@article{46471, author = {{Unterstell, Rembert}}, journal = {{german research – Magazine of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft}}, number = {{1}}, pages = {{8--11}}, title = {{{„Allowing the Economy to Breathe Even During the Crisis“ – Interview with Tax Expert Caren Sureth-Sloane}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @techreport{46491, author = {{Kundisch, Dennis}}, pages = {{12--13}}, title = {{{#DIGITALENTS - Digital Talents Programm geht in die zweite Runde}}}, volume = {{1}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{45656, author = {{Kempkes, J. P. and Kreuzhage, K. and Kundisch, Dennis and Seutter, Janina and Weskamp, Christoph}}, journal = {{Kultur Management Network Magazin}}, title = {{{Digitale Transformation im Theater – Mittels Besucherforschung und Entscheidungsunterstützung zur besseren Angebotsgestaltung}}}, volume = {{172}}, year = {{2023}}, } @techreport{46534, abstract = {{We study the effect of education on health (hospital stays, number of diagnosed conditions, self-rated poor health, and obesity) over the life-cycle in Germany, using compulsory schooling reforms as a source of exogenous variation. Our results suggest a positive correlation of health and education which increases over the life-cycle. We do not, however, find any positive local average treatment effects of an additional year of schooling on health or health care utilization for individuals up to age 79. An exception is obesity, where positive effects of schooling start to be visible around age 60 and become very large in age group 75-79. The results in age group 75-79 need to be interpreted with caution, however, due to small sample size and possible problems of attrition.}}, author = {{Schmitz, Hendrik and Tawiah, Beatrice Baaba}}, keywords = {{Education, health, life-cycle effects, compulsory schooling}}, publisher = {{RWI - Leibniz-Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung, Ruhr-University Bochum, TU Dortmund University, University of Duisburg-Essen}}, title = {{{Life-cycle health effects of compulsory schooling}}}, volume = {{1006}}, year = {{2023}}, } @techreport{46521, author = {{Freise, Diana and Schiele, Valentin and Schmitz, Hendrik}}, issn = {{1556-5068}}, keywords = {{General Earth and Planetary Sciences, General Environmental Science}}, publisher = {{Elsevier BV}}, title = {{{Housing Situations and Local COVID-19 Infection Dynamics – A Case Study With Small-Area Data}}}, doi = {{10.2139/ssrn.4372490}}, year = {{2023}}, } @techreport{46536, abstract = {{We study the effect of education on vaccination against COVID-19 and influenza in Germany and Europe. Our identification strategy makes use of changes in compulsory schooling laws and allows to estimate local average treatment effects for individuals between 59 and 91 years of age. We find no significant effect of an additional year of schooling on vaccination status in Germany. Pooling data from Europe, we conclude that schooling increases the likelihood to vaccinate against COVID by an economically negligible effect of one percentage point (zero for influenza). However, we find indications that additional schooling increases fear of side effects from COVID vaccination.}}, author = {{Monsees, Daniel and Schmitz, Hendrik}}, keywords = {{COVID, influenza, vaccination, education, compulsory schooling}}, publisher = {{RWI - Leibniz-Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung, Ruhr-University Bochum, TU Dortmund University, University of Duisburg-Essen}}, title = {{{The effect of compulsory schooling on vaccination against COVID and Influenza}}}, volume = {{1011}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inproceedings{46646, author = {{Althaus, Maike and Grieger, Nicole and Vorbohle, Christian and Müller, Michelle and Kundisch, Dennis}}, location = {{Madrid, Spanien}}, title = {{{Business Models for Cultural Event Platforms - A Taxonomy Approach}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inproceedings{46665, author = {{Garnefeld, I. and Böhm, Eva and Hanf, L. and Helm, S.}}, booktitle = {{2023 AMA Summer Academic Conference, San Francisco, CA}}, location = {{San Francisco, CA}}, title = {{{Unboxing video effectiveness – Does speech matter?}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inproceedings{46666, author = {{Kessing, K. and Garnefeld, I. and Böhm, Eva}}, booktitle = {{EMAC Annual Conference, Odense, Denmark}}, location = {{Odense, Denmark.