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Pino G. Audia

Researcher at Dartmouth College

Publications -  40
Citations -  4144

Pino G. Audia is an academic researcher from Dartmouth College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Empathy & Organizational ecology. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 37 publications receiving 3665 citations. Previous affiliations of Pino G. Audia include University of California, Berkeley & London Business School.

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The social structure of entrepreneurial activity : Geographic concentration of footwear production in the United States, 1940-1989

TL;DR: This paper argued that heterogeneity in entrepreneurial opportunities, rather than differential performance, maintains geographic concentration and that exposure to existing organizations in the industry to acquire tacit knowledge, obtain important social ties, and build self-confidence is important for entrepreneurial activity.
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The Paradox of Success: An Archival and a Laboratory Study of Strategic Persistence Following Radical Environmental Change

TL;DR: An archival study of the airline and trucking industries over a ten-year period and a laboratory study revealed that greater past success led to greater strategic persistence after a radical environmental change, and such persistence induced performance declines.
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Less Likely to Fail: Low Performance, Firm Size, and Factory Expansion in the Shipbuilding Industry

TL;DR: Using data on the risky decision of factory expansion in shipbuilding firms and firm size as an indicator of the stock of tangible resources, it is found that performance below the aspiration level reduces risk taking in small firms, but either does not affect risk taking or increases riskTaking in large firms.
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Past Success and Creativity over Time: A Study of Inventors in the Hard Disk Drive Industry

TL;DR: A key prediction is that successful people should be more likely to generate new ideas, but these ideas will tend to be less divergent as they favor the exploitation of familiar knowledge at the expense of the exploration of new domains.
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Community Ecology and the Sociology of Organizations

TL;DR: In this article, community can be conceptualized as sets of relations between organizational forms or as places where organizations are located in resource space or in geography, and such relationships channel flows of resources, opportunities are granted or withheld from social actors depending in part on their organization connections.