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2025.12.31Li, Andrew, et al. "Family Demands Diversity, Team Work–Family Conflict, and Team Effort: A Moderated Mediation Model." Human Resource Management (2025).
【Abstract】Most research on family demands has been conducted at the individual level, showing that they can negatively influence employees' abilities to manage the work-family interface. We challenge this existing paradigm by arguing that at the team level, family demands diversity (i.e., differences among members of the same team with respect to their family demands) can enable the entire team to better manage the work-family interface. Drawing on the categorization-elaboration model and social exchange theory, we found that family demands diversity was indirectly and positively related to team effort through team backup behavior and team work-to-family conflict, and these effects were stronger when team family identity was low and supervisor family support was high. We discuss the theoretical implications of our findings and the practical implications for HR policies and practices.
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2025.12.30Xu, Le, Yang Yu, and Francesco Zanetti. "The adoption and termination of suppliers over the business cycle." Journal of Monetary Economics 151 (2025): 103730.
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2025.12.30Nan, Haonan, et al. "Governance of Smart Service Social Responsibility: A Systematic Literature Review." IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management (2025).
【Abstract】Smart technologies are reshaping service operations across sectors while raising critical concerns related to privacy, fairness, and accountability. Given the complexity of risks arising from interactions among diverse service agents, effective governance demands a holistic understanding of how responsibility is generated and managed within smart service ecosystems. To address these dynamics, we conduct a systematic literature review in order to establish a foundational understanding of smart service social responsibility (SSSR). We propose a novel I-D-G (identify-deconstruct-govern) framework, providing an integrated lens through which to analyze responsibility emergence, attribution, and governance in multiagent systems. Our review identifies key dimensions of responsibility, clarifies the roles and interactions of agents, and synthesizes governance practices along three pathways: technological governance, institutional regulation, and multiparty supervision. This study advances the literature on service, operations, and engineering management by offering a structured framework with which to enhance social responsibility and collaborative governance in smart service operations. Finally, we propose several future research directions to strengthen the adaptive and effective governance of SSSR from both theoretical and practical perspectives.
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2025.12.29魏煊,大模型背景下的“人-智-群”协同决策机制与应用研究
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2025.12.17Huang, Rui, and Chongfeng Wu. "Tell less, get more? News topic concentration and stock market reaction." Finance Research Letters (2025): 107740.
【Abstract】This paper examines the effect of news topic concentration (TCR) on Chinese stocks. Our empirical findings reveal a U-shaped relationship between TCR and market reaction, which is mediated by investor attention. Information ambiguity complements attention's role at low TCR. Moreover, TCR has a greater effect on stock prices when firms have lower institutional ownership, higher information uncertainty, and when the news originates from state-controlled media. Additionally, we observe that the U-shaped patterns differ across dominant meta-themes. Our results highlight the importance of the structure of the information present in its integration into asset prices and emphasize the role of journalists as key information intermediaries.
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2025.12.16于海跃,数据驱动的医院床位共享的柔性机制和优化方法研究
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2025.12.15Zhang, Mingyue, et al."Sunk Cost Fallacy, Price Adjustment, and Subscription Services for Information Goods." Journal of the Association for Information Systems 26.2 (2025): 543-574.
【Abstract】Information goods often adopt a subscription-based business model, where customers pay a fixed fee to enter into a purchase agreement. The up-front payment of the subscription fee creates a sunk cost for members, which may influence their future consumption behavior. Although price adjustment is a common strategy employed by subscription providers, it remains unclear how changes in the fixed fee-as a sunk cost-affect the consumption of information goods. For this paper, we first leveraged a quasi-natural experiment in a movie subscription service and employed a difference-in-differences model to estimate the impact of fixed fee adjustments on overall consumption. Then we used a randomized experiment to unveil the underlying mechanism of sunk cost fallacy. Our findings reveal that the average treatment effect on information goods consumption is both significant and economically meaningful. Specifically, the box office revenues of an average movie increased by 12%similar to 35% in the six months following a sudden downward price adjustment, likely because a lower fixed subscription fee appeals to highly price-conscious consumers, who are more susceptible to the sunk cost fallacy. We also uncovered insightful heterogeneous effects, demonstrating that niche information goods, especially those driven by narrow appeal and high quality, benefit the most from such a downward price adjustment of a subscription service. Our results are robust to alternative control groups, placebo tests, and different data analysis granularity. Our research enhances the understanding of the sunk cost fallacy within the context of subscription-based information goods.
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2025.12.15徐海峰,基于生成式人工智能的人机协作创造力研究



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