}}, title = {{{The dark and bright side of online reviews in manufacturer online shops}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inproceedings{46667, author = {{Hanf, L. and Garnefeld, I. and Böhm, Eva and Helm, S.}}, booktitle = {{EMAC Annual Conference, Odense, Denmark}}, location = {{Odense, Denmark}}, title = {{{Stimulating engagement with unboxing videos – Does speech matter?}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inproceedings{33722, author = {{Müller, Michelle and Neumann, Jürgen}}, booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 55th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS)}}, location = {{Maui, Hawaii, USA}}, title = {{{Bring me my Meal on your Wheel - An Empirical Analysis of the Impact of Food Delivery Platforms on Local Restaurant Employment}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{34114, abstract = {{Qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) enables researchers in international management to better understand how the impact of a single explanatory factor depends on the context of other factors. But the analytical toolbox of QCA does not include a parameter for the explanatory power of a single explanatory factor or “condition”. In this paper, we therefore reinterpret the Banzhaf power index, originally developed in cooperative game theory, to establish a goodness-of-fit parameter in QCA. The relative Banzhaf index we suggest measures the explanatory power of one condition averaged across all sufficient combinations of conditions. The paper argues that the index is especially informative in three situations that are all salient in international management and call for a context-sensitive analysis of single conditions, namely substantial limited diversity in the data, the emergence of strong INUS conditions in the analysis, and theorizing with contingency factors. The paper derives the properties of the relative Banzhaf index in QCA, demonstrates how the index can be computed easily from a rudimentary truth table, and explores its insights by revisiting selected papers in international management that apply fuzzy-set QCA. It finally suggests a three-step procedure for utilizing the relative Banzhaf index when the causal structure involves both contingency effects and configurational causation. }}, author = {{Haake, Claus-Jochen and Schneider, Martin}}, journal = {{Journal of International Management}}, keywords = {{Qualitative comparative analysis, Banzhaf power index, causality, explanatory power}}, publisher = {{Elsevier}}, title = {{{Playing games with QCA: Measuring the explanatory power of single conditions with the Banzhaf index}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{46642, abstract = {{ Purpose This study aims to conceptually propose and empirically validate a path perspective on the servitization process of manufacturing firms. It identifies a customer and an outcome path to servitization, sheds light on the pivotal role of digital technology usage for both value-creating paths and explores their financial and relational performance outcomes. Design/methodology/approach The authors use a mixed-method approach, combining a qualitative study with a cross-sectional survey in the USA, the UK and Germany. Findings Manufacturing firms choose between two generic paths to servitization, a customer and an outcome path. Digital technology usage is equally important for both value-creating paths. Progress on the outcome path has a positive effect on firms’ financial performance, whereas the customer path has an indirect effect only, fully mediated by firms’ relational performance. Customer tenure and customer’s open-mindedness are contingency variables in the digital technology usage – servitization path – firm performance framework. Research limitations/implications A path perspective is useful to conceptualize the servitization processes in manufacturing industries. Future research should investigate the sequential choice of servitization paths and explore its drivers and performance outcomes. Practical implications To create and claim superior value for their customers, managers can choose between two servitization paths, leading to differential performance outcomes. While digital technology usage is key to progress on both paths, it is particularly effective for newly acquired