It’s not just what is said but who says it that matters
MIT Sloan research findings suggest that identity cues cause people to vote according to content producers’ reputations, production history, and reciprocal votes with content viewers.
MIT Sloan research findings suggest that identity cues cause people to vote according to content producers’ reputations, production history, and reciprocal votes with content viewers.
A new report published today found American workers are taking actions through union organizing, strikes, and other forms of collective action to achieve a stronger voice at work.
MIT Sloan researchers demonstrate a new approach to designing experiments in the social and behavioral sciences by applying it to a longstanding question about punishment in public goods games
The academics and researchers joining MIT Sloan in 2024 are experts in economics, management, organizational studies, and more.
MIT Sloan’s Gary Gensler and Peter R. Fisher advise investors to develop an AI investment thesis and avoid overconfident investing during policy pivots.
In a research paper MIT professors Andrew W. Lo and Dennis G. Whyte propose five initiatives for accelerating progress in fusion based on lessons learned from the last 50 years of biotechnology.
New MIT Sloan research found that while movie viewers react negatively to increased racial representation in movie casting, the Black Lives Matter movement mitigated this bias against racial minority
Two studies by Prof. Hazhir Rahmandad, Prof. John Sterman, and PhD student Tse Yang Lim find that this apparent tradeoff is a false one.
County-level voter unhappiness prior to the 2016 election mattered more to Donald Trump’s electoral success than a host of other factors.
Pushing back investments in renewable electricity generation by one year could outweigh the emission reductions and deaths avoided from March through June 2020.