Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Organizational behaviour and change management: the impact of cognitive and social bias

Contributor(s): Vernooij, Cornell | Stuijt, Judith | Hendriks, Maarten | Have, Wouter ten | Have, Steven tenMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Routledge Studies in Organizational Change & DevelopmentPublication details: New York Routledge 2023 Description: xvi, 263 pISBN: 9781032264233Subject(s): Organizational behavior | Social psychology | Change (Psychology)DDC classification: 302.35 Summary: Humans are social animals, and change is a social process. To understand this social process and explain the thoughts, feelings, and behaviours of individuals, knowledge of how the presence of others influences people is crucial. In this regard, bias is a concept with a lot of potential. Because cognitive and social biases influence human thinking, feelings, and behaviour, these provide insights and knowledge that are helpful, if not essential, for the field of organizational behaviour and change management. The preceding statements may seem obvious and self-evident, but practice as well as science show that they are neither. Organizational Behaviour and Change Management: The Impact of Cognitive and Social Bias aims at unleashing the potential of cognitive and social biases to develop a more effective change management theory and practice. To do so, we analysed and assessed thousands of scientific articles. The most prominent biases are structured by using a practical and comprehensible framework based on five core social motives (belonging, understanding, controlling, trusting, and self-enhancing). With its evidence-based, systematic, and integrative approach, this book provides scientists and practitioners in the field of organizational behaviour and change management with the best-available evidence, linking biases to organizational behaviour and change and further enriching the field of change management. (https://www.routledge.com/Organizational-Behaviour-and-Change-Management-The-Impact-of-Cognitive/Vernooij-Stuijt-Hendriks-ten-Have-ten-Have/p/book/9781032264233)
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Indian Institute of Management LRC
General Stacks
Human Resource and Organization Behvaiour 302.35 VER (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 005867

Humans are social animals, and change is a social process. To understand this social process and explain the thoughts, feelings, and behaviours of individuals, knowledge of how the presence of others influences people is crucial. In this regard, bias is a concept with a lot of potential. Because cognitive and social biases influence human thinking, feelings, and behaviour, these provide insights and knowledge that are helpful, if not essential, for the field of organizational behaviour and change management. The preceding statements may seem obvious and self-evident, but practice as well as science show that they are neither. Organizational Behaviour and Change Management: The Impact of Cognitive and Social Bias aims at unleashing the potential of cognitive and social biases to develop a more effective change management theory and practice. To do so, we analysed and assessed thousands of scientific articles. The most prominent biases are structured by using a practical and comprehensible framework based on five core social motives (belonging, understanding, controlling, trusting, and self-enhancing). With its evidence-based, systematic, and integrative approach, this book provides scientists and practitioners in the field of organizational behaviour and change management with the best-available evidence, linking biases to organizational behaviour and change and further enriching the field of change management.

(https://www.routledge.com/Organizational-Behaviour-and-Change-Management-The-Impact-of-Cognitive/Vernooij-Stuijt-Hendriks-ten-Have-ten-Have/p/book/9781032264233)

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.

©2019-2020 Learning Resource Centre, Indian Institute of Management Bodhgaya

Powered by Koha