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Publications

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    • All HBS Web  (1,054)
      • Faculty Publications  (250)

      AttributionRemove Attribution →

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      • 1977
      • Dictionary Entry

      Attribution Theory

      By: L. D. Ross and T. M. Amabile
      Keywords: Theory; Mathematical Methods
      Citation
      Related
      Ross, L. D., and T. M. Amabile. "Attribution Theory." In International Encyclopedia of Psychiatry, Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Neurology. Vol. 10, edited by B. Wolman, 300–302. Prentice Hall, 1977.
      • Research Summary

      Corporate Reputation

      By: Stephen A. Greyser
      Stephen A. Greyser is undertaking an empirical analysis of corporate reputation based on interviews conducted by Opinion Research Corporation with more than four thousand executives in nineteen countries. His study is examining public awareness of, familiarity with,... View Details
      • Research Summary

      Managing Product Development in Rapidly Changing Environments

      By: Alan D. MacCormack
      A consistent finding in many studies of innovation is the repeated failure of established firms when faced with radical changes in their core markets or technologies. Professor MacCormack's research takes the view that many of these failures can be attributed to the... View Details
      • Research Summary

      Of Measurement and Mission: Accounting for Performance in Non-Governmental Organizations

      By: Debora L. Spar
      As members of civil society NGOs would seem to have a built-in proclivity towards representation: towards working on behalf of some group of people, or toward some specific goal. Yet in practice such moments of accountability are rare. Unlike other social agents,... View Details
      • Research Summary

      Selection and Market Reallocation: Productivity Gains from Multinational Production

      By: Laura Alfaro
      Assessing the productivity gains from multinational production has been a vital topic of economic research and policy debate. Positive aggregate productivity gains are often attributed to within-firm productivity improvement; however, an alternative, less emphasized... View Details
      • Research Summary

      Selection, Reallocation, and Spillover: Identifying the Sources of Gains from Multinational Production (with Maggie Chen)

      By: Laura Alfaro

      Quantifying the gains from multinational production has been a vital topic of economic research. Positive productivity gains are often attributed to knowledge spillover from multinational to domestic firms. An alternative, less stressed explanation is firm selection... View Details

      Keywords: Gains From Multinational Production; Firm Selection; Knowledge Spillover
      • Research Summary

      Social Entrepreneurship

      By: James L. Heskett
      This project is centered around an analysis of data and experiences of 31 executive directors of not-for-profit organizations who completed the Denali Initiative on social entrepreneurship, of which I was volunteer faculty chairperson, between 1999 and 2002. The... View Details
      • Research Summary

      The Baby Business: How Markets are Changing the Future of Birth

      By: Debora L. Spar
      It is difficult to conceive of the child as commerce. For even at the start of the 21st century, we like to believe that some things remain beyond both markets and science; that there are some things that money can't buy. In economic terms, these things are defined as... View Details
      • Research Summary

      The Supply Chain Economy: A New Industry Categorization for Understanding Innovation in Services

      By: Karen Mills
      An active debate has centered on the importance of manufacturing for driving innovation in the U.S. economy. This paper offers an alternative framework that focuses on the role of suppliers of goods and services (the “supply chain economy”) in national performance. We... View Details
      • Forthcoming
      • Article

      Trading Volume Manipulation and Competition Among Centralized Crypto Exchanges

      By: Dan Amiran, Evgeny Lyandres and Daniel Rabetti
      How competition affects manipulation by firms of information about important attributes of their products and how such information manipulation impacts firms’ short-term and long-term performance are open empirical questions. We use a setting that is especially... View Details
      Keywords: Cryptocurrency; Financial Markets; Performance; Competition
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      Amiran, Dan, Evgeny Lyandres, and Daniel Rabetti. "Trading Volume Manipulation and Competition Among Centralized Crypto Exchanges." Management Science (forthcoming). (Pre-published online February 5, 2025.)
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