YOUR SEARCH :
     Discipline: Statistics / Decision Science (remove)

YOUR SEARCH PRODUCED 60 MATCHES.      PAGE 6 of 7    Items 51-60 of 60    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 NEXT »
Show 50 results per page


sort results by:   Best Match   Most Downloaded   Highest Rated   Publication Date

Search results with a darker orange shading indicate that the product is a teaching module.

The Costs and Benefits of Undoing Egocentric Responsibility Assessments in Groups

Authors: Bazerman, Max H.; Caruso, Eugene M.; Epley, Nicholas
Product Type: Essays and Concept Papers; Journal Articles
Source: Journal of Personality and Psychology, Vol. 91, No. 5. The American Psychological Association
Publication Year: 2006

[This document has not yet been rated] 807 views

Individuals working in groups often egocentrically believe they have contributed more of the total work than is logically possible. Actively considering others' contributions effectively reduces these egocentric assessments, but this research suggests that undoing egocentric biases in groups may have some unexpected costs...

Click here for more

Intel's Internet Entanglement (A, B)

Authors: Perry, L.; Swain, M.; Kovalenko, N.
Product Type: Cases
Source: The Case Research Journal
Publication Year: 1996

[This document has not yet been rated] 795 views

Intel released the Pentium microprocessor chip but a professor has discovered a bug in the chip and is talking about it on the Internet.

Click here for more

Changing Practice on Sustainability

Understanding and Overcoming the Organizational and Psychological Barriers to Action

Authors: Hoffman, Andrew J.; Bazerman, Max H.
Product Type: Research Notes / Working Papers
Source: Andrew J. Hoffman and Max H. Bazerman, Working Paper # 05-043
Publication Year: 2006

[This document has not yet been rated] 754 views

At its core, sustainable development requires a change in the way we think as individuals, as organizations and as a society. Yet, what is well understood within the organizational literature is that such changes are difficult and are usually met with resistance. Sustainability is no exception; executives and organizations have been slow to adopt wise practices....

Click here for more

Climate Change as a Predictable Surprise

Author: Bazerman, Max H.
Product Type: Research Notes / Working Papers
Source: Harvard Business School, Negotiation, Organizations and Markets Unit, Research Paper Series
Publication Year: 2005

[This document has not yet been rated] 699 views

In this article, the authors analyzes climate change as a "predictable surprise": an event that leads an organization or nation to react with surprise, despite the fact that the information necessary to anticipate the event and its consequences was available...

Click here for more

Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)

Sustainable Operations

Author: Souza, Gilvan C.
Product Type: Notes; Teaching Modules
Source: Kelley School of Business, Indiana University
Publication Year: 2010

[This document has not yet been rated] 655 views

The goal of life-cycle assessment is to find the full range of environmental and societal damages assignable to products (or a process) through its entire life cycle.

Click here for more

Economic Policy Institute

Author:
Product Type: Web Sites
Source:
Publication Year:

[This document has not yet been rated] 629 views

The EPI is "a nonprofit, nonpartisan think tank that seeks to broaden the public debate about strategies to achieve a prosperous and fair economy." The institute aims to achieve this by offering high-quality research and education. The web site features a wealth of economic indicators and facts as well as links to relevant publications.

Click here for more

The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable

Author: Taleb, Nassim Nicholas
Product Type: Books / Book Chapters
Source: Random House
Publication Year: 2007

[This document has not yet been rated] 601 views

Our brains are wired for narrative, not statistical uncertainty. Nassim Nicholas Taleb argues that we have no idea why stock markets go up or down on any given day, and whatever reason we give is sure to be grossly simplified, if not flat out wrong.

Click here for more

Changing Environmental Practice

Understanding and Overcoming the Organizational and Psychological Barriers

Authors: Hoffman, Andrew J.; Bazerman, Max H.
Product Type: Research Notes / Working Papers
Source: Harvard Business School, Negotiation, Organizations and Markets Unit, Research Paper Series.
Publication Year: 2005

[This document has not yet been rated] 580 views

Since the early 1990s, the environmental management literature has grown from a small offshoot of mainstream academic study to become a vibrant field of its own. The contributions of this field lie in the study of corporations and their impact upon the natural world. We are impressed by the large quantity of good ideas that have developed concerning how to improve the environment in ways that are good for business. Yet we also have observed that many executives and organizations have been slow to adopt wise environmental practices...

Click here for more

Variety, Vice, and Virtue

How Assortment Size Influences Option Choice

Author: Liu, Wendy
Product Type: Cases
Source: Social Science Research Network (SSRN)
Publication Year: 2008

[This document has not yet been rated] 565 views

Research has demonstrated that assortment size can influence whether consumers make a choice, but could it also influence what they choose?

Click here for more

Dirty Work, Clean Hands: The Moral Psychology of Indirect Agency

Working Paper 09-012

Authors: Paharia, Neeru; Kassam, Karim S.; Greene, Joshua D.; Bazerman, Max H.
Product Type:
Source: Harvard Business School
Publication Year: 2008

[This document has not yet been rated] 514 views

Are harmful actions carried out through others evaluated less negatively than harmful actions carried out directly?

Click here for more

YOUR SEARCH PRODUCED 60 MATCHES.      PAGE 6 of 7    Items 51-60 of 60    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 NEXT »

Search for
Teaching Materials