customers on the customer path. Suppliers should target their value-creating service offerings at open-minded customer firms to reap their full performance potential. Originality/value Propose and empirically validate a path-perspective on servitization. Understand the pivotal importance of digital technology usage for both servitization paths. }}, author = {{Harrmann, Lisa Katharina and Eggert, Andreas and Böhm, Eva}}, issn = {{0309-0566}}, journal = {{European Journal of Marketing}}, keywords = {{Marketing}}, number = {{3}}, pages = {{834--857}}, publisher = {{Emerald}}, title = {{{Digital technology usage as a driver of servitization paths in manufacturing industries}}}, doi = {{10.1108/ejm-11-2021-0914}}, volume = {{57}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{46765, abstract = {{Über zwei Drittel der Anfänger*innen im Übergangssystem verfügen maximal über einen Hauptschul-/Mittelschulabschluss. Sie sind damit überrepräsentiert, was sich weniger durch ihre Kompetenzen als mit ihrem sozioökonomischen Status und klassenspezifischen Nachqualifizierungsverhalten erklären lässt.}}, author = {{Sommer, Christian}}, issn = {{00059536}}, journal = {{Berufsbildung. Zeitschrift für Theorie-Praxis-Dialog}}, keywords = {{Social inequality, Transition system}}, pages = {{9--13}}, publisher = {{wbv}}, title = {{{Der Hauptschulabschluss als sozial selektiver Hauptzulieferer des Übergangssystems}}}, doi = {{10.3278/BB2303W}}, volume = {{199}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inbook{46867, author = {{Dieter, Peter}}, booktitle = {{Lecture Notes in Computer Science}}, isbn = {{9783031436116}}, issn = {{0302-9743}}, publisher = {{Springer Nature Switzerland}}, title = {{{A Regret Policy for the Dynamic Vehicle Routing Problem with Time Windows}}}, doi = {{10.1007/978-3-031-43612-3_14}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{46971, abstract = {{AbstractLow socio-economic status is associated with higher SARS-CoV-2 incidences. In this paper we study whether this is a result of differences in (1) the frequency, (2) intensity, and/or (3) duration of local SARS-CoV-2 outbreaks depending on the local housing situations. So far, there is not clear evidence which of the three factors dominates. Using small-scale data from neighborhoods in the German city Essen and a flexible estimation approach which does not require prior knowledge about specific transmission characteristics of SARS-CoV-2, behavioral responses or other potential model parameters, we find evidence for the last of the three hypotheses. Outbreaks do not happen more often in less well-off areas or are more severe (in terms of the number of cases), but they last longer. This indicates that the socio-economic gradient in infection levels is at least in parts a result of a more sustained spread of infections in neighborhoods with worse housing conditions after local outbreaks and suggests that in case of an epidemic allocating scarce resources in containment measures to areas with poor housing conditions might have the greatest benefit.}}, author = {{Freise, Diana and Schiele, Valentin and Schmitz, Hendrik}}, issn = {{2045-2322}}, journal = {{Scientific Reports}}, keywords = {{Multidisciplinary}}, number = {{1}}, publisher = {{Springer Science and Business Media LLC}}, title = {{{Housing situations and local COVID-19 infection dynamics using small-area data}}}, doi = {{10.1038/s41598-023-40734-0}}, volume = {{13}}, year = {{2023}}, } @techreport{47107, author = {{Beverungen, Daniel and zur Heiden, Philipp and Lehrer, Christiane and Trier, Matthias and Bartelheimer, Christian and Bradt, Tobias and Distel, Bettina and Drews, Paul and Ehmke, Jan Fabian and Fill, Hans-Georg and Flath, Christoph M. and Fridgen, Gilbert and Grisold, Thomas and Janiesch, Christian and Janson, Andreas and Krancher, Oliver and Krönung, Julia and Kundisch, Dennis and Márton, Attila and Mirbabaie, Milad and Morana, Stefan and Mueller, Benjamin and Müller, Oliver and Oberländer, Anna Maria and Peters, Christoph and Peukert, Christoph and Reuter-Oppermann, Melanie and Riehle, Dennis M. and Robra-Bissantz, Susanne and Röglinger, Maximilian and Rosenthal, Kristina and Schryen, Guido and Schütte, Reinhard and Strahringer, Susanne and Urbach, Nils and Wessel, Lauri and Zavolokina, Liudmila and Zschech, Patrick}}, pages = {{16}}, publisher = {{Department of Information Systems, Paderborn