Perception and Individual Decision Making: Organizational Behavior
Perception and Individual Decision Making: Organizational Behavior
Perception and Individual Decision Making: Organizational Behavior
Peoples behavior is based on their perception of what reality is, not on reality itself. The world as it is perceived is the world that is behaviorally important.
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When individuals observe behavior, they attempt to determine whether it is internally or externally caused.
Distinctiveness: shows different behaviors in different situations. Consensus: response is the same as others to same situation. Consistency: responds in the same way over time.
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Contrast Effects Evaluation of a persons characteristics that are affected by comparisons with other people recently encountered who rank higher or lower on the same characteristics.
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higher performance of employees reflects preconceived leader expectations about employee capabilities.
Ethnic Profiling
A form of stereotyping in which a group of individuals is singled outtypically on the basis of race or ethnicityfor intensive inquiry, scrutinizing, or investigation.
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Employee Effort
Assessment of individual effort is a subjective judgment subject to perceptual distortion and bias.
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Outcomes
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Model Assumptions
Problem clarity Known options Clear preferences Constant preferences No time or cost constraints Maximum payoff
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Proposition that individual creativity requires expertise, creative-thinking skills, and intrinsic task motivation.
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Alternative Development
Satisficing: seeking the first alternative that solves problem. Engaging in incremental rather than unique problem solving through successive limited comparison of alternatives to the current alternative in effect.
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Anchoring Bias
Fixating on early, first received information.
Confirmation Bias
Using only the facts that support our decision.
Availability Bias
Using information that is most readily at hand.
Representative Bias
Assessing the likelihood of an occurrence by trying to match it with a preexisting category.
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Randomness Error
Trying to create meaning out of random events by falling prey to a false sense of control or superstitions.
Hindsight Bias
Falsely believing to have accurately predicted the outcome of an event, after that outcome is actually known.
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Intuition
Intuitive Decision Making
An unconscious process created out of distilled experience.
Reward Systems
Decision makers make action choices that are favored by the organization.
Formal Regulations
Organizational rules and policies limit the alternative choices of decision makers.
Historical Precedents
Past decisions influence current decisions.
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Rights
Respecting and protecting basic rights of individuals such as whistleblowers.
Justice
Imposing and enforcing rules fairly and impartially.
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The ethical principles of global organizations that reflect and respect local cultural norms are necessary for high standards and consistent practices.
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4. Dont assume that your specific decision style is appropriate to every situation.
5. Enhance personal creativity by looking for novel solutions or seeing problems in new ways, and using analogies.
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