At Columbia Business School, our faculty members are at the forefront of research in their respective fields, offering innovative ideas that directly impact business practice today. A glance at our publication on faculty research, CBS Insights, will give you a sense of the breadth and immediacy of the insight our professors provide.
Columbia Business School in conjunction with the Office of the Dean provides its faculty, PhD students, and other research staff with resources and cutting edge tools and technology to help push the boundaries of business research.
Specifically, our goal is to seamlessly help faculty set up and execute their research programs. This includes, but is not limited to:
- Highly skilled staff of full-time predoctoral fellows, summer research interns, and part-time research assistants
- Access to centralized funding from the Dean's office and external grants to support research activities
- Providing a state-of-the-art high-performance grid computing environment
- Acquisition of proprietary data sets and access to various databases
- Leading library which provides faculty with latest tools and techniques to enable digital scholarship
All these activities help to facilitate and streamline faculty research, and that of the doctoral students working with them.
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Journal of Monetary Economics
Persistence of Dollarization after Price Stabilization
Credit contracts in developing countries are often denominated in foreign currencies, even after many of these economies succeeded in controlling inflation. This paper proposes a new interpretation of this apparent puzzle based on the demand for insurance against real shocks: the fact that devaluations occur more frequently in adverse states of the world provides a motive for holding dollar assets. This approach implies a complementarity between the optimal monetary policy and the currency denomination of contracts.
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Journal of Financial Economics
Predictability and the Earnings-Returns Relation
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Sadka, Ronnie
This paper studies the effects of predictability on the earnings-returns relation for individual firms and for the aggregate. We demonstrate that prices better anticipate earnings growth at the aggregate level than at the firm level, which implies that random-walk models are inappropriate for gauging aggregate earnings expectations. Moreover, we show that the contemporaneous correlation of earnings growth and stock returns decreases with the ability to predict future earnings.
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Consumer Research
Tragic Choices: Autonomy and Emotional Responses to Medical Decisions
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We investigate how making highly consequential, highly undesirable decisions affects emotions and preference for autonomy. We examine individuals facing real or hypothetical decisions to discontinue their infants' life support who either choose personally or have physicians choose for them. Findings from a multidisciplinary approach consisting of a qualitative analysis of in-depth interviews and three laboratory studies reveal that perceived personal causality for making tragic decisions generates more negative feelings than having the same choices externally made.
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Consumer Research
Vicarious Goal Fulfillment: When the Mere Presence of a Healthy Option Leads to an Ironically Indulgent Decision
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Wilcox, Keith, Beth Vallen, Lauren Block, and Gavan Fitzsimons
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Management Science
Competing Retailers and Inventory: An Empirical Investigation of General Motors' Dealerships in Isolated U.S. Markets
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Olivares, Marcelo and Gérard P. Cachon
We study the following question: How does competition influence the inventory holdings of General Motors' dealerships operating in isolated U.S. markets? We wish to disentangle two mechanisms by which local competition influences a dealer's inventory: (1) the entry or exit of a competitor can change a retailer's demand (a sales effect); and (2) the entry or exit of a competitor can change the amount of buffer stock a retailer holds, which influences the probability that a consumer finds a desired product in stock (a service-level effect).
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Journal Article
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- Marketing Science
A Dynamic Model of Consumer Replacement Cycles in the PC Processor Industry
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Gordon, Brett R
As high-tech markets mature, replacement purchases inevitably become the dominant proportion of sales. Despite the clear importance of replacement, little work examines the separate roles of adoption and replacement. The analysis is complicated by the fact that a consumer's decision to replace a product is dynamic because high-tech markets undergo both rapid improvements in quality and falling prices.
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Abacus
Accounting for Intangible Assets: There Is Also an Income Statement
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Accounting is often criticized for omitting intangible assets from the balance sheet. This paper points out that the omission is not necessarily a deficiency. There is also an income statement, and the value of intangible (and other) assets can be ascertained from the income statement. Thus, calls for the recognition of "intangible assets" on the balance sheet may be misconceived. The paper lays out the property whereby the income statement corrects for deficiencies in the balance sheet.
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Brand Management
Assessing Long-Term Brand Potential
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Keller, Kevin Lane and Donald Lehmann
Long-term brand value depends on how well a firm understands and recognises the potential of a brand, as well as how well a firm capitalises on that brand potential in the marketplace. Realising this potential, in turn, depends on maximising long-term brand persistence and growth. Brand persistence comes from current customers maintaining their spending on the brand; brand growth results from current customers increasing their spending and from new customers being attracted to the brand in the future.
