Institution
IE University
Education•Segovia, Castilla y León, Spain•
About: IE University is a education organization based out in Segovia, Castilla y León, Spain. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Corporate governance & Supply chain. The organization has 527 authors who have published 1709 publications receiving 64682 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: The authors' results indicated a prevalent use of non-social information during the early stages of the colonization and an increasing role of social information as the expansion progressed, with breeding density of conspecifics increased its importance over time, having the greatest relative weight in habitat selection later in the colonization process.
Abstract: Animals can select breeding sites using non-social information (habitat characteristics) and social information (conspecific presence or abundance). The availability of both types of information is expected to vary over time during the colonization of a new area, conditioning their use by colonizers. However, if and how both types of information are exploited during the colonization process remains unclear. We hypothesized that nonsocial information should be predominant at the beginning of a colonization episode (when conspecific presence is low) and that social information should gain in importance as the colonization progresses. We tested this hypothesis by studying habitat selection by the Griffon Vulture Gyps fulvus, a long-lived colonial raptor, during a natural colonization process spanning 40 years. In NW Spain, the population showed a sharp increase from 15 breeding pairs in three colonies in the 1970s to 586 breeding pairs in 120 colonies in 2008, expanding its range from 90 km 2 in the 1970s to 6403 km 2 in 2008, with directions of expansion following areas rich in nesting cliffs. The main determinants of habitat selection varied over time. Livestock density and the characteristics of nesting cliffs were the main predictors of settlement at the onset of colonization. Breeding density of conspecifics increased its importance over time, having the greatest relative weight in habitat selection later in the colonization process. Our results indicated a prevalent use of non-social information during the early stages of the colonization and an increasing role of social information as the expansion progressed.
24 citations
••
TL;DR: A discussion on the issues, opportunities and obstacles which may arise when accounting history is used in the context of accounting history was presented at the 8 Accounting History International Conference as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: Originating in a panel presentation at the eighth Accounting History International Conference, this study offers a reflection on the issues, opportunities and obstacles which may arise when account...
24 citations
••
TL;DR: The authors disentangle two critical determinants of innovation strategies among family firms, namely, the family's wealth concentration (WC) in its business, and its agency and behavioral perspectives.
Abstract: Drawing on agency and behavioral perspectives, we disentangle two critical determinants of innovation strategies among family firms, namely, the family’s wealth concentration (WC) in its business a...
24 citations
••
TL;DR: The findings suggest that when people’s experience of outcome and procedural fairness diverged from how they expected to be treated, they reacted in the direction of their experiences; otherwise, their reactions were consistent with their expectations.
Abstract: Reactions to decisions are shaped by both outcome and procedural fairness. Moreover, outcome and procedural fairness interact to influence beliefs and behaviors. However, different types of “process/outcome” interaction effects have emerged. Many studies have shown that people react particularly negatively when they receive unfair or unfavorable outcomes accompanied by unfair procedures (the “low-low” interactive pattern). However, others find that people react especially positively when they receive fair or favorable outcomes accompanied by fair procedures (the “high-high” interactive pattern). We propose that trust in decision-making authorities dictates the form of the process/outcome interaction. Across three studies, when trust was high, the “low-low” interactive pattern emerged. When trust was low, the “high-high” interactive pattern emerged. The findings suggest that when people’s experience of outcome and procedural fairness diverged from how they expected to be treated, they reacted in the direction of their experiences; otherwise, their reactions were consistent with their expectations.
24 citations
••
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the space use and habitat selection of radio-tagged lesser kestrels Falco naumanni at two spatial scales during summer in north-western Spain, where premigratory aggregations of around 1000 smaller birds occur.
Abstract: The conservation importance of the post-fledging period in migratory birds has been scarcely assessed. In this study, we examined the space use and habitat selection of radio-tagged lesser kestrels Falco naumanni at two spatial scales during summer in north-western Spain, where premigratory aggregations of around 1000 lesser kestrels occur. Space use was estimated by kernel accounting for the spatiotemporal autocorrelation of the radio locations, and habitat selection was analysed by weighted compositional analysis accounting for the intensity of use. Kestrels moved within 9 km around roosts during daylight and returned daily during sunset to the same roosts, exhibiting refuging behaviour. They foraged on average 3.7 km from the roost in an area of 346.8 ha (home range), 92.7 ha of which were used intensively (core area). Within these areas, lesser kestrels intensively used more farmland than any land-scale habitat. Within farmland, kestrels significantly avoided the irrigated crops. This avoidance seemed to be due to the difficulty of prey access and/or scarcity of prey available. Conservation plans of lesser kestrel should include the post-fledging period by legally protecting roost sites and maintaining dry farmland systems around the communal roosts.
24 citations
Authors
Showing all 569 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Andreas Richter | 110 | 769 | 48262 |
Martin J. Conyon | 49 | 131 | 10026 |
Mahmoud Ezzamel | 49 | 138 | 7116 |
Mauro F. Guillén | 45 | 148 | 11899 |
Kazuhisa Bessho | 43 | 223 | 5490 |
Bryan W. Husted | 40 | 104 | 7369 |
Luis Garicano | 40 | 119 | 7446 |
Marc Goergen | 38 | 209 | 5677 |
Diego Miranda-Saavedra | 38 | 59 | 7559 |
Cipriano Forza | 37 | 84 | 6426 |
Dimo Dimov | 33 | 117 | 6158 |
Gordon Murray | 32 | 90 | 5604 |
Pascual Berrone | 29 | 64 | 7732 |
Albert Maydeu-Olivares | 27 | 37 | 3470 |
Jelena Zikic | 26 | 46 | 2398 |