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Entrepreneurial cognition research is at a crossroads, where static
views give way to dynamic approaches. This Handbook draws on a
variety of perspectives from experts in the field of
entrepreneurial cognition to highlight the key elements in a
socially-situated view, where cognition is action-oriented,
embodied, socially-situated, and distributed. It provides readers
with some of the most up-to-date approaches to entrepreneurial
cognition research and is designed to be an invaluable and
timesaving companion for entrepreneurial cognition researchers.
With insights from leading entrepreneurial cognition researchers
the Handbook offers a comprehensive literature review of the field.
Readers seeking to better understand and participate in some of the
most up-to-date approaches to entrepreneurial cognition research
will find this Handbook to be especially helpful in their research.
Established scholars who are new to the research area will also be
interested in this book. University libraries with research-focused
business schools will also benefit from this Handbook.
Contributors: R.A. Baron, D.A. Baucus, M.S. Baucus, B. Bird, M.
Brannback, M.S. Cardon, A.L. Carsrud, E.T. Chan, J.S. Clarke, A.C.
Corbett, J.P. Cornelissen, M. Drnovsek, M-D. Foo, D.P. Forbes, D.A.
Gregoire, M. Hayek, J.S. McMullen, J.R. Mitchell, R.K. Mitchell,
C.Y. Murnieks, L.E. Palich, B. Randolph-Seng, M.R. Ryan, S.D.
Sarasvathy, A. Slavec, W.A. Williams, Jr., M.S. Wood, M.A. Zachary
The Micofoundations of Entrepreneurial Cognition Research is
divided into three sections. The first section reviews the
precursor field of social cognition and its historical development
to explore how progression in this broader field serves as a
conceptual footing for the more specialized, microfoundation-based
examination of entrepreneurial social cognition. The second section
briefly reviews some of the relevant work in fields that are
closely related to entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial thinking.
It also examines the work of scholars who provided earlier
conceptualizations of the role that human thought plays in economic
aspects of entrepreneurship, selectively reviewing the major
theoretical approaches in the field of entrepreneurial cognition
research. The last section makes a case for socially situated
cognition as a new and useful framework under which the
microfoundations of some of the emerging and more dynamic
approaches to the study of entrepreneurs' thinking can be
understood and organized. The authors outline some possible
productive directions for future entrepreneurial cognition
research.
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