2,316 research outputs found
Voice Flows To And Around Leaders: Understanding When Units Are Helped Or Hurt By Employee Voice
In two studies, we develop and test theory about the relationship between speaking up, one type of organizational citizenship behavior, and unit performance by accounting for where employee voice is flowing. Results from a qualitative study of managers and professionals across a variety of industries suggest that voice to targets at different formal power levels (peers or superiors) and locations in the organization (inside or outside a focal unit) differs systematically in terms of its usefulness in generating actions to a unit's benefit on the issues raised and in the likely information value of the ideas expressed. We then theorize how distinct voice flows should be differentially related to unit performance based on these core characteristics and test our hypotheses using time-lagged field data from 801 employees and their managers in 93 units across nine North American credit unions. Results demonstrate that voice flows are positively related to a unit's effectiveness when they are targeted at the focal leader of that unitwho should be able to take actionwhether from that leader's own subordinates or those in other units, and negatively related to a unit's effectiveness when they are targeted at coworkers who have little power to effect change. Together, these studies provide a structural framework for studying the nature and impact of multiple voice flows, some along formal reporting lines and others that reflect the informal communication structure within organizations. This research demonstrates that understanding the potential performance benefits and costs of voice for leaders and their units requires attention to the structure and complexity of multiple voice flows rather than to an undifferentiated amount of voice.Business Administratio
A Bichromatic Incidence Bound and an Application
We prove a new, tight upper bound on the number of incidences between points
and hyperplanes in Euclidean d-space. Given n points, of which k are colored
red, there are O_d(m^{2/3}k^{2/3}n^{(d-2)/3} + kn^{d-2} + m) incidences between
the k red points and m hyperplanes spanned by all n points provided that m =
\Omega(n^{d-2}). For the monochromatic case k = n, this was proved by Agarwal
and Aronov.
We use this incidence bound to prove that a set of n points, no more than n-k
of which lie on any plane or two lines, spans \Omega(nk^2) planes. We also
provide an infinite family of counterexamples to a conjecture of Purdy's on the
number of hyperplanes spanned by a set of points in dimensions higher than 3,
and present new conjectures not subject to the counterexample.Comment: 12 page
On the Number of Facets of Three-Dimensional Dirichlet Stereohedra III: Full Cubic Groups
We are interested in the maximum possible number of facets that Dirichlet
stereohedra for three-dimensional crystallographic groups can have. The problem
for non-cubic groups was studied in previous papers by D. Bochis and the second
author (Discrete Comput. Geom. 25:3 (2001), 419-444, and Beitr. Algebra Geom.,
47:1 (2006), 89-120). This paper deals with ''full'' cubic groups, while
''quarter'' cubic groups are left for a subsequent paper. Here, ''full'' and
''quarter'' refers to the recent classification of three-dimensional
crystallographic groups by Conway, Delgado-Friedrichs, Huson and Thurston
(math.MG/9911185, Beitr. Algebra Geom. 42.2 (2001), 475-507).
Our main result in this paper is that Dirichlet stereohedra for any of the 27
full groups cannot have more than 25 facets. We also find stereohedra with 17
facets for one of these groups.Comment: 28 pages, 12 figures. Changes from v1: apart of some editing (mostly
at the end of the introduction) and addition of references, an appendix has
been added, which analyzes the case where the base point does not have
trivial stabilize
Sequence Dependence of Self-Interacting Random Chains
We study the thermodynamic behavior of the random chain model proposed by
Iori, Marinari and Parisi, and how this depends on the actual sequence of
interactions along the chain. The properties of randomly chosen sequences are
compared to those of designed ones, obtained through a simulated annealing
procedure in sequence space. We show that the transition to the folded phase
takes place at a smaller strength of the quenched disorder for designed
sequences. As a result, folding can be relatively fast for these sequences.Comment: 14 pages, uuencoded compressed postscript fil
The Social Climbing Game
The structure of a society depends, to some extent, on the incentives of the
individuals they are composed of. We study a stylized model of this interplay,
that suggests that the more individuals aim at climbing the social hierarchy,
the more society's hierarchy gets strong. Such a dependence is sharp, in the
sense that a persistent hierarchical order emerges abruptly when the preference
for social status gets larger than a threshold. This phase transition has its
origin in the fact that the presence of a well defined hierarchy allows agents
to climb it, thus reinforcing it, whereas in a "disordered" society it is
harder for agents to find out whom they should connect to in order to become
more central. Interestingly, a social order emerges when agents strive harder
to climb society and it results in a state of reduced social mobility, as a
consequence of ergodicity breaking, where climbing is more difficult.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
Bond breaking in vibrationally excited methane on transition metal catalysts
The role of vibrational excitation of a single mode in the scattering of
methane is studied by wave packet simulations of oriented CH4 and CD4 molecules
from a flat surface. All nine internal vibrations are included. In the
translational energy range from 32 up to 128 kJ/mol we find that initial
vibrational excitations enhance the transfer of translational energy towards
vibrational energy and increase the accessibility of the entrance channel for
dissociation. Our simulations predict that initial vibrational excitations of
the asymmetrical stretch (nu_3) and especially the symmetrical stretch (nu_1)
modes will give the highest enhancement of the dissociation probability of
methane.Comment: 4 pages REVTeX, 2 figures (eps), to be published in Phys. Rev. B.
(See also arXiv:physics.chem-ph/0003031). Journal version at
http://publish.aps.org/abstract/PRB/v61/p1565
The changing patterns of group politics in Britain
Two interpretations of ways in which group politics in Britain have presented challenges to democracy are reviewed: neo-corporatism or pluralistic stagnation and the rise of single issue interest groups. The disappearance of the first paradigm created a political space for the second to emerge. A three-phase model of group activity is developed: a phase centred around production interests, followed by the development of broadly based 'other regarding' groups, succeeded by fragmented, inner directed groups focusing on particular interests. Explanations of the decay of corporatism are reviewed. Single issue group activity has increased as party membership has declined and is facilitated by changes in traditional media and the development of the internet. Such groups can overload the policy-making process and frustrate depoliticisation. Debates about the constitution and governance have largely ignored these issues and there is need for a debate
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