95 results match your criteria: "University of Chicago Booth School of Business.[Affiliation]"
How does the content of secrets relate to their harms? We identified a data-driven model (across five empirical steps), which suggested that secrets are generally seen to differ in how immoral, relational, and profession/goal-oriented they are (Study 1). The more a secret was consensually perceived to be immoral, relational, and profession/goal-oriented, the more that secret was reported to evoke feelings of shame, social connectedness, and insight into the secret, respectively. These three experiences independently predicted the extent to which the secret was judged as harmful to well-being (Studies 2a-c and 3).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScience
March 2021
Independent researcher, London, UK.
J Public Econ
January 2021
University of Chicago Booth School of Business, United States.
The collapse of economic activity in 2020 from COVID-19 has been immense. An important question is how much of that collapse resulted from government-imposed restrictions versus people voluntarily choosing to stay home to avoid infection. This paper examines the drivers of the economic slowdown using cellular phone records data on customer visits to more than 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Res Methods
June 2021
University of Chicago Booth School of Business, Chicago, IL, USA.
Multiracial individuals represent a growing segment of the population and have been increasingly the focus of empirical study. Much of this research centers on the perception and racial categorization of multiracial individuals. The current paper reviews some of this research and describes the different types of stimuli that have been used in these paradigms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Rev
March 2021
Institute of Psychological Research, Catholic University of Louvain.
Social evaluation occurs at personal, interpersonal, group, and intergroup levels, with competing theories and evidence. Five models engage in adversarial collaboration, to identify common conceptual ground, ongoing controversies, and continuing agendas: Dual Perspective Model (Abele & Wojciszke, 2007); Behavioral Regulation Model (Leach, Ellemers, & Barreto, 2007); Dimensional Compensation Model (Yzerbyt et al., 2005); Stereotype Content Model (Fiske, Cuddy, Glick, & Xu, 2002); and Agency-Beliefs-Communion Model (Koch, Imhoff, Dotsch, Unkelbach, & Alves, 2016).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Aff (Millwood)
July 2020
Daniel Adelman is the Charles I. Clough, Jr. Professor of Operations Management at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, in Chicago, Illinois.
It is thought that there are not enough mechanical ventilators in the United States for every patient who may need one during the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. However, there has been no analysis that measures the potential magnitude of the problem or proposes a solution. In this article I combine the pandemic forecasting model used by the federal government with estimates of ventilator availability from the literature to assess the expected shortage under various scenarios.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe dimensions that explain which societal groups cooperate more with which other groups remain unclear. We predicted that perceived similarity in agency/socioeconomic success and conservative-progressive beliefs increases cooperation across groups. Self-identified members ( = 583) of 30 society-representative U.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCognition
June 2020
Carnegie Mellon University, Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences, 5000 Forbes Avenue, BP 208, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA. Electronic address:
Beliefs about how effective a cause will be at achieving possible outcomes are critical inputs into a range of decisions, from how to treat an illness to which products to purchase. We identify scope-the number of distinct outcomes a cause is known to achieve-as an important input into judgments of efficacy. We compare causes that lead to worse outcomes (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScience
October 2019
Research School of Economics, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.
Curr Opin Psychol
April 2020
University of Chicago Booth School of Business, United States. Electronic address:
Roughly four billion people live in cultures with a legacy of rice farm. Recent studies find that rice cultures are more interdependent than herding cultures and wheat-farming cultures. In China, people from rice-farming areas think more holistically and show less implicit individualism than people from wheat-farming areas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
July 2019
Department of Psychology, Ruhr University Bochum, Bochum, Germany.
When considering whether to enact or not to enact a tempting option, people often anticipate how their choices will make them feel, typically resulting in a "mixed bag" of conflicting emotions. Building on earlier work, we propose an integrative theoretical model of this judgment process and empirically test its main propositions using a novel procedure to capture and integrate both the intensity and duration of anticipated emotions. We identify and theoretically integrate four highly relevant key emotions, pleasure, frustration, guilt, and pride.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
July 2019
School of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, China.
Collectivistic cultures have been characterized as having harmonious, cooperative ingroup relationships. However, we find evidence that people in collectivistic cultures are more vigilant toward ingroup members, mindful of their possible unethical intentions. Study 1 found that Chinese participants were more vigilant than Americans in within-group competitions, anticipating more unethical behaviors from their peers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Hum Behav
June 2019
University of Chicago Booth School of Business, Chicago, IL, USA.
Adolescents are exposed to extensive marketing for junk food, which drives overconsumption by creating positive emotional associations with junk food. Here we counter this influence with an intervention that frames manipulative food marketing as incompatible with important adolescent values, including social justice and autonomy from adult control. In a preregistered, longitudinal, randomized, controlled field experiment, we show that this framing intervention reduces boys' and girls' implicit positive associations with junk food marketing and substantially improves boys' daily dietary choices in the school cafeteria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pediatr Surg
June 2019
Department of Surgery, Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, Portsmouth, VA; Department of Pediatric Surgery, Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, Portsmouth, VA.
