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Resistance and compliance: Employee reaction to bureaucratic control measures in autonomous work settings
Organizational control is a fundamental management process but has consistently presented a dynamic challenge to leadership. As organizations have increased in size and complexity, however, control of processes and individual behavior has become progressively more difficult. Membership in a group or organization does not necessarily imply aligned goals and behaviors, which can lead to dysfunction and create the perception that even more control is necessary. In addition, technological progress in the design of electronic monitoring devices has made observation and data collection relatively cheap and easy. More and more organizations are choosing to gather data about employees in this manner, but this observation could have negative effects not readily seen. These tactics could threaten employees and leave them in a negative emotional state where they look to reestablish their freedom, either directly or indirectly. The seminal theorist Jack Brehm called this emotional state Psychological Reactance (1966). I predict this elevated level of Reactance will result in behavioral reactions which can be ultimately harmful to the organization. Other control strategies that attempt to create alignment between an individual\u27s identity and the company might be useful in mitigating these behaviors, particularly in relatively autonomous job settings where control is somewhat limited.
This study tests the connection between how threatened an employee is by a control system, the psychological reactance experienced, and subsequent behaviors. The perceived organizational justification for a system and the strength of the individual identity with the company are theorized to moderate these relationships, as well.
My sample includes commercial airline pilots (N=217) who fly for a major U.S. airline. I chose this group because their work environment is highly monitored yet they maintain a relatively large amount of autonomy. The findings generally support the hypothesized relationships and suggest that organizations consider multiple courses of action as well as negative side effects when choosing control mechanisms
Collaborative semantic web browsing with Magpie
Web browsing is often a collaborative activity. Users involved in a joint information gathering exercise will wish to share knowledge about the web pages visited and the contents found. Magpie is a suite of tools supporting the interpretation of web pages and semantically enriched web browsing. By automatically associating an ontology-based semantic layer to web resources, Magpie allows relevant services to be invoked as well as remotely triggered within a standard web browser. In this paper we describe how Magpie trigger services can provide semantic support to collaborative browsing activities
Accounting Editorial Board Membership And Research Output
The primary purpose of this article is to examine whether the university affiliation of faculty members on the editorial boards of three top academic accounting journals is related to the university affiliation of the faculty that publish in these journals. The journals selected – The Accounting Review (AR); The Journal of Accounting Research (JAR); and, Accounting, Organizations and Society (AOS), were identified by Chan, et al. (2009) as the top three accounting research journals. The board members (as of January 1, 2007) of these three journals were categorized by university affiliation (both current employer and doctoral-degree granting), and cross referenced with the authors (including co-authors) of all main articles published in these three journals during the calendar years of 2007-2009. The results indicate that the majority of the authors at JAR and AOS had academic affiliations different from the editorial board members. In the AR, however, over 60% of the authors had the same academic affiliations as the 101 members of the AR editorial review board. Secondary results provide that a small handful of university affiliations dominate the U.S.-based journal boards, however this connection was not as strong in the non-U.S. AOS.  Overall, less than 11% of AACSB accredited business programs are represented on these collective boards, although AACSB accounting specific accreditation does increase this ratio to a 14% representation.
Magpie: towards a semantic web browser
Web browsing involves two tasks: finding the right web page and then making sense of its content. So far, research has focused on supporting the task of finding web resources through ‘standard’ information retrieval mechanisms, or semantics-enhanced search. Much less attention has been paid to the second problem. In this paper we describe Magpie, a tool which supports the
interpretation of web pages. Magpie offers complementary knowledge sources, which a reader can call upon to quickly gain access to any background knowledge relevant to a web resource. Magpie automatically associates an ontologybased
semantic layer to web resources, allowing relevant services to be invoked within a standard web browser. Hence, Magpie may be seen as a step towards a semantic web browser. The functionality of Magpie is illustrated using examples of how it has been integrated with our lab’s web resources
Rotational Alignment Altered by Source Position Correlations
In the construction of modern Celestial Reference Frames (CRFs) the overall rotational alignment is only weakly constrained by the data. Therefore, common practice has been to apply a 3-dimensional No-Net-Rotation (NNR) constraint in order to align an under-construction frame to the ICRF. We present evidence that correlations amongst source position parameters must be accounted for in order to properly align a CRF at the 5-10 (mu)as level of uncertainty found in current work. Failure to do so creates errors at the 10-40 (mu)as level
Multifaceted empathy differences in children and adults with autism
Although empathy impairments have been reported in autistic individuals, there is no clear consensus on how emotional valence influences this multidimensional process. In this study, we use the Multifaceted Empathy Test for juveniles (MET-J) to interrogate emotional and cognitive empathy in 184 participants (ages 8–59 years, 83 autistic) under the robust Bayesian inference framework. Group comparisons demonstrate previously unreported interaction effects between: (1) valence and autism diagnosis in predictions of emotional resonance, and (2) valence and age group in predictions of arousal to images portraying positive and negative facial expressions. These results extend previous studies using the MET by examining differential effects of emotional valence in a large sample of autistic children and adults with average or above-average intelligence. We report impaired cognitive empathy in autism, and subtle differences in emotional empathy characterized by less distinction between emotional resonance to positive vs. negative facial expressions in autism compared to neurotypicals. Reduced emotional differentiation between positive and negative affect in others could be a mechanism for diminished social reciprocity that poses a universal challenge for people with autism. These component- and valence- specific findings are of clinical relevance for the development and implementation of target-specific social interventions in autism
Deep Imaging of AXJ2019+112: The Luminosity of a ``Dark Cluster''
We detect a distant cluster of galaxies centered on the QSO lens and luminous
X-ray source AXJ2019+112, a.k.a. ``The Dark Cluster'' (Hattori et al 1997).
Using deep V,I Keck images and wide-field K_s imaging from the NTT, a tight red
sequence of galaxies is identified within a radius of 0.2 h^{-1} Mpc of the
known z=1.01 elliptical lensing galaxy. The sequence, which includes the
central elliptical galaxy, has a slope in good agreement with the model
predictions of Kodama et al (1998) for z~1. We estimate the integrated
rest-frame luminosity of the cluster to be L_V > 3.2 x 10^{11}h^{-2}L_{\sun}
(after accounting for significant extinction at the low latitude of this
field), more than an order of magnitude higher than previous estimates. The
central region of the cluster is deconvolved using the technique of Magain,
Courbin & Sohy (1998), revealing a thick central arc coincident with an
extended radio source. All the observed lensing features are readily explained
by differential magnification of a radio loud AGN by a shallow elliptical
potential. The QSO must lie just outside the diamond caustic, producing two
images, and the arc is a highly magnified image formed from a region close to
the center of the host galaxy, projecting inside the caustic. The
mass--to--light ratio within an aperture of 0.4 h ^{-1} Mpc is M_x/L_V=
224^{+112}_{-78}h(M/L_V)_{\sun}, using the X-ray temperature. The strong lens
model yields a compatible value, M/L_V= 372^{+94}_{-94}h(M/L_V)_{\sun}, whereas
an independent weak lensing analysis sets an upper limit of M/L_V <520
h(M/L_V)_{\sun}, typical of massive clusters.Comment: AAS Latex format, 24 pages, 9 figures. Fig 1a,b available at
http://astro.berkeley.edu/~benitezn/cluster.html . Submitted to ApJ on August
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