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  • Search: isPartOf:"Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes"
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Year of publication
Subject
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Experiment 278 Decision 134 Entscheidung 134 Consumer behaviour 109 Konsumentenverhalten 109 Theorie 94 Theory 94 Ethics 93 Personality psychology 89 Persönlichkeitspsychologie 89 Organizational behaviour 88 Verhalten in Organisationen 88 Arbeitsgruppe 86 Arbeitsverhalten 86 Team 86 Work behaviour 86 Ethik 84 Emotion 81 Motivation 68 Cognition 67 Confidence 67 Kognition 67 Social behaviour 64 Soziales Verhalten 64 Vertrauen 62 Business ethics 60 Unternehmensethik 60 Social relations 59 Soziale Beziehungen 59 Behavioral economics 58 Verhaltensökonomik 58 Führungsstil 54 Leadership style 54 Creativity 53 Decision theory 50 Entscheidungstheorie 50 Führungskräfte 50 Job performance 50 Managers 50 Leistungsmotivation 49
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Online availability
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Undetermined 2,141 Free 10
Type of publication
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Article 2,753 Book / Working Paper 14
Type of publication (narrower categories)
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Article in journal 874 Aufsatz in Zeitschrift 874 Collection of articles of several authors 6 Sammelwerk 6 Aufsatzsammlung 3 Case study 1 Fallstudie 1
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Language
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Undetermined 1,849 English 918
Author
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Gino, Francesca 40 Schweitzer, Maurice E. 30 Neale, Margaret A. 28 Bazerman, Max H. 26 Moore, Don A. 23 Northcraft, Gregory B. 23 Galinsky, Adam D. 22 Budescu, David V. 20 Hollenbeck, John R. 19 Mayer, David M. 17 Yates, J. Frank 17 Brockner, Joel 16 Kouchaki, Maryam 16 Rapoport, Amnon 16 Zeelenberg, Marcel 16 Ariely, Dan 15 Conlon, Donald E. 15 Sniezek, Janet A. 15 Thau, Stefan 15 Thompson, Leigh 15 Birnbaum, Michael H. 14 Dijk, Eric van 14 Hsee, Christopher K. 14 Ilies, Remus 14 Milkman, Katherine L. 14 Argote, Linda 13 Baron, Jonathan 13 Chen, Xiao-Ping 13 Grant, Adam M. 13 Ilgen, Daniel R. 13 Judge, Timothy A. 13 Loewenstein, George 13 Wiltermuth, Scott S. 13 Aquino, Karl 12 Connolly, Terry 12 Keren, Gideon 12 Knippenberg, Daan van 12 Kray, Laura J. 12 Ritov, Ilana 12 Arkes, Hal R. 11
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Institution
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Gender Audits Forecasting Collaboration 1
Published in...
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Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 1,665 Organizational behavior and human decision processes : a journal of fundamental research and theory in applied psychology 1,073 Organizational behavior and human decision processes 26 Leonhardt, J. M. & Pechmann, C. (2021). Is This Product Easy to Control? Liabilities of Using Difficult-To-Pronounce Product Names. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 165, 90-102 1 Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 131, 110-120, 2015 1 in Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 1
Source
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RePEc 1,665 ECONIS (ZBW) 917 OLC EcoSci 183 USB Cologne (EcoSocSci) 2
Showing 571 - 580 of 2,767
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Who’s bringing the donuts: The role of affective patterns in group decision making
Emich, Kyle J. - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 124 (2014) 2, pp. 122-132
Two studies examined how intragroup affective patterns influence groups’ pervasive tendency to ignore the unique expertise of their members. Using a hidden profile task, Study 1 provided evidence that groups with at least one member experiencing positive affect shared more unique information...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010786410
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The bias in the bias: Comparative optimism as a function of event social undesirability
Sweldens, Steven; Puntoni, Stefano; Paolacci, Gabriele; … - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 124 (2014) 2, pp. 229-244
We present a new event-level predictor of comparative optimism: comparative optimism is larger for more socially undesirable events. A meta-analysis shows that event social undesirability predicts comparative optimism effect sizes reported in the literature, over and above the effects of other...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010786411
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Mirror, mirror on the wall, who’s the fairest of them all? Thinking that one is attractive increases the tendency to support inequality
Belmi, Peter; Neale, Margaret - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 124 (2014) 2, pp. 133-149
Five studies tested the hypothesis that self-perceived attractiveness shapes people’s perceptions of their social class (subjective SES), which, in turn, shape how people respond to inequality and social hierarchies. Study 1 found that self-perceived attractiveness was associated with support...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010786412
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Ethical ends: Effect of abstract mindsets in ethical decisions for the greater social good
Rixom, Jessica; Mishra, Himanshu - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 124 (2014) 2, pp. 110-121
We explore the impact of construal level on decisions involving conflicts between multiple ethical principles. Whereas abstract mindsets are associated with a focus on ethical issues and superordinate concerns, concrete mindsets are associated with financial self-interest. With abstract...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010786413
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Standing out as a signal to selfishness: Culture and devaluation of non-normative characteristics
Kinias, Zoe; Kim, Heejung S.; Hafenbrack, Andrew C.; … - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 124 (2014) 2, pp. 190-203
This article proposes and tests a theoretical model articulating when and why differences in devaluation and avoidance of individuals with non-normative characteristics emerge between East Asian and Western cultural contexts. Four main studies examined this theoretical model. In a pilot study,...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010786414
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Empowering leadership, uncertainty avoidance, trust, and employee creativity: Interaction effects and a mediating mechanism
Zhang, Xiaomeng; Zhou, Jing - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 124 (2014) 2, pp. 150-164
Taking an interactional approach, we hypothesized that (a) there is an interaction between empowering leadership, uncertainty avoidance, and trust that affects creativity, such that empowering leadership has the strongest positive relationship with creativity when the employees have high levels...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010786415
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The effect of priming learning vs. performance goals on a complex task
Chen, Xiao; Latham, Gary P. - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 125 (2014) 2, pp. 88-97
This research examined the effect of priming a learning goal, a performance goal, and both a learning and a performance goal on a task requiring the acquisition of knowledge. A photograph of Rodin’s “The Thinker” primed a learning goal, and a photograph of a racer primed a performance...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011076514
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Are affect and perceived stress detrimental or beneficial to job seekers? The role of learning goal orientation in job search self-regulation
Motta Veiga, Serge P. da; Turban, Daniel B. - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 125 (2014) 2, pp. 193-203
Although job seekers have variability in affect and perceived stress during their job search, little is known about whether and how such within-person variability is related to job search intensity. We integrated learning goal orientation (LGO) with control theory to theorize that affect and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011076515
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Don’t hate me because I’m beautiful: Acknowledging appearance mitigates the “beauty is beastly” effect
Johnson, Stefanie K.; Sitzmann, Traci; Nguyen, Anh Thuy - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 125 (2014) 2, pp. 184-192
Physically attractive women are discriminated against when applying for masculine sex-typed jobs, a phenomenon known as the beauty is beastly effect. We conducted three studies to establish an intervention for mitigating the beauty is beastly effect and to determine mediators and moderators of...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011076516
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Protect thyself: How affective self-protection increases self-interested, unethical behavior
Winterich, Karen Page; Mittal, Vikas; Morales, Andrea C. - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 125 (2014) 2, pp. 151-161
In this research, we draw on the characteristics of disgust—an affective state that prompts a self-protection response—to demonstrate that experiencing disgust can also increase self-interested, unethical behaviors such as cheating. This series of studies contributes to the literature...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011076517
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