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New page: *This page is referenced in The NBER Entrepreneurship Research Boot Camp Page ==Reference(s)== *Leun...
*This page is referenced in [[Entrepreneurship_Research_Boot_Camp#Sociological_Approaches_to_Entrepreneurship | 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" [http://www.edegan.com/pdfs/Leung%20Sharkey%20(2009)%20-%20Out%20Of%20Sight%20Out%20Of%20Mind%20The%20Mere%20Labeling%20Effect%20Of%20Multi%20Category%20Membership%20In%20Markets.pdf 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.
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