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Leadership & Organizational Behavior

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Leadership & Organizational Behavior Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Latest on Leadership & Organizational Behavior

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Leadership Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Leadership & Organizational Behavior

Negational Categorization and Intergroup Behavior

Authors
C.B. Zhong, G.J. Leonardelli, and Adam Galinsky
Date
June 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

Individuals define themselves, at times, as who they are (e.g., a psychologist) and, at other times, as who they are not (e.g., not an economist). Drawing on social identity, optimal distinctiveness, and balance theories, four studies examined the nature of negational identity relative to affirmational identity. One study explored the conditions that increase negational identification and found that activating the need for distinctiveness increased the accessibility of negational identities.

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The effect of past performance on expected control and risk attitudes in integrative negotiations

Authors
L. Kray and Adam Galinsky
Date
May 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Negotiation and Conflict Management Research

Three experiments examine the relationship between past performance and strategies and risk attitudes in integrative negotiations. We hypothesized that past performance would affect negotiators' willingness to embrace two types of risk: strategic (i.e., information sharing in the present) versus contractual (i.e., uncertainty about the future). Consistent with the hypothesis that past success promotes strategic risk taking, dyads with a history of success were more integrative than dyads with a history of failure in Experiment 1.

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Multicultural experience enhances creativity: The when and how

Authors
Angela Ka-yee Leung, W. Maddux, Adam Galinsky, and Chi-Yue Chiu
Date
April 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Psychologist

Many practices aimed at cultivating multicultural competence in educational and organizational settings (e.g., exchange programs, diversity education in college, diversity management at work) assume that multicultural experience fosters creativity. In line with this assumption, the research reported in this article is the first to empirically demonstrate that exposure to multiple cultures in and of itself can enhance creativity.

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When Does Coordination Require Centralization?

Authors
Ricardo Alonso, Wouter Dessein, and Niko Matouschek
Date
March 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Economic Review

This paper compares centralized and decentralized coordination when managers are privately informed and communicate strategically. We consider a multi-divisional organization in which decisions must be adapted to local conditions but also coordinated with each other. Information about local conditions is dispersed and held by self-interested division managers who communicate via cheap talk. The only available formal mechanism is the allocation of decision rights. We show that a higher need for coordination improves horizontal communication but worsens vertical communication.

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Agency Conflicts, Investment, and Asset Pricing

Authors
Neng Wang and Rui Albuquerque
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

The separation of ownership and control allows controlling shareholders to pursue private benefits. We develop an analytically tractable dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model to study asset pricing and welfare implications of imperfect investor protection. Consistent with empirical evidence, the model predicts that countries with weaker investor protection have more incentives to overinvest, lower Tobin's q, higher return volatility, larger risk premia, and higher interest rate.

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Correlated Trading and Returns

Authors
Gur Huberman, Daniel Dorn, and Paul Sengmueller
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

A German broker's clients place similar speculative trades and therefore tend to be on the same side of the market in a given stock during a given day, week, month, and quarter. Aggregate liquidity effects, short sale constraints, the systematic execution of limit orders (coordinated through price movements) or the correlated trading of other investors who pick off retail limit orders, do not fully explain why retail investors trade similarly. Correlated market orders lead returns, presumably due to persistent speculative price pressure.

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Punishing Hubris: The Perils of Status Self-Enhancement in Teams and Organizations

Authors
Cameron Anderson, Daniel Ames, and Samuel Gosling
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

Individuals engage in status self-enhancement when they form an overly positive perception of their status in a group. We argue that status self-enhancement incurs social costs and, therefore, most individuals perceive their status accurately. In contrast, theories of positive illusions suggest status self-enhancement is beneficial for the individual and that most individuals overestimate their status. We found supportive evidence for our hypotheses in a social relations analysis of laboratory groups, an experiment that manipulated status self-enhancement, and a study of real-world groups.

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Optimization-Based and Machine-Learning Methods for Conjoint Analysis: Estimation and Question Design

Authors
Olivier Toubia
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Chapter
Book
Conjoint Measurement: Methods and Applications, 4th edition
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In search of the right touch: Interpersonal assertiveness in organizational life

Authors
Daniel Ames
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Current Directions in Psychological Science

Recent evidence suggests that many organizational members and leaders are seen as under- or over-assertive by colleagues, suggesting that having the "right touch" with interpersonal assertiveness is a meaningful and widespread challenge. In this article, I review emerging work on the curvilinear relation between assertiveness and effectiveness, including evidence from both qualitative descriptions of coworkers and ratings of colleagues and leaders.

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