University}}, title = {{{Implementing Digital Responsibility through Information Systems Research: A Delphi Study of Objectives, Activities, and Challenges in IS Research}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inproceedings{45459, author = {{Seutter, Janina}}, location = {{San Francisco, USA}}, title = {{{The Origination of Online Reviews in B2B Markets: A Qualitative Study on the Underlying Motives of Review Writers}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @techreport{49092, author = {{Amberger, Harald and Siahaan, Fernando and Sureth-Sloane, Caren}}, publisher = {{TRR 266 Accounting for Transparency}}, title = {{{Turnover-Based Corporate Income Taxation and Corporate Risk-Taking}}}, doi = {{10.2139/ssrn.4589055}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{46139, author = {{Schneider, Martin and Radermacher, Katharina}}, issn = {{0032-3446}}, journal = {{Wie Arbeitgeber strategisch gegen den Arbeitskräftemangel vorgehen.}}, number = {{580}}, publisher = {{Die politische Meinung}}, title = {{{Wie Arbeitgeber strategisch gegen den Arbeitskräftemangel vorgehen.}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inproceedings{48285, author = {{Lebedeva, Anastasia and Kornowicz, Jaroslaw and Lammert, Olesja and Papenkordt, Jörg}}, booktitle = {{Artificial Intelligence in HCI}}, title = {{{The Role of Response Time for Algorithm Aversion in Fast and Slow Thinking Tasks}}}, doi = {{10.1007/978-3-031-35891-3_9}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inproceedings{47976, author = {{Papenkordt, Jörg and Ngonga-Ngomo, Axel-Cyrille and Thommes, Kirsten}}, booktitle = {{Academy of Management Proceedings}}, title = {{{Are Numbers or Words the Key to User Reliance on AI?}}}, doi = {{10.5465/AMPROC.2023.12946}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{49213, author = {{Schneider, Martin and Radermacher, Katharina}}, issn = {{0032-3446}}, journal = {{Die Politische Meinung}}, number = {{580}}, pages = {{63--67}}, title = {{{Employer Branding - Wie Arbeitgeber strategisch gegen den Arbeitskräftemangel vorgehen. }}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{49309, abstract = {{I study the effect of heterogeneous beliefs about asset prices on the long-term behavior of financial markets. Starting from the ideas of Abreu and Brunnermeier (Citation2003), a two-dimensional system of differential equations is developed. The first dynamic variable is the asset price growth rate. The second dynamic variable is the number of investors who believe that asset prices are abnormally high. In a phase plane analysis, I find both stable and unstable equilibria, depending on the spread of information and the response to other agents’ beliefs. If individuals try to increase their returns while perceiving more overpricing, these equilibria can be spirals or even approach limit cycles. Although I intend to study general price patterns, abnormally high asset prices can be caused by financial bubbles. In this model, bubbles can emerge and deflate both in cycles or directly, or they can grow until they burst. Further, I analyze market behavior after a central bank increases the interest rate. This can lead to new stable equilibria, but the emergence and bursting of bubbles cannot be prevented.}}, author = {{Burs, Carina}}, issn = {{2332-2039}}, journal = {{Cogent Economics & Finance}}, keywords = {{asset pricing, subjective information, stability conditions, monetary policy, risk aversion}}, number = {{2}}, publisher = {{Informa UK Limited}}, title = {{{A model of cycles and bubbles under heterogeneous beliefs in financial markets}}}, doi = {{10.1080/23322039.2023.2272485}}, volume = {{11}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inbook{47927, author = {{Grüttner, Niclas Christian}}, booktitle = {{50 Jahre Universität Paderborn. Studentische Forschungsprojekte zur Gründungsgeschichte. Ein Rückblick}}, editor = {{Pöppinghege, Rainer}}, pages = {{6--33}}, title = {{{Frühe Versuche zur Etablierung des Hochschulstandorts Paderborn (1945-1970)}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{48086, abstract = {{Individuals strive to make decisions that are consistent with not only their consumer preferences but also their psychological needs. However, they are confronted with complex, ambiguous or even false information. Ideologies and belief systems provide guidance when processing