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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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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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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 691 - 700 of 2,767
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The role of epistemic motivation in individuals’ response to decision complexity
Amit, Adi; Sagiv, Lilach - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 121 (2013) 1, pp. 104-117
Integrating findings on the effects of more alternatives with findings on the effects of more attributes, we offer a motivational decision-making model, suggesting that epistemic motivation moderates individuals’ responses to complex information. Study 1 empirically investigated the shared...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010636018
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Outcome interdependence shapes the effects of prevention focus on team processes and performance
Beersma, Bianca; Homan, Astrid C.; Kleef, Gerben A. Van; … - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 121 (2013) 2, pp. 194-203
Although the effects of regulatory focus on individual-level performance have often been studied, relatively little is yet known about team-level effects. Filling this void, we integrate the notion that promotion-focused individuals are concerned with progress and achievement, whereas...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010665658
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Why and when do motives matter? An integrative model of motives, role cognitions, and social support as predictors of OCB
Kim, You-Jin; Van Dyne, Linn; Kamdar, Dishan; Johnson, … - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 121 (2013) 2, pp. 231-245
We extend prior thinking about citizenship behavior by integrating employee motives, social support, and role cognitions as predictors of organizational citizenship behavior (OCB). Drawing on trait activation and situated self theories, we provide insights into why and when motives predict OCB...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010665659
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The detection and influence of problematic item content in ability tests: An examination of sensitivity review practices for personnel selection test development
Grand, James A.; Golubovich, Juliya; Ryan, Ann Marie; … - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 121 (2013) 2, pp. 158-173
In organizational and educational practices, sensitivity reviews are commonly advocated techniques for reducing test bias and enhancing fairness. In the present paper, results from two studies are reported which investigate how effective individuals are at detecting problematic test content and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010665660
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Cheap talk and credibility: The consequences of confidence and accuracy on advisor credibility and persuasiveness
Sah, Sunita; Moore, Don A.; MacCoun, Robert J. - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 121 (2013) 2, pp. 246-255
Is it possible to increase one’s influence simply by behaving more confidently? Prior research presents two competing hypotheses: (1) the confidence heuristic holds that more confidence increases credibility, and (2) the calibration hypothesis asserts that overconfidence will backfire when...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010665661
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Diversity mindsets and the performance of diverse teams
van Knippenberg, Daan; Ginkel, Wendy P. van; Homan, … - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 121 (2013) 2, pp. 183-193
Diversity can enhance as well as disrupt team performance. Diversity beliefs and climates may play an important moderating role in these effects, but it is unclear what form these should take to promote the positive effects of diversity. Addressing this question in an integration of research in...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010665662
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Workplace duties or opportunities? Challenge stressors, regulatory focus, and creativity
Sacramento, Claudia A.; Fay, Doris; West, Michael A. - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 121 (2013) 2, pp. 141-157
Previous research has produced contradictory findings about the impact of challenge stressors on individual and team creativity. Based on the challenge–hindrance stressors framework (LePine, Podsakoff, & LePine, 2005) and on regulatory focus theory (Higgins, 1997), we argue that the effect of...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010665663
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Methods for second order meta-analysis and illustrative applications
Schmidt, Frank L.; Oh, In-Sue - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 121 (2013) 2, pp. 204-218
This paper presents methods for second order meta-analysis along with several illustrative applications. A second order meta-analysis is a meta-analysis of a number of statistically independent and methodologically comparable first order meta-analyses examining ostensibly the same relationship...
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When waiting to choose increases patience
Dai, Xianchi; Fishbach, Ayelet - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 121 (2013) 2, pp. 256-266
We explore how waiting to choose influences patience. We propose that waiting to make an intertemporal choice increases the assumed value of the items for which people are waiting, leading them to become more patient. Five studies support this model. Study 1 finds that after waiting to choose,...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010665665
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The psychological costs of knowledge specialization in groups: Unique expertise leaves you out of the loop
Jones, Eric E.; Kelly, Janice R. - In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 121 (2013) 2, pp. 174-182
Knowledge specialization, such as that present in cross-functional teams, produces both positive and negative outcomes. Our research investigated how unique expertise can lead to feelings of ostracism in the form of being out of the loop. Compared to group members with shared expertise, members...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010665666
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