Difference between revisions of "Leung Sharkey (2009) - Out Of Sight Out Of Mind The Mere Labeling Effect Of Multi Category Membership In Markets"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(2 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Article | {{Article | ||
|Has page=Leung Sharkey (2009) - Out Of Sight Out Of Mind The Mere Labeling Effect Of Multi Category Membership In Markets | |Has page=Leung Sharkey (2009) - Out Of Sight Out Of Mind The Mere Labeling Effect Of Multi Category Membership In Markets | ||
− | |Has title=Out Of Sight Out Of Mind The Mere Labeling Effect Of Multi Category Membership In Markets | + | |Has bibtex key= |
− | |Has author= | + | |Has article title=Out Of Sight Out Of Mind The Mere Labeling Effect Of Multi Category Membership In Markets |
− | |Has year= | + | |Has author=Leung Sharkey |
+ | |Has year=2009 | ||
|In journal= | |In journal= | ||
|In volume= | |In volume= |
Latest revision as of 18:15, 29 September 2020
Article | |
---|---|
Has bibtex key | |
Has article title | Out Of Sight Out Of Mind The Mere Labeling Effect Of Multi Category Membership In Markets |
Has author | Leung Sharkey |
Has year | 2009 |
In journal | |
In volume | |
In number | |
Has pages | |
Has publisher | |
© edegan.com, 2016 |
- This page is referenced in The NBER Entrepreneurship Research Boot Camp Page
Reference(s)
- Leung, Ming D., and Amanda J. Sharkey (2009), "Out of sight, out of mind: The mere labeling effect of multi-category membership in markets" pdf
Abstract
Extant work shows that actors who span multiple social categories are devalued relative to their more specialized peers. Two reasons have been proffered: 1) category spanners are of lower-quality or, 2) category spanners are difficult to understand and therefore ignored. It has been challenging for extant work to disentangle these two. This paper tackles this issue by employing a natural experiment on a peer-to-peer lending website. Difference in difference analyses show that, regardless of underlying ability or quality, perceptions of category spanning can result in devaluation.