8,346 research outputs found
How do employees shape HR implementation? Intra-team acceptance of espoused HR practices, frontline managers’ implementation behavior, and team performance
This study investigates the critical role of employees in shaping frontline managers’ (FLMs) HR implementation. It goes beyond previous research, which recurrently attributes FLMs’ implementation behavior to the facilitating conditions and FLMs’ personal capabilities, overlooking or downplaying the potential impact of employees during the implementation process. In doing so, we characterize the construct of intra-team acceptance of espoused HR practices as a key force influencing FLMs’ HR enactment. Hence, we hypothesize how intra-team acceptance of espoused HR practices is linked to FLMs’ implementation behavior through FLMs’ performance expectancy, effort expectancy, and social influence. In this narrative, we position team-level HPWS as a direct outcome of FLMs’ implementation behavior. Therefore, we establish that team-level HPWS mediates the relationship between FLMs’ implementation behavior and team performance, underscoring the importance of employees in the HRM variability debate. Conducting a time-lagged study and analyzing data collected from 23 South Korean firms, we found support for our theoretical claims. Our findings recognize employees as significant contributors to the implementation process and challenge the conventional wisdom in which employees are viewed as passive recipients of HR practices. We discuss theoretical and managerial implications and offer directions for future endeavors
QCD effective action with a most general homogeneous field background
We consider one-loop effective action of SU(3) QCD with a most general
constant chromomagnetic (chromoelectric) background which has two independent
Abelian field components. The effective potential with a pure magnetic
background has a local minimum only when two Abelian components H_{\mu\nu}^3
and H_{\mu\nu}^8 of color magnetic field are orthogonal to each other. The
non-trivial structure of the effective action has important implication in
estimating quark-gluon production rate and p_T-distribution in quark-gluon
plasma. In general the production rate depends on three independent Casimir
invariants, in particular, it depends on the relative orientation between
chromoelectric fields.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures (9 pages in published version
Semi-Leptonic b-decay at Intermediate Recoil
We compute the O(\alpha_s^2) corrections to the differential rate of the
semileptonic decay b -> clv at the "intermediate recoil" point, where the
c-quark mass and the invariant mass of the leptons are equal. The calculation
is based on an expansion around two opposite limits of the quark masses
m_{b,c}: m_c ~ m_b and m_c << m_b. The former case was previously studied; we
correct and extend that result. The latter case is new. The smooth matching of
both expansions provides a check of both. We clarify the discrepancy between
the recent determinations of the full NNLO QCD correction to the semileptonic b
-> c rate, and its earlier estimate.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, Replaced figures, small format and typo
corrections, added appendix and reference
Studying Human-Centered IT Innovation Using a Grounded Action Learning Approach
This paper describes how two research methodologies, grounded theory and action learning, were combined to produce a rigorous yet creative and flexible method for field study of a recent IT-based innovation, virtual teams. Essentially, an action learning program was used to train facilitators of virtual teams and generate research data while grounded theory techniques were used to analyze and interpret the data. This paper shows how this combined method can be used to develop local and practical theory for complex, human-centered areas of information technology. The implications of this grounded action learning approach for practice and research in IS will be discussed
- …