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Entrepreneurship & Innovation

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

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Entrepreneurship & Innovation Faculty

Entrepreneurship & Innovation Research

The contribution of pharmaceutical innovation to longevity growth in Germany and France, 2001–2007

Authors
Frank Lichtenberg
Date
March 1, 2012
Format
Journal Article
Journal
PharmacoEconomics

I investigate the contribution of pharmaceutical innovation to recent longevity growth in Germany and France. First, I examine the effect of the vintage of prescription drugs (and other variables) on the life expectancy and age-adjusted mortality rates of residents of Germany, using longitudinal, annual, state-level data during the period 2001–2007. The estimates imply that about one-third of the 1.4-year increase in German life expectancy during the period 2001–2007 was due to the replacement of older drugs by newer drugs.

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Exhausting or exhilarating? Conflict as threat to interests, relationships and identities

Authors
N. Halevy, E. Chou, and Adam Galinsky
Date
March 1, 2012
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

Some conflicts are experienced as depleting and exhausting whereas others are experienced as stimulating and invigorating. We explored the possibility that the focus of perceived threat in conflict determines whether it produces taxing stress or vitalizing arousal. Studies 1 and 2 established that attending to threats to interests, relationships, and identities during interpersonal conflict differentially relates to motivational goals, empathy and perspective-taking, femininity, and a collectivistic self-construal.

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The communication orientation model: Explaining the diverse effects of sight, sound, and synchronicity on negotiation and group decision-making outcomes

Authors
Roderick I. Swaab, Adam Galinsky, V.H. Medvec, and D. Diermeier
Date
February 1, 2012
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Personality and Social Psychology Review

Two quantitative meta-analyses examined how the presence of visual channels, vocal channels, and synchronicity influences the quality of outcomes in negotiations and group decision making. A qualitative review of the literature found that the effects of communication channels vary widely and that existing theories do not sufficiently account for these contradictory findings.

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A Unified Model of Entrepreneurship Dynamics

Authors
Chong Wang, Neng Wang, and Jinqiang Yang
Date
January 1, 2012
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

We develop an incomplete-markets q-theoretic model to study entrepreneurship dynamics. Precautionary motive, borrowing constraints, and capital illiquidity lead to underinvestment, conservative debt use, under-consumption, and less risky portfolio allocation. The endogenous liquid wealth-illiquid capital ratio w measures time-varying financial constraint. The option to accumulate wealth before entry is critical for entrepreneurship. Flexible exit option is important for risk management purposes.

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Sociometric status and subjective well-being

Authors
Cameron Anderson, M. Kraus, Adam Galinsky, and D. Keltner
Date
January 1, 2012
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Psychological Science
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Super Size Me: Product Size as a Signal of Status

Authors
David Dubois, Derek D. Rucker, and Adam Galinsky
Date
January 1, 2012
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research
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The destructive nature of power without status

Authors
N. Fast, N. Halevy, and Adam Galinsky
Date
January 1, 2012
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

The current research explores how roles that possess power but lack status influence behavior toward others. Past research has primarily examined the isolated effects of having either power or status, but we propose that power and status interact to affect interpersonal behavior. Based on the notions that a) low-status is threatening and aversive and b) power frees people to act on their internal states and feelings, we hypothesized that power without status fosters demeaning behaviors toward others.

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Power and overconfident decision making

Authors
N. Fast, N. Sivanathan, N. Mayer, and Adam Galinsky
Date
January 1, 2012
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes

Five experiments demonstrate that experiencing power leads to overconfident decision-making. Using multiple instantiations of power, including an episodic recall task (Experiments 1–3), a measure of work-related power (Experiment 4), and assignment to high- and low-power roles (Experiment 5), power produced overconfident decisions that generated monetary losses for the powerful. The current findings, through both mediation and moderation, also highlight the central role that the sense of power plays in producing these decision-making tendencies.

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Not so fluid and not so meaningful: Toward an appreciation of content-specific compensation

Authors
Adam Galinsky, J. Whitson, L. Huang, and Derek D. Rucker
Date
January 1, 2012
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Psychological Inquiry

Travis Proulx and Michael Inzlicht offer an intriguing and ambitious model that seeks to parsimoniously capture the full range of meaning threats and the many psychological mechanisms that people use to cope with those threats. In this commentary, we articulate both our agreements and our disagreements with their meaning maintenance model (MMM). In general, we find the model both compelling and intriguing, and we find promise in several of its core assertions. However, we believe the current model, like any incipient model, has yet to incorporate some critical core constructs.

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