Marketing Tenure Track Faculty Database
Marketing
Fuqua School of Business
Duke University

 HOME > Fuqua > Marketing > Tenure Track Faculty    Search Help Login pdf version printable version 

Publications [#266015] of Dan Ariely

Journal Articles

  1. Maciejovsky, B; Budescu, DV; Ariely, D, The researcher as a consumer of scientific publications: How do name-ordering conventions affect inferences about contribution credits?, Marketing Science, vol. 28 no. 3 (May, 2009), pp. 589-598, Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS) [doi]
    (last updated on 2024/04/24)

    Abstract:
    When researchers from different fields with different norms collaborate, the question arises of how name-ordering conventions are chosen and how they affect contribution credits. In this paper, we answer these questions by studying two disciplines that exemplify the two cornerstones of name-ordering conventions: lexicographical ordering (i.e., alphabetical ordering, endorsed in economics) and nonlexicographical ordering (i.e., ordering according to individual contributions, endorsed in psychology). Inferences about credits are unambiguous in the latter arrangement but imperfect in the former, because alphabetical listing can reflect ordering according to individual contributions by chance. We contrast the fields of economics and psychology with marketing, a discipline heavily influenced by both. Based on archival data, consisting of more than 38,000 journal articles, we show that the three fields have different ordering practices. In two empirical studies with 351 faculty and graduate student participants from all three disciplines, as well as in a computer simulation, we show that ordering practices systematically affect and shape the allocation of perceived contributions and credit. Whereas strong disciplinary norms in economics and psychology govern the allocation of contribution credits, a more heterogeneous picture emerges for marketing. This lack of strong norms has detrimental effects in terms of assigned contribution credits. © 2009 INFORMS.


Duke University * Marketing * Faculty * Affiliated * Staff * Reload * Login