and evaluating information and give a coherent and comprehensible interpretation of reality. The first question is: why is an individual attracted to a particular ideology? Individuals choose ideologies that resonate with their subjective psychological needs and preferences. Second, how do individuals search for ideologies and find out which suit them best? We model an individual’s sequential information search for the best matching ideologies by applying Bayesian learning and utility optimization. Additional information enhances utility by reducing uncertainty. As a search is costly, the process may stop once an individual adopts an ideology even if the information set remains incomplete. Third, once they have chosen a particular ideology, individuals adhere to its rules and norms when making everyday decisions. Consumers not only physically consume, but they also act in accordance with their psychological needs.}}, author = {{Burs, Carina and Gries, Thomas and Müller, Veronika}}, issn = {{2158-3609}}, journal = {{Journal of Organizational Psychology}}, keywords = {{Economics, Ideology, Decision-making}}, number = {{1}}, publisher = {{North American Business Press}}, title = {{{The Choice of Ideology and Everyday Decisions}}}, doi = {{10.33423/jop.v23i1.6033}}, volume = {{23}}, year = {{2023}}, } @book{48077, author = {{Volgmann, Simone}}, isbn = {{9783763974245}}, publisher = {{wbv Publikation}}, title = {{{Erlebnisorientiert Lehren und Lernen in der beruflichen Bildung. Entwicklung eines didaktischen Konzepts im Rahmen von designbasierter Forschung. }}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{48500, author = {{Namujju, Lillian Donna and Acquah-Swanzy, Henrietta and Ngoti, Irene F.}}, issn = {{0301-4215}}, journal = {{Energy Policy}}, keywords = {{Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law, General Energy}}, publisher = {{Elsevier BV}}, title = {{{An IAD framework analysis of minigrid institutions for sustainable rural electrification in East Africa: A comparative study of Uganda and Tanzania}}}, doi = {{10.1016/j.enpol.2023.113742}}, volume = {{182}}, year = {{2023}}, } @techreport{34802, abstract = {{Employing data on 3,943 banks from the EU-15 between 2013 and 2020, this paper empirically analyzes the relationship between banking market consolidation, market power and banking stability, separately for the loan and deposit market. We initially find that European banks follow a loss-leader pricing strategy and cross-subsidize between both markets. In addition, it is observed that the empirical link between consolidation and market power is weak and thus, provokes diametral findings. Investigating the conditionality of consolidation and market power further reveals that, although the negative impact of consolidation on stability is reduced, it is not fully crowded out, even if banks exhibit stronger market power in the loan and deposit market. Analyzing likely impact channels, different determinants of bank distress as well as effects from the lower bound and negative interest rates regime provides further important insights.}}, author = {{Herwald, Sarah and Voigt, Simone and Uhde, André}}, title = {{{The conditional impact of market consolidation and market power on banking stability – Evidence from Europe}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{47431, author = {{Burmeister, Sascha Christian and Guericke, Daniela and Schryen, Guido}}, journal = {{Flexible Services and Manufacturing Journal}}, title = {{{A Memetic NSGA-II for the Multi-Objective Flexible Job Shop Scheduling Problem with Real-time Energy Tariffs}}}, doi = {{10.1007/s10696-023-09517-7}}, year = {{2023}}, } @techreport{48979, author = {{Maiterth, Ralf and Sureth-Sloane, Caren and Dyck, Daniel and Heinemann-Heile, Vanessa}}, publisher = {{TRR 266 Accounting for Transparency}}, title = {{{GBP-Monitor: Betriebswirtschaftliche Einschätzungen und Erwartungen von Unternehmen in Deutschland. Unternehmenstrends im November 2023}}}, doi = {{10.52569/DURP4114}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inbook{47926, author = {{Grüttner, Niclas Christian}}, booktitle = {{50 Jahre Universität Paderborn. Studentische Forschungsprojekte zur Gründungsgeschichte. Ein Rückblick}}, editor = {{Rainer, Pöppinghege}}, pages = {{6--33}}, title = {{{Frühe Versuche zur Etablierung des Hochschulstandorts Paderborn (1945-1970)}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{35852, author = {{Neumann, Jürgen and Gutt, Dominik and Kundisch, Dennis}}, journal = {{MIS Quarterly}}, number = {{4}}, pages = {{1709--1726}}, title = {{{Reviewing from a Distance: Uncovering Asymmetric Moderations of Spatial and Temporal Distances Between Sentiment Negativity and Rating}}}, volume = {{47}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{47093, abstract = {{We experimentally test a theoretically promising amendment to the ratchet-up mechanism of the Paris Agreement. The ratchet-up mechanism prescribes that parties’ commitments to the global response to climate change cannot decrease over time, and our results show that its effect is detrimental. We design a public goods game to study whether cooperation is promoted by an amendment to the mechanism that stipulates that all agents must contribute at least a collectively chosen minimum based on the principle of the lowest common denominator. We find that binding collective minimum contributions improve the effectiveness of the ratchet-up mechanism. Non-binding minimum contributions, by contrast, do not encourage cooperation. Our data indicate that the difference is attributable to conditional cooperative dynamics. If other participants contribute less than the collective minimum contribution, even initially cooperative participants start to negatively reciprocate this form of non-compliance by contributing less.}}, author = {{Alt, Marius and Kesternich, Martin and Gallier, Carlo and Sturm, Bodo}}, issn = {{1556-5068}}, journal = {{Journal of Environmental Economics and Management}}, keywords = {{global public goods, climate change, institutions, ratchet-up mechanism, minimum contributions, laboratory experiment}}, title = {{{Collective Minimum Contributions to Counteract the Ratchet Effect in the Voluntary Provision of Public Goods}}}, doi = {{10.2139/ssrn.4288327}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{49446, author = {{Diederich, Sarah and Iseke, Anja and Pull, Kerstin and Schneider, Martin}}, issn = {{0958-5192}}, journal = {{The International Journal of Human Resource Management}}, keywords = {{Management of Technology and Innovation, Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management, Strategy and Management, Business and International Management, Industrial relations}}, pages = {{1--29}}, publisher = {{Informa UK Limited}}, title = {{{Role (in-)congruity and the Catch 22 for female executives: how stereotyping contributes to the gender pay gap at top executive level}}}, doi = {{10.1080/09585192.2023.2273331}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{47102, author = {{Gallier, Carlo and Goeschl, Timo and Kesternich, Martin and Lohse, Johannes and Reif, Christiane and Römer, Daniel}}, issn = {{1556-5068}}, journal = {{Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization}}, pages = {{457--468}}, title = {{{Inter-Charity Competition under Spatial Differentiation: Sorting, Crowding, and Spillovers}}}, doi = {{10.2139/ssrn.3466679}}, volume = {{216}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{45112, author = {{Beverungen, Daniel and Kundisch, Dennis and Mirbabaie, Milad and Müller, Oliver and Schryen, Guido and Trang, Simon Thanh-Nam and Trier, Matthias}}, journal = {{Business & Information Systems Engineering}}, number = {{4}}, pages = {{463 -- 474}}, title = {{{Digital Responsibility – a Multilevel Framework for Responsible Digitalization}}}, doi = {{https://doi.org/10.1007/s12599-023-00822-x}}, volume = {{65}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inbook{49469, abstract = {{Today, it is possible to collect and connect large amounts of digital data from various sources and life domains. This chapter examines the potential and the risks of this development from an interdisciplinary perspective. It defines the ‘global digital twin’ of a human being as the sum of all digitally stored information and predictive knowledge about a person. It points out that, compared to the digital twin of a machine, the human global digital twin is far more complex because it comprises the genetic code and the biographic code of a person. The genetic code contains not only a simple ‘construction plan’ but also hereditary information, in a form that is difficult to read. The biographic code contains all other information that can be assembled about a person, which is obtained