Purpose: Geographic proximity to pediatric surgical care has not been evaluated using the Decennial Census nor have racial, ethnic, gender, or urbanization variations been reported. This study's aim is to describe proximity of children living in the continental U.S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pers Soc Psychol
October 2018
Department of Behavioral Science and Marketing, University of Chicago Booth School of Business.
Goal systems are hierarchical, often requiring people to invest resources vertically-both in lower-order means and higher-order goals. For example, a college student who wants to take a particular class (a goal) might first have to take a prerequisite (the means). We investigated how the hierarchical configuration of goals and means affects preferences for vertical resource allocation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm Econ Rev
August 2018
University of Chicago Booth School of Business, 5807 South Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago, IL 60637
A central question in the debate over privatized Medicare is whether increased government payments to private Medicare Advantage (MA) plans generate lower premiums for consumers or higher profits for producers. Using difference‑in‑differences variation brought about by a sharp legislative change, we find that MA insurers pass through 45 percent of increased payments in lower premiums and an additional 9 percent in more generous benefits. We show that advantageous selection into MA cannot explain this incomplete pass‑through.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScience
August 2018
Richard H. Thaler is the Charles R. Walgreen Distinguished Service Professor of Behavioral Science and Economics at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, Chicago, IL, USA, and the 2017 Nobel laureate in economic sciences.
Phys Med Biol
September 2018
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, University of Toronto, 5 King's College Road, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 3G8, Canada. The University of Chicago Booth School of Business, 5807 S Woodlawn Ave, Chicago, IL 60637, United States of America.
Current practice for treatment planning optimization can be both inefficient and time consuming. In this paper, we propose an automated planning methodology that aims to combine both explorative and prescriptive approaches for improving the efficiency and the quality of the treatment planning process. Given a treatment plan, our explorative approach explores trade-offs between different objectives and finds an acceptable region for objective function weights via inverse optimization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
July 2018
Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam 1081 BT, The Netherlands.
Biologists and social scientists have long tried to understand why some societies have more fluid and open interpersonal relationships and how those differences influence culture. This study measures relational mobility, a socioecological variable quantifying voluntary (high relational mobility) vs. fixed (low relational mobility) interpersonal relationships.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
April 2018
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904, USA.
Traditional paddy rice farmers had to share labor and coordinate irrigation in a way that most wheat farmers did not. We observed people in everyday life to test whether these agricultural legacies gave rice-farming southern China a more interdependent culture and wheat-farming northern China a more independent culture. In Study 1, we counted 8964 people sitting in cafes in six cities and found that people in northern China were more likely to be sitting alone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPers Soc Psychol Bull
May 2018
1 The University of Chicago Booth School of Business, IL, USA.
This study tests whether liberals and conservatives within the same society think as if they were from different cultures. I tested this by measuring the cultural thought style of social liberals and conservatives in Hong Kong (Study 1). Liberals tended to think more analytically (more "WEIRD"), and conservatives tended to think more holistically (more common in East Asia).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Emerg Med
July 2018
Department of Medicine, Section of Cardiology, The University of Chicago Medical Center, 5841 S. Maryland Ave, Chicago, IL 60637, United States.
Background: A multidisciplinary team at a major academic medical center established an Acutely Decompensated Heart Failure Clinical Pathway (ADHFCP) program to reduce inpatient readmission rates among patients with heart failure which, among several interventions, included an immediate consultation from a cardiologist familiar with an ADHFCP patient when the patient presented at the Emergency Department (ED). This study analyzed how that program impacted utilization of services in the ED and its subsequent effect on rates of admission from the ED and on disposition times.
Methods: ADHFCP inpatient visits were retrospectively risk stratified and matched with non-program inpatient visits to create a control group.
Psychol Sci
December 2017
Department of Behavioral Science, The University of Chicago Booth School of Business.
Will people follow their intuition even when they explicitly recognize that it is irrational to do so? Dual-process models of judgment and decision making are often based on the assumption that the correction of errors necessarily follows the detection of errors. But this assumption does not always hold. People can explicitly recognize that their intuitive judgment is wrong but nevertheless maintain it, a phenomenon known as acquiescence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pers Soc Psychol
September 2017
Department of Marketing, University of Chicago Booth School of Business.
The use of performance enhancing drugs (PEDs) elicits widespread normative opposition, yet little research has investigated what underlies these judgments. We examine this question comprehensively, across 13 studies. We first test the hypothesis that opposition to PED use cannot be fully accounted for by considerations of fairness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Med
September 2017
Section of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, The University of Chicago Medical Center, Ill.
Background: Re-hospitalization after discharge for acute decompensated heart failure is a common problem. Low-socioeconomic urban patients suffer high rates of re-hospitalization and often over-utilize the emergency department (ED) for their care. We hypothesized that early consultation with a cardiologist in the ED can reduce re-hospitalization and health care costs for low-socioeconomic urban patients with acute decompensated heart failure.
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