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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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Leadership Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Leadership & Organizational Behavior

BioPharm-Seltek teaching note: The dynamics of distribution

Authors
Adam Galinsky and J. Brett
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Working Paper
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Appraising the Unusual: Framing Effects and Moderators of Uniqueness-Seeking and Social Projection

Authors
Daniel Ames and Sheena Iyengar
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

In this paper, we examine people's appraisals of unusual objects and their intuitions about whether others will like those objects. Prior work suggests uniqueness motives (e.g., Need for Uniqueness) affect appraisals, but the effect of these motives on projection of appraisals to others is unclear. Contrary to some prior work, we argue that uniqueness motives do not govern projection of appraisals but rather that individual differences in perceived similarity to a target group do.

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The Economic Implications of Corporate Financial Reporting

Authors
John Graham, Campbell Harvey, and Shivaram Rajgopal
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting and Economics

We survey and interview more than 400 executives to determine the factors that drive reported earnings and disclosure decisions. We find that managers would rather take economic actions that could have negative long-term consequences than make within-GAAP accounting choices to manage earnings. A surprising 78% of our sample admits to sacrificing long-term value to smooth earnings. Managers also work to maintain predictability in earnings and financial disclosures.

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Dynamic trading policies with price impact

Authors
Hua He and Harry Mamaysky
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Economic Dynamics & Control

In this paper, we analyze the optimal policy for a risk averse agent who wants to sell a large block of shares of a risky security in the presence of price impact and transactions costs. Our framework reduces to the standard Merton portfolio problem in the absence of any market frictions. Optimal liquidation results in revenue distributions which are substantially different from those generated by a naive strategy. The main tradeoff involves choosing between revenue distributions which have high means versus those which have low variances.

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On the Use of Customized versus Standardized Performance Measures

Authors
A. Arya, Jonathan Glover, L. Ye, and B. Mittendorf
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Management Accounting Research

Despite the influx of measures which can be customized to the demands of each business unit (e.g., customer satisfaction surveys and quality indices), many firms have been dogged in their reliance on standardized measures (e.g., conventional financial metrics) in performance evaluation. In this paper, we consider one justification: though customized measures may more accurately target the goals of a particular unit, standardized measures may offer more meaningful opportunities for relative performance evaluation.

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Separating Facts from Forecasts in Financial Statements

Authors
Jonathan Glover, Y. Ijiri, C. Levine, and P. Liang
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Accounting Horizons

In the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board's Sep 2004 Standing Advisory Group Meeting, one of the sessions was devoted to verifiability concerns regarding fair values. At that meeting, some participants expressed the opinion that accounting estimates pose broader problems beyond computing fair values, and investors need to be educated about the role of estimates in financial statements. This paper suggests an extension to the existing accounting model to allow users to better understand the role of estimates/forecasts in financial statements.

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Inside the Mind-Reader's Toolkit: Projection and Stereotyping in Mental State Inference

Authors
Daniel Ames
Date
November 1, 2004
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Mental state inferences - judgments about what others think, want, and feel - are central to social life. Models of such "mind-reading" have considered main effects, including social projection and stereotyping, but have not specified the conditions that govern when these tools will be used. This paper develops such a model, claiming that when perceivers assume an initial general sense of similarity to a target, they engage in greater projection and less stereotyping. Three studies featuring manipulations of similarity supported this claim.

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Exploring the rabbit hole of possibilities by myself or with my group: The benefits and liabilities of activating counterfactual mind-sets for information sharing and group coordination

Authors
K. Liljenquist, Adam Galinsky, and L. Kray
Date
October 1, 2004
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Behavioral Decision Making

The current experiment explored the effect of activating a counterfactual mind-set on the discussion of unique information and group judgment accuracy. Evidence suggests that a counterfactual mind-set is characterized by a focused, analytic mental state and, when activated at the group level, improves group judgment accuracy in the murder mystery paradigm (a hidden profile task).

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The Psychological Pleasure and Pain of Choosing: When People Prefer Choosing at the Cost of Subsequent Well-Being

Authors
Simona Botti and Sheena Iyengar
Date
September 1, 2004
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

This empirical investigation tests the hypothesis that the benefits of personal choosing are restricted to choices made from among attractive alternatives. Findings from vignette and laboratory studies show that, contrary to people's self-predictions, choosers only proved more satisfied than non-choosers when selecting from among liked alternatives. When selecting from among disliked alternatives, the reverse is observed - that is, non-choosers proved more satisfied with the decision outcome than choosers.

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