Research

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RESEARCH AND DISCOVERY

Faculty and staff work to make Nebraska Business a place of ongoing personal discovery for all. From undergraduate and graduate students to our faculty, you’ll find a dedicated and energetic community of scholars continually striving for research excellence.

Research Impact

#68
In the top 100 U.S. business schools, based on faculty publications in 24 leading business journals in 2023
(according to the University of Texas Dallas)
100%
Placement of Ph.D. Graduates
150,000+
Citations to Faculty Research in Google Scholar Citations

Management

Study IDs How Business Turnover Unfolds Amid ‘Unit-Level Shocks’

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Jenna Pieper

Marketing

Nebraska Researchers Explore How Group Purchasing Organizations Help Reduce Health Care Costs

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Alok and Amit

Supply Chain Management

Lan Wins Chan Hahn Best Paper Award

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 Yingchao Lan, assistant professor of supply chain management and analytics, won the Chan Hahn Best Paper Award at the 2021 Academy of Management Conference for her paper “Ancillary Cost Implication of Multisiting Physicians and Inter-Organizational Collaboration in Health Care Delivery.” The study examines the role physicians and collaboration play into the cost and efficiency of health care delivery.

Impactful Research

Articles listed by date published.

Search for a specific faculty member, title of article or subject by typing in keywords.

Latest News

Journal(s):
Personnel Psychology

Published Date:
02-05-21

CoB Author(s):
Amy Bartels


Amy Bartels, associate professor of management, and her co-authors walk through the powerful role emotions play in the dynamic of the leadership-follower relationship through daily interactions. Displays of emotion from a leader can ripple throughout an organization and influence follower performance, the relationship between a leader and follower, and the leader’s behavior.


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Journal(s):
National Bureau of Economic Research

Published Date:
12-16-20

CoB Author(s):
Brenden D. Timpe


Children who receive education from Head Start, a federally-funded preschool program for disadvantaged kids that prepares them for success in elementary school, find improved chances of having financial independence in adulthood. Research also shows this greatly decreases the odds that those children require public assistance from federal programs, ultimately generating revenue, rather than costs, for the government.


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Journal(s):
Contemporary Accounting Research

Published Date:
10-13-20

CoB Author(s):
Jimmy F. Downes


Although cash flow hedge derivative transactions have become common practice for corporations wanting to mitigate risk, adjusting financial statements to account for them often confuses investors. Dr. Jimmy Downes, associate professor of accountancy, published an article recently to help provide a full picture of financial statement adjustments needed when considering hedge derivatives.

“Companies use cash flow hedges to protect themselves from changes in commodity prices, foreign exchange rates and interest rates. What we look at in my recent paper is how debt investors understand the accounting for cash flow hedges,” said Downes. “The accounting for those transactions is difficult to understand. Prior literature, including one of my own papers, documents that investors and equity analysts don’t understand the accounting for these transactions.”


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Journal(s):
Decision Sciences

Published Date:
06-01-20

CoB Author(s):
Özgür M. Araz, David L. Olson


Schools close, elderly populations isolate and businesses shut down due to the coronavirus pandemic. Dr. Özgür Araz, associate professor of supply chain management and analytics, believes decisions imposed to change the way we live in the short-term stem from critical research analysis now in the hands of government and health care providers.

Araz’s research examines decision sciences specifically related to health systems, like pandemic decision-making. He teaches predictive analytics and knows his work impacts lives in a time of crisis.


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Journal(s):
Production and Operations Management

Published Date:
01-27-20

CoB Author(s):
Yunxia Zhu


Everyone knows the frustration of not having the right change to complete a purchase. Dr. Yunxia (Peter) Zhu, assistant professor of supply chain management and analytics, believes his research exploring the supply chain of currency may contain solutions to a situation made worse by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“At the beginning of the pandemic, consumers were faced with shortages in toilet paper and other products,” said Zhu, who came to the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in 2018. “For these products, the flow in the supply chain is one direction – manufacturers produce products and then retailers sell those products to customers.”


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