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Pandemic Shows We Must Recraft Editorial Ethics in Academic Publishing
Communication
April 8, 2022

Pandemic Shows We Must Recraft Editorial Ethics in Academic Publishing

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Time for Management Researchers to Tackle Tipping
Research
April 7, 2022

Time for Management Researchers to Tackle Tipping

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Collateral Damage: Russia’s War Damages its Academic Ties with West
Industry
April 7, 2022

Collateral Damage: Russia’s War Damages its Academic Ties with West

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Woody Powell to Lead Stanford’s Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences
Announcements
April 6, 2022

Woody Powell to Lead Stanford’s Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences

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Negative Emotions Feed into Crisis Responses But Do Not Impact All Managers Equally

Negative Emotions Feed into Crisis Responses But Do Not Impact All Managers Equally

This study furthers our understanding that threat-driven perception of crisis is not univocal since some top managers can show steady and cold-headed decision-making trajectory even when they feel that crisis is threatening the survival of their business.

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John List on Economic Field Experiments

John List on Economic Field Experiments

Behavioral economist John List talks about his work on field experiments and how research done in the natural world can lead to insights that otherwise might be hard to tease out in a lab.

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America’s DataHub Consortium: Seeing — and Understanding — the Entire Elephant

America’s DataHub Consortium: Seeing — and Understanding — the Entire Elephant

We live in the information age. So where are all the answers? A new data science consortium led by NSF’s National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics wants to reveal the answers and evidence hidden in a sea of federally compartmentalized data.

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Understanding the ‘Undercover Autism’ of Many Women and Girls

Understanding the ‘Undercover Autism’ of Many Women and Girls

[Ed. – April 2, 2022 is World Autism Awareness Day.] Being autistic, but not diagnosed, can lead to a lifetime of struggles […]

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Comparing COVID Deaths and Political Persuasion in the US

Comparing COVID Deaths and Political Persuasion in the US

The Pew Research Center writes that “as the relationship between population density and coronavirus death rates has changed over the course of the pandemic, so too has the relationship between counties’ voting patterns and their death rates from COVID-19.”

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‘Old Bones in Boxes’: Lessons On Race and Physical Anthropology

‘Old Bones in Boxes’: Lessons On Race and Physical Anthropology

The discipline of physical anthropology has a dark, often fraught past. It was misused to justify slavery and even genocide. In this […]

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Spring in DC Not Really Cherry Blossom Season; It’s Budget Season 

Spring in DC Not Really Cherry Blossom Season; It’s Budget Season 

What does this year’s U.S. Executive Branch budget suggest for key agencies that provide social and behavioral science funding? 

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What Can Game Theory Tell Us About Ukraine War Negotiations?

What Can Game Theory Tell Us About Ukraine War Negotiations?

Game theory is the formal study of strategic choices between two sides. It’s useful to decision makers because it can illustrate the range of options open to combatants within a given crisis, and also map the likely “wins and losses” strategically decided upon by the parties involved. The challenge is applying a hypothetical spectrum to the range of passive and aggressive options, and their consequences in Ukraine today.

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