Value of Deposits

Authors
Patrick Bolton, Ye Li, Neng Wang, and Jinqiang Yang
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Journal Article

We propose a theory of banking in which banks cannot perfectly control deposit flows. Facing uninsurable loan and deposit shocks, banks dynamically manage lending, wholesale funding, deposits, and equity. Deposits create value by lowering funding costs. However, when the bank is undercapitalized and at risk of breaching leverage requirements, the marginal value of deposits can turn negative as deposit inflows, by raising leverage, increase the likelihood of costly equity issuance.

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