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This Handbook provides an overview of neuroscience-driven research
methodologies and how those methodologies might be applied to
theory-based research in the nascent field of
neuroentrepreneurship. A key challenge of this field is that few
neuroscientists are trained as entrepreneurship scholars and few
entrepreneurship scholars are trained as neuroscientists, but this
book skillfully bridges that gap. Expert contributors include
concrete examples of new ways to conduct research in their
contributions, which have the potential to shed light onto areas
such as decision making and opportunity recognition and allow
neuroentrepreneurs to ask different, perhaps better, questions than
ever before. This Handbook also presents current thinking and
examples of pioneering work, serves as a reference for those
wishing to incorporate these methods into their own research, and
provides several helpful discussions on the nature of answerable
questions using neuroscience techniques. Neuroentrepreneurship is
an important, emerging field for neuroscientists and
entrepreneurship scholars alike. For the former audience, this book
presents concrete research questions and entrepreneurship
applications; for the latter, it serves as a primer and
introduction to neuroscientific methods. Graduate students studying
entrepreneurship, and practitioners who are keen to promote
innovation and entrepreneurial skills in their leadership, will
also find this Handbook to be of interest. Contributors include: W.
Becker, C. Bellavitis, M.C. Boardman, M. Colosio, C. Couffe, M.
Day, P.M. de Holan, A.A. Gorin, S. Guillory, N. Krueger, A.
Passarelli, V. Perez-Centeno, C. Reeck, L. Schjoedt, K.G. Shaver,
A. Sud, T. Treffers, M.K. Ward
The ideal firm has been studied over several centuries, yet little
is known about what makes one successful and another fail. This
pioneering book brings together leading researchers investigating
the concept of the firm from a neuroscientific perspective. From
the viewpoint of economics, the firm's purpose is to maximize
shareholders' wealth; resources are commodities, each with its
particular supply and demand curve that can be manipulated by the
firm to its own benefit. Traditionally, the firm is focused on the
strategic, operational and resource management objectives. The
editors instead suggest that the objective of the firm is equal to
the objectives of its workers. The definition and function of risk
in decision-making, ethics, trust and the global financial crisis
are all discussed. They are analyzed from the perspective of human
bio-physiology, using scanning and hormonal analysis tools, with a
focus on the implications for the bottom line of the firm. With
experimental as well as theoretical and applied contributions, this
book will benefit scholars and students of economics, business
management, finance, organizational behavior, entrepreneurship,
psychology, neuroscience and law. Practitioners of management,
entrepreneurship and law firms will also find this book to be a
captivating read.
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