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LeBow News
Research Excellence
LeBow business and engineering student Sarah Malik

Sarah Malik's paper, co-authored with Professor of MIS Murugan Anandarajan, looks at securing medical devices that use Internet of Things technology.

Lauren D'Innocenzo

This newly created fellowship supports the engagement of a graduate assistant to help with a variety of research projects for one year.

Calendar and hourglass

Jeongsik Lee’s research on deadlines and work quality draws from accepted patents, published patent applications, and survey responses.

Irina Nedelcu and Erika Pleskunas

Two Drexel LeBow students have each contributed a chapter to a new textbook on the Internet of Things and its applications in the modern workplace.

Daniel Korschun

Daniel Korschun, associate professor of marketing and Stephen Cozen Research Scholar in Marketing, received a Fulbright award to conduct research in Italy.

Konstantinos Serfes

Drexel LeBow School of Economics Professor Konstantinos Serfes has received a Fulbright award to visit the University of Exeter in the United Kingdom.

Information flows

Analyzing journal citations provided Chaojiang Wu and his co-authors an objective way of documenting the sharing of knowledge across academic disciplines.

Daan van Knippenberg, PhD

One of the world’s most cited researchers on leadership in business joined LeBow this summer. He will be teaching MBA, EMBA and DBA courses.

Beer Bottles

According to research by a Drexel School of Economics professor, consumers pay noticeably more for their macro-brewed beer because of mergers.

National Reputation and Trade

For many, a country's reputation ranking doesn't mean much, but when three LeBow professors examined its impact on trade, it told a different and surprising story.

Mary Mawritz

Management professor Mary Mawritz's research reveals how any boss can engage abusive supervision, and that it may actually be in response to an employee’s deviant behavior.

Drexel's Office of the Provost recognized Yoto Yotov, Chris Finnin and Frank Linnehan in the areas of teaching, scholarship and professional service.

Illustration of Puzzle in a House

Challenging the assumption that consumers make purchasing decisions in a well-informed and rational manner, Sebastien Bradley looked to evidence from experiments at the intersection of psychology and economics.

LeBow assistant professor Curtis Hall weighs in on the long-held debate among academics and regulators about whether or not the stock market creates pressure on the managers of public firms to make short-term decisions in order to meet earnings targets.