via data from cameras, microphones, or other sensors, as well as general personal information. When the growing wealth of information concerning the genetic code and the biographical code is properly utilised, insights from biology and the behavioural sciences may be used to predict personal events such as health problems, job resignations, or even crimes. Because our own interests and those of private firms are partly in conflict over the use of this powerful knowledge, it is still unclear whether the global digital twins of humans will become a liberating or disciplining force for citizens. On the one hand, human beings are not machines: They are aware of their digital twin and therefore are able to influence it throughout their lives. Because of their free will, human beings are in general difficult to predict. Dystopias of full control over individual behaviour are therefore unlikely to materialise. On the other hand, private firms are beginning to take advantage of the available digital twins of humans by monopolising data access and by commercialising predictive knowledge. This is problematic because, unlike machines, human beings cannot only benefit from but also suffer due to their digital twins as they attempt to shape their own lives. We illustrate these issues with some examples and arrive at two conclusions: It is in the public interest for people to be granted more property rights over their personal global digital twins, and publicly funded research needs to become more interdisciplinary, much like private firms that have already begun to perform interdisciplinary research.}}, author = {{Hellweg, Talea Davina and Schneider, Martin and Rückert, Ulrich and Harteis, Christian and Pilz, Sarah}}, booktitle = {{The Digital Twin of Human}}, title = {{{Who Will Own Our Global Digital Twin: The Power of Genetic and Biographic Information to Shape Our Lives}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{49456, author = {{Nastjuk, I. and Trang, S. and Grummeck-Braamt, J. and Adam, M. and Tarafdar, M.}}, journal = {{European Journal of Information Systems}}, title = {{{Integrating and Synthesizing Technostress Research: A Meta-Analysis on Technostress Creators, Outcomes, and Usage Contexts}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{49453, author = {{Wolf, T. and Trang, S. and Weiger, W. and Trenz, M.}}, journal = {{Journal of Information Technology}}, title = {{{The technology-behavioral compensation effect: Unintended consequences of health technology adoption}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{49457, author = {{Krämer, T. and Weiger, W. and Trang, S. and Trenz, M.}}, journal = {{Journal of Product Innovation Management}}, pages = {{154--174}}, title = {{{Deflected by the Tin Foil Hat? Word-of-Mouth, Conspiracy Beliefs, and the Adoption of Public Health Apps}}}, volume = {{40}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{49455, author = {{Hengstler, S. and Kuehnel, S. and Masuch, K. and Nastjuk, I. and Trang, S.}}, journal = {{Computers & Security}}, title = {{{Should I Really do That? Using Quantile Regression to Examine the Impact of Sanctions on Information Security Policy Compliance Behavior}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{47953, author = {{Kornowicz, Jaroslaw and Thommes, Kirsten}}, isbn = {{9783031358906}}, issn = {{0302-9743}}, journal = {{Artificial Intelligence in HCI}}, publisher = {{Springer Nature Switzerland}}, title = {{{Aggregating Human Domain Knowledge for Feature Ranking}}}, doi = {{10.1007/978-3-031-35891-3_7}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inproceedings{47972, author = {{Gutt, Jana Kim and Mehic, Miro and Thommes, Kirsten}}, booktitle = {{Academy of Management Proceedings}}, title = {{{Oh my Goodness: Investigating the Goodness of Performance Appraisal Formats Between and Within Teams}}}, doi = {{10.5465/AMPROC.2023.214}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{44639, author = {{Hoppe, Julia Amelie and Tuisku, Outi and Johansson-Pajala, Rose-Marie and Pekkarinen, Satu and Hennala, Lea and Gustafsson, Christine and Melkas, Helinä and Thommes, Kirsten}}, issn = {{2451-9588}}, journal = {{Computers in Human Behavior Reports}}, keywords = {{Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Neuroscience, Computer Science Applications, Human-Computer Interaction, Applied Psychology, Neuroscience (miscellaneous)}}, publisher = {{Elsevier BV}}, title = {{{When do individuals choose care robots over a human caregiver? Insights from a laboratory experiment on choices under uncertainty}}}, doi = {{10.1016/j.chbr.2022.100258}}, volume = {{9}}, year = {{2023}}, } @techreport{47078, abstract = {{Informationen sind für eine erfolgreiche Klimapolitik in doppelter Hinsicht wichtig: Sie werden benötigt, wenn Potenziale zur Vermeidung von Emissionen identifiziert und klimapolitische Instrumente ausgewählt werden. Und sie sind zentral, damit Bürger/innen selbst Entscheidungen im Sinne des Klimaschutzes treffen können.