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Management Science
Competing Retailers and Inventory: An Empirical Investigation of U.S. Automobile Dealerships
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Olivares, Marcelo and Gérard P. Cachon
In this study we estimate empirically the effect of local market conditions on inventory holdings of U.S. automobile dealerships. We show that the influence of competition on a retailer's inventory holdings can be separated into two mechanisms: (1) the entry or exit of a competitor can change a retailer's demand (a sales effect); (2) the entry or exit of a competitor can change the amount of buyer stock a retailer chooses to hold, which influences the probability a consumer finds a desired product in stock (a service level effect).
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Operations Research
Conflict resolution in the scheduling of television commercials
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Marketing Science
Customer Satisfaction-Based Mispricing: Issues and Misconceptions
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Jacobson, Robert
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Journal Article
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- The Review of Accounting Studies
Discussion of "Explicit Relative Performance Evaluation in Performance-Vested Equity Grants"
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Journal Article
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- Review of Accounting Studies
Discussion of 'The robustness of the Sarbanes Oxley effect on the U.S. capital market'
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In this paper, I use anecdotal evidence and logical reasoning to suggest that, despite the use of an extensive database, it is not possible to conclude that passage of the Sarbanes Oxley Act did not have an impact on companies' delisting decisions. Moreover, the instrumental variables used to proxy for SOX effects are too weak and suffer from a significant endogeneity problem given that passage of SOX was driven by many of the economic and control problems that are used to control for market and company factors.
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Journal of Macromarketing
Effectiveness of Corporate Well-Being Programs
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Health is a major component of well-being and quality of life (QOL) and an increasingly costly one. We examine the role of employers for promoting QOL. A meta-analysis examines the impact of fifty well-being programs, which address six health issues and use seven marketing approaches. The analysis indicates that well-being programs and marketing approaches significantly improve employee health and depend on company size and employee gender. Results, based on sixty studies, show there is significant opportunity to efficiently tailor corporate health programs.
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Journal Article
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Income Dispersion and Counter-Cyclical Markups
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Operations Research
Revenue Management with Costly Price Adjustments
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Savin, Sergei and Sabri Celik
We consider a novel variant of the perishable inventory profit management problem faced by a firm that sells a fixed inventory over a finite horizon in the presence of price-adjustment costs. In economics literature, such price-adjustment costs are widely studied and are typically assumed to include a fixed component (e.g., advertising costs), an inventory-dependent component (e.g., inventory relabeling costs), as well as a component that depends on the magnitude of the price adjustment (e.g., cognitive and coordination managerial costs).
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Marketing Science
The Financial Markets and Customer Satisfaction: Reexamining Possible Financial Market Mispricing of Customer Satisfaction
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Jacobson, Robert
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Experimental Psychology: General
Discounting future green: Money versus the environment
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Hardisty, D. and Elke Weber
In 3 studies, participants made choices between hypothetical financial, environmental, and health gains and losses that took effect either immediately or with a delay of 1 or 10 years. In all 3 domains, choices indicated that gains were discounted more than losses. There were no significant differences in the discounting of monetary and environmental outcomes, but health gains were discounted more and health losses were discounted less than gains or losses in the other 2 domains.
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Journal Article
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- European Journal of Social Psychology
Familiarity and person construal: Individuating knowledge moderates the automaticity of category activation
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Journal Article
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- Economics Letters
Is Mistrust Self-Fulfilling?
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Sapienza, Paola and Luigi Zingales
We study experimentally the effect of expectations on whether trust is repaid. Subjects respond with untrustworthy behavior if they see that little is expected of them. This suggests that guilt aversion plays an important role in the repayment of trust.
The final version of this article can be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.econlet.2009.04.007.
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Journal of Financial Economics
Mortgage Timing
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications
Scheduling algorithms for broadcasting media with multiple distortion measures
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Due to the increase in diversity of wireless devices, streaming media systems must be capable of serving multiple types of users. Scalable coding allows for adaptations without re-encoding. To account for various viewing capabilities of each user, such as different spatial resolutions, multiple distortion measures are used. In this paper, we examine the question of how to broadcast media packets with multiple distortion measures to multiple users. We cast the problem as a stochastic shortest path problem and use Dynamic Programming to find the optimal policy.
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Journal Article
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- The Advertiser (an ANA publication)
Achieving Marketing Nirvana
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Donald E. Sexton, PhD, a professor of marketing at Columbia University and president of The Arrow Group, Ltd., discusses one key way to link marketing activity to financial performance.
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Journal Article
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- Personality and Individual Differences
Belief in stable and fleeting luck and achievement motivation
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The current work seeks to understand the relationship between luck beliefs and achievement motivation. We hypothesized and found evidence that belief in stable rather than fleeting luck positively relates to achievement motivation (Study 1). Furthermore, belief in stable luck affects achievement motivation via personal agency beliefs (Study 2). These findings add to our understanding of the causal beliefs associated with a sense of mastery and preference for challenging tasks.
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Cultural chameleons and iconoclasts: Assimilation and reactance to cultural cues in biculturals' expressed personalities as a function of identity conflict
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Mok, Aurelia and Michael Morris
Bicultural individuals vary in the degree to which their two cultural identities are integrated versus conflicting — Bicultural Identity Integration (BII). Past research on attribution biases finds that BII influences the way that biculturals shift in response to cultural primes: integrated biculturals shift assimilatively, whereas conflicted biculturals shift contrastively. Proposing that this reflects assimilation versus reactance responses, we tested whether it extends to shifts in self-perceived personality.
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Journal Article
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Globalization and Financial Development
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Consumer Psychology
Indulgence as Self Reward for Prior Shopping Restraint
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This research investigates the effects of refraining from a purchase temptation at one point in time on choices made at a subsequent opportunity to purchase or consume a tempting product. Four experiments involving scenarios and real decisions demonstrate that the salience of restraint at a prior impulse buying opportunity causes consumers to reward themselves subsequently by choosing indulgence over non-indulgence. We show that indulgence is likely to increase only when prior restraint is salient and hence can be used as a justification. As expected, an index of reasons for vs.
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Journal Article
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- Financial Analysts Journal
Liquidity and the Post-Earnings-Announcement Drift
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Chordia, Tarun, Amit Goyal, Ronnie Sadka, and Lakshmanan Shivakumar
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Journal Article
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Ratings Shopping and Asset Complexity: A Theory of Ratings Inflation
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Journal Article
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- The Economic Journal
The Importance of Emotions for the Effectiveness of Social Punishment
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Hopfensitz, Astrid
This article experimentally explores how the enforcement of cooperative behaviour in a social dilemma is facilitated through institutional as well as emotional mechanisms. Recent studies emphasise the importance of anger and its role in motivating individuals to punish free riders. However, we find that anger also triggers retaliatory behaviour by the punished individuals. This makes the enforcement of a cooperative norm more costly. We show that in addition to anger, "social" emotions like guilt need to be present for punishment to be an effective deterrent of uncooperative actions.
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Journal Article
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- American Economic Journal: Applied Economics
The Smuggling of Art, and the Art of Smuggling: Uncovering the Illicit Trade in Cultural Property and Antiques
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Fisman, Raymond and Shang-Jin Wei
We empirically analyze the illicit trade in cultural property and antiques, taking advantage of different reporting incentives between source and destination countries. We thus generate a measure of illicit trafficking in these goods based on the difference between imports recorded in United States' customs data and the (purportedly identical) trade as recorded by customs authorities in exporting countries.
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Journal Article
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- Journal of International Economics
The Value of Making Commitments Externally: Evidence from WTO Accessions
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Tang, Man-Keung and Shang-Jin Wei
This paper studies the value of external commitment to policy reforms in the case of WTO/GATT accessions. The accessions often entail reforms that go beyond narrowly defined trade liberalization, and have to overcome fierce resistance in the acceding countries, as reflected in protracted negotiations. We study the growth and investment consequences of WTO/GATT accessions, with attention to a possible selection bias. We find that the accessions tend to raise income, but only for those countries that were subject to rigorous accession procedures.
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Journal of Pricing and Revenue Management
Competitive Revenue Management with Forward and Spot Markets
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Krishnamoorthy, Srinivas
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Journal of Marketing Research
Financial Markets Research in Marketing
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Jacobson, Robert
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- The Journal of Finance
Information Immobility and the Home Bias Puzzle
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Many argue that home bias arises because home investors can predict home asset payoffs more accurately than foreigners can. But why doesn't global information access eliminate this asymmetry? We model investors, endowed with a small home information advantage, who choose what information to learn before they invest. Surprisingly, even when home investors can learn what foreigners know, they choose not to: Investors profit more from knowing information others do not know. Learning amplifies information asymmetry.
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Urban Economics
Irreversible Investment, Real Options, and Competition: Evidence from Real Estate Development
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We examine the extent to which uncertainty delays investment, and the effect of competition on this relationship, using a sample of 1214 condominium developments in Vancouver, Canada built from 1979–1998. We find that increases in both idiosyncratic and systematic risk lead developers to delay new real estate investments. Empirically, a one-standard deviation increase in the return volatility reduces the probability of investment by 13 percent, equivalent to a 9 percent decline in real prices.
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Journal Article
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- Scandinavian Journal of Management
Necessary Conditions for the Study of Fads and Fashions in Science
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This article asserts that any theory or research on fads or fashions in science has to answer three questions clearly and unambiguously. What defines "science"? What defines a "scientific fad" or a "scientific fashion"? What might facilitate the occurrence of scientific fads or fashions so defined? To illustrate this argument, this article critically examines the answers to three questions suggested by Starbuck's article: [Starbuck, W. H. (2009)] The constant causes of never-ending faddishness in the behavioral and social sciences. Scandinavian Journal of Management].
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Journal Article
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- Operations Research
On a data-driven method for staffing large call centers
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Bassamboo, Achal and Assaf Zeevi
We consider a call center model with multiple customer classes and multiple server pools. Calls arrive randomly over time, and the instantaneous arrival rates are allowed to vary both temporally and stochastically in an arbitrary manner. The objective is to minimize the sum of personnel costs and expected abandonment penalties by selecting an appropriate staffing level for each server pool.
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Journal Article
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Using Prediction Markets to Track Information Flows
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Since 2005, Google has conducted the largest corporate experiment with prediction markets we are aware of. In this paper, we illustrate how markets can be used to study how an organization processes information. We show that market participants are not typical of Google’s workforce, and that market participation and success is skewed towards Google’s engineering and quantitatively oriented employees.
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Journal of Marketing
Brand Experience: What Is It? How Is It Measured? Does It Affect Loyalty?
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Brand experience is conceptualized as sensations, feelings, cognitions, and behavioral responses evoked by brand-related stimuli that are part of a brand"s design and identity, packaging, communications, and environments. The authors distinguish several experience dimensions and construct a brand experience scale that includes four dimensions: sensory, affective, intellectual, and behavioral.
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Management Science
Contagion of Wishful Thinking in Markets
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Seybert, Nicholas
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- IEEE Transactions on Information Theory
Convergence of min-sum message passing for quadratic optimization
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Moallemi, Ciamac and Benjamin Van Roy
We establish the convergence of the min-sum message passing algorithm for minimization of a quadratic objective function given a convex decomposition. Our results also apply to the equivalent problem of the convergence of Gaussian belief propagation.
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Journal Article
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Is Monetary Policy Effective During Financial Crises
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Journal Article
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- Mathematics of Operations Research
Stochastic depletion problems: Effective myopic policies for a class of dynamic optimization problems
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Chan, Carri and Vivek Farias
This paper presents a general class of dynamic stochastic optimization problems we refer to as Stochastic Depletion Problems. A number of challenging dynamic optimization problems of practical interest are stochastic depletion problems. Optimal solutions for such problems are difficult to obtain, both from a pragmatic computational perspective as also from a theoretical perspective. As such, simple heuristics are desirable.
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Organizational Behavior
Commitment, procedural fairness, and organizational citizenship behavior: A multi-foci analysis
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Management Science
Competition in service industries with segmented markets
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Allon, Gad and Awi Federgruen
We develop a model for the competitive interactions in service industries where firms cater to multiple customer classes or market segments with the help of shared service facilities or processes so as to exploit pooling benefits. Different customer classes typically have distinct sensitivities to the price of service as well as the delays encountered.
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- The Accounting Review
Earnings Quality and Ownership Structure: The Role of Private Equity Sponsors
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- Journal of Consumer Psychology
Engaging the Consumer: The Science and Art of the Value Creation Process
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Higgins, E. Tory and Abigail Scholer
Regulatory engagement theory [Higgins, E. T. (2006). Value from hedonic experience and engagement. Psychological Review, 113, 439–460.] proposes that value is a motivational force of attraction to or repulsion from something, and that strength of engagement contributes to value intensity independent of hedonic and other sources of value direction.
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Journal Article
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- Journal
- <a href="http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/jole/2009/27/2">Journal of Labor Economics</a>
Globalization and the Provision of Incentives Inside the Firm: The Effect of Foreign Competition
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Cuñat, Vicente