1,723,831 research outputs found

    Fawad and Children

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    Fawad and his family are refugees from Afghanistan now living in France. Before the Taliban forced them to flee, Fawad was a singer and Zakeela was a beautician.https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/tsos_photography/1022/thumbnail.jp

    Fawad and Children at Water

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    Fawad and his family are refugees from Afghanistan now living in France. Before the Taliban forced them to flee, Fawad was a singer and Zakeela was a beautician.https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/tsos_photography/1023/thumbnail.jp

    Fawad and Zakeela

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    Fawad and his wife, Zakeela, have three children. Zakeela was a beautician, and Fawad was a singer in the Baghlan district in Afghanistan. The music he produced was not in accordance with the strict restrictions of the Taliban. They threatened his life and assaulted him many times, so he decided to leave with his family to Kabul. Fawad’s day job was as an FM radio producer; at night, he moonlighted as a singer and musician. He produced music for ceremonies and weddings, often performing for the women’s part, which the Taliban did not accept. Eventually, his life was again threatened, and the family fled the country. Coming to Greece was a difficult transition for them since they had a good house, car, and income in Afghanistan. As of 2018 the family made their way to Paris after several failed attempts at the Croatian border, where police ordered to beat and fingerprint anyone attempting to cross. The family spent 10 days hiding in forests, hiking, sleeping in one small tent with two blankets, and no food or water.https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/tsos_interviews/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Role of Cognitive Processes, Emotional Regulation, Attention, and Intrinsic Motives in explaining the underlying Mechanism and Dynamics of Value Premium: A Mispricing Perspective

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    Is the investor’s reliance on cognitive processes and emotional regulation strategy predict preferences towards the selection of value versus growth stocks? Is the value premium vary across the level of investors’ attention? Is the value premium dependent on mispricing signals manifested in the firms’ intangibles-intensity? Investor’s Intrinsic Motives and the Valence of Word-of-Mouth in Sequential Decision-Making

    Investor attention, information acquisition, and value premium: A mispricing perspective

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    This paper investigates the impact of investor attention on the dynamics of the value premium. We find superior return differences to value-growth strategy conditioned as low degree of investor attention. In contrast, return differences to the value-growth strategy conditioned as high investor attention are indifferent from zero. We show that return differences to low degree of investor attention across value and growth firms are attributed to mispricing explanation using common risk factors, mispricing factors, sentiment analysis, multivariate analysis, and market expectation errors approach. The findings suggest that investor attention contributes to generating superior return differences to standard value-growth strategy. Our finding concludes that long-short investment strategy in value stocks and growth stocks conditioned as low investor attention generate superior value premiu

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed

    Is the investor's reliance on cognition and emotional regulation predict preference for selecting value versus growth stocks?

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    Economic behavior highlights the importance of differences in individual characteristics like cognition and emotional regulation strategy in predicting the selection and performance of economic choices. However, the literature on value premium has overlooked the effect of cognition and emotional regulation strategy in assessing individual preference to select value versus growth stocks. We fill this gap by employing dual-process and emotional regulation theories to investigate the impact of intuitive cognition (Type 1), analytical cognition (Type 2), expressive suppression, and cognitive reappraisal on individual preferences for the selection of value versus growth stocks. Results confirm that individuals with higher reliance on Type 1 (or Type 2) and expressive suppression (or cognitive reappraisal) exhibit lower (or higher) preferences for the selection of value versus growth stocks. These results imply that emotion alters an individual's decision-making, and both emotion and cognition are inherently intertwined from inception to action. Our findings have implications for investors to avoid (or seek) investment in emotion-driven fundamentally weak overvalued firms (or fundamentally strong undervalued firms) via regulating emotional inhibitors to engage in thorough decision-making
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