}}, author = {{Frick, Marc and Foese, Dario and Von Graevenitz, Kathrine and Kesternich, Martin and Wagner, Ulrich}}, issn = {{1430-8800}}, keywords = {{General Medicine}}, pages = {{44--50}}, publisher = {{Ökologisches Wirtschaften 38(1)}}, title = {{{Die Doppelwirkung von Information für klimafreundliches Handeln}}}, doi = {{10.14512/oew380144}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{47921, abstract = {{ The relationship between nonfinancial reporting and real sustainable change within and beyond organizations is fraught with complication. Furthermore, all facets of the relationship have not been examined equally. The contributions of this special issue made substantive progress in this regard and draw our focus to several remaining complications—in particular, the societal impacts of nonfinancial reporting. With this introduction, we seek to move the conversation forward by proposing a framework that disentangles the linkages between nonfinancial reporting and real sustainable change at multiple levels of analysis. We highlight the distinction between sustainability-related outputs and outcomes that typically materialize at the firm level, and eventually lead to sustainable impact at the societal level. Future research should advance this distinction and scrutinize the impact of real sustainable change beyond firm-level outputs, study the organizational change processes from antecedents to impacts, and examine the interrelationships between different instruments to foster real sustainable change. }}, author = {{Hahn, Rüdiger and Reimsbach, Daniel and Wickert, Christopher}}, issn = {{1086-0266}}, journal = {{Organization & Environment}}, keywords = {{Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management, General Environmental Science}}, number = {{1}}, pages = {{3--16}}, publisher = {{SAGE Publications}}, title = {{{Nonfinancial Reporting and Real Sustainable Change: Relationship Status—It’s Complicated}}}, doi = {{10.1177/10860266231151653}}, volume = {{36}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{47922, abstract = {{This year, the 7th edition of the Dutch Accounting Research Conference (DARC) was hosted by the Nijmegen School of Management at Radboud University on Thursday, March 23. In total, over 75 accounting researchers from various Dutch universities were welcomed by Frank Hartmann, chair of the accounting group and head of the Business Economics department. During the day, four keynote speakers presented their research and in a panel discussion, the current state of accounting education was debated. In the evening, participants gathered to network over dinner. This article presents a discussion of the theme of the conference, an outline of the research papers and projects presented during the conference, and a summary of the panel discussion on Accounting Education.}}, author = {{De Meyst, Karen and Niederkofler, Thomas and Reimsbach, Daniel}}, issn = {{2543-1684}}, journal = {{Maandblad voor Accountancy en Bedrijfseconomie}}, keywords = {{General Arts and Humanities}}, number = {{5/6}}, pages = {{153--155}}, publisher = {{Amsterdam University Press}}, title = {{{DARC 2023 at Radboud University: Societal challenges in accounting research and education}}}, doi = {{10.5117/mab.97.107215}}, volume = {{97}}, year = {{2023}}, } @techreport{49549, author = {{Harst, Simon and Schanz, Deborah and Siegel, Felix and Sureth-Sloane, Caren}}, publisher = {{TRR 266 Accounting for Transparency}}, title = {{{2022 Global MNC Tax Complexity Survey}}}, doi = {{10.52569/VKAO7696}}, year = {{2023}}, } @techreport{46044, author = {{Giese, Henning and Holtmann, Svea}}, title = {{{Towards Green Driving - Income Taxes Incentives for Plug-In Hybrids}}}, doi = {{10.2139/ssrn.4394968}}, volume = {{118}}, year = {{2023}}, }