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Paul Andrew Bottomley

Researcher at Cardiff University

Publications -  55
Citations -  3027

Paul Andrew Bottomley is an academic researcher from Cardiff University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Total factor productivity & Organizational citizenship behavior. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 55 publications receiving 2696 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul Andrew Bottomley include University of Bath.

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Mixed messages in brand names: Separating the impacts of letter shape from sound symbolism

TL;DR: This article showed that the visual characteristics of the brand name letters provide a plausible alternative explanation of the sound symbolism effect in brand names and showed that powerful visual messages are present in brand name and that because of confounding, the contribution sound symbolism makes to the brand names may not always act as thought.
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Understanding fans’ responses to the sponsor of a rival team

TL;DR: This paper found that schadenfreude is a better predictor of affective and behavioural responses than fan identification, despite its popularity in recent research involving rival fans, and that more highly identified fans tend to pay greater attention to the sponsor of their rival team.
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Measuring childhood materialism: Refining and validating Schor's Consumer Involvement Scale

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the measurement of childhood materialism using Schor's (2004) Consumer Involvement Scale and established the psychometric superiority of a three-factor structure comprising dissatisfaction, consumer orientation, and brand awareness components.
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Self-Sacrificial Leadership and Employee Behaviours: An Examination of the Role of Organizational Social Capital

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined a mechanism, namely organizational social capital (OSC), through which self-sacrificial leadership is related to two types of employee behaviours: organizational citizenship behaviours (OCBs) and counterproductive behaviours (CPBs).
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Relative age effect in elite soccer: more early-born players, but no better valued, and no paragon clubs or countries

TL;DR: There are no paragon clubs or countries immune to RAE; that is clubs and countries do not differ systematically in the RAE they experience; also, that Poisson regression is a powerful and flexible method of analysing RAE data.