@article {1972626, title = {Ghost in the machine: On organizational theory in the age of machine learning}, journal = {Academy of Management Review}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, keywords = {Management}, author = {Leavitt,Keith and Schabram,Kira and Barnes,Christopher M and Prashanth,Hari} } @article {1972651, title = {From the Bedroom to the Office: Workplace Spillover Effects of Marital Sexual Activity}, journal = {Journal of Management}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, keywords = {Management}, author = {Leavitt,Keith and Barnes,Christopher M and Watkins,Trevor and Wagner,David T} } @article {1972646, title = {Why so Serious? Experimental and Field Evidence that Morality and a Sense of Humor are Psychologically Incompatible.}, journal = {Journal of Personality and Social Psychology}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, keywords = {Management}, author = {Yam,Kai Chi (Sam) and Barnes,Christopher M and Leavitt,Keith and Wei,W and Uhlmann,Eric L} } @article {1972656, title = {Archival Data in Micro-Organizational Research: A Toolkit for Moving to a Broader Set of Topics}, journal = {Journal of Management}, volume = {44}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {1453-1478}, keywords = {Management}, author = {Barnes,Christopher M and Dang,Carolyn and Leavitt,Keith and Guarana,Christiano and Uhlmann,Eric Luis} } @article {1980386, title = {Why so Serious? Experimental and Field Evidence that Morality and a Sense of Humor are Psychologically Incompatible.}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, address = {Chicago}, keywords = {Management}, author = {Yam,Kai Chi and Barnes,Christopher M and Leavitt,Keith and Uhlmann,Eric L} } @article {1980396, title = {From the bedroom to the office: Workplace spillover effects of marital sexual activity.}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, address = {Anaheim, CA}, keywords = {Management}, author = {Leavitt,Keith and Barnes,Christopher M and Watkins,Trevor and Wagner,David T} } @article {1972691, title = {Different hats, different obligations: Plural occupational identities and situated moral judgments.}, journal = {Academy of Management Journal}, volume = {55}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {1316-1333}, abstract = {It is well understood that moral identity substantially influences moral judgments. However, occupational identities are also replete with moral content, and individuals may have multiple occupational identities within a given work role (e.g., engineer-manager). Consequently, we apply the lenses of moral universalism and moral particularism to categorize occupational identities and explore their moral prescriptions. We present and test a model of occupational identities as implicitly-held and dynamically-activated knowledge structures, cued by context and containing associated content about the absolute and/or relationship-dependent moral obligations owed by the actor to stakeholders. Results from one field study and two situated experiments with dual-occupation individuals indicate that moral obligations embedded in occupational identities influence actors{\textquoteright} work-role moral judgments in a predictable and meaningful manner.}, keywords = {Management}, author = {Leavitt,Keith and Reynolds,Scott J and Barnes,Christopher M and Schilpzand,Pauline and Hannah,Sean T} }