ORCID Identifier(s)

0000-0002-5903-4171

Graduation Semester and Year

2020

Language

English

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy in Management Science

Department

Information Systems and Operations Management

First Advisor

Kay-Yut Chen

Second Advisor

Edmund Prater

Abstract

Normative theoretical models in operations management have been widely utilized by businesses and scientists to explain multiple phenomena. They assume that operating systems are managed by fully rational decision-makers who always choose the most profitable solution. However, decision-makers are human beings with behavioral and cognitive biases which influence their choices. In this thesis we argue that a change in the social and operating environments explains the choice deviation from the normative theoretical predictions. We present three independent studies of behavioral patterns on the individual and cluster levels. In the first study we observe the effect of human faces on the behavioral judgments in supply chain contracting. We find that the decisions made in “face” and “blind” settings are not equivalent. Judgments about facial attractiveness, trustworthiness and dominance influence the decision-maker in addition to the cognitive bias. We continue to explore the economic value of facial information in the second study. In experimental settings human faces are used as a facilitator of trust and honesty in a supply chain with multiple retailers competing for the cooperation of a single supplier. The analytical results reveal that retailer’s information sharing behavior and supplier’s reliance and reciprocity are influenced by the shown faces. Moreover, we observe that the channel efficiency improves when faces of all retailers are revealed to the supplier. However, the change in profitability is linked to the difference in facial trustworthiness. In the third study we use the data of terrorist attacks to investigate the behavioral patterns of organizations through their operational choices. We find that almost half of ideological terrorist movements connect through clusters. While some links have been stable over decades, the structure of the network has transformed from a centralized hierarchy to a decentralized structure and eventually evolved into the combination of two – a hybrid organization. Our findings suggest that the global terrorist network responses to the changes in operational environment by adopting the new structure.

Keywords

Newsvendor, Face Effect, Social Factors, Behavioral Operations, Trust and honesty, Cheap talk, Face effect, Facial Trustworthiness, Experimental economics, Game theory, Risk Management, Crisis Management, Terrorism, Network Analysis, Network Structure, Terrorism Management

Disciplines

Business | Management Information Systems

License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Comments

Degree granted by The University of Texas at Arlington

30863-2.zip (1793 kB)

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