Personnel selection involves exchanges of information between job market actors (applicants and organizations). These actors do not have an incentive to exchange accurate information about their ability and commitment to the employment relationship unless it is to their advantage. This state of affairs explains numerous phenomena in personnel selection (e.g., faking). Signaling theory describes a mechanism by which parties with partly conflicting interests (and thus an incentive for deception) can nevertheless exchange accurate information. We apply signaling theory to personnel selection, distinguishing between adaptive relationships between applicants and organizations, among applicants, and among organizations. In each case, repeated ada...
Information asymmetries can prevent markets from operating efficiently. An important exampleis the l...
Job applicants and hiring organizations bring a host of goals with them to the staffing process. Thi...
Information asymmetries can prevent markets from operating efficiