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Institution

Tilburg University

EducationTilburg, Noord-Brabant, Netherlands
About: Tilburg University is a education organization based out in Tilburg, Noord-Brabant, Netherlands. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 5550 authors who have published 22330 publications receiving 791335 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Baskerville does not realize that there exist different paradigms in the social sciences about the meaning of "culture" leading to different research approaches as discussed by the authors, and her arguments are therefore largely irrelevant to cross-cultural accounting research.
Abstract: Baskerville does not realize that there exist different paradigms in the social sciences about the meaning of “culture”, leading to different research approaches. Her arguments are therefore largely irrelevant to cross-cultural accounting research.

222 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the influence of dissatisfaction and per capita income on the rate of self-employment in 15 European countries in the period 1978-2000, within a framework of occupational choice.
Abstract: This paper deals with explaining the sizable differences in the rate of self-employment (business ownership) across 15 European countries in the period 1978-2000, within a framework of occupational choice, focusing on the influence of dissatisfaction and of per capita income. Using two different measures of dissatisfaction, in addition to the level of economic development and controlling for several other variables, we find that, in addition to a negative and significant impact of per capita income, dissatisfaction at the level of societies has a positive and significant influence on self-employment levels. Both dissatisfaction with life and dissatisfaction with the way democracy works are found to influence self-employment. It is concluded that these are proxies for job dissatisfaction and at the same time represent other negative ‘displacements’ known to promote self-employment. The findings indirectly point at the potential importance of push factors within the incentive structures of modern economies.

222 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors develop a theoretical framework to study the psychology of poverty and "aspirations failure", defined as the failure to aspire to one's own potential, and specify the conditions under which raising aspirations alone is sufficient to help escape from a poverty trap.
Abstract: We develop a theoretical framework to study the psychology of poverty and ‘aspirations failure’, defined as the failure to aspire to one's own potential. In our framework, rich and the poor persons share the same preferences and same behavioural bias in setting aspirations. We show that poverty can exacerbate the effects of this behavioural bias leading to aspirations failure and hence, a behavioural poverty trap. Aspirations failure is a consequence of poverty, rather than a cause. We specify the conditions under which raising aspirations alone is sufficient to help escape from a poverty trap, even without relaxing material constraints.

221 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors conducted an experiment to study the prevalence of the higher order risk attitudes of prudence and temperance, in a large demographically representative sample, as well as in a sample of undergraduate students.
Abstract: We conduct an experiment to study the prevalence of the higher order risk attitudes of prudence and temperance, in a large demographically representative sample, as well as in a sample of undergraduate students. Participants make pairwise choices between lotteries of the form proposed by Eeckhoudt and Schlesinger (2006). The choices in these lotteries isolate prudent from imprudent, and temperate from intemperate, behavior. We relate individuals’ risk aversion, prudence, and temperance levels to demographics and financial decisions. We observe that the majority of individuals’ decisions are consistent with risk aversion, prudence, and temperance, in both the student and the demographically representative sample. An individual’s level of prudence is predictive of his wealth, saving, and borrowing behavior outside of the experiment, while temperance predicts the riskiness of portfolio choices. Our findings suggest that the coefficient of relative prudence for a representative individual is approximately equal to two.

221 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that stimulus anticipation is reflected by negative activity, as is motor preparation, but the potential distribution of the negative activity is different from the stimulus-preceding negativity (SPN), pointing to a different electrophysiological source.

221 citations


Authors

Showing all 5691 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David M. Fergusson12747455992
Johan P. Mackenbach12078356705
Henning Tiemeier10886648604
Allen N. Berger10638265596
Thorsten Beck9937362708
Luc Laeven9335536916
William J. Baumol8546049603
Michael H. Antoni8443121878
Russell Spears8433631609
Wim Meeus8144522646
Daan van Knippenberg8022325272
Wolfgang Karl Härdle7978328934
Aaron Cohen7841266543
Jan-Benedict E.M. Steenkamp7417836059
Geert Hofstede72126103728
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202369
2022205
20211,274
20201,206
20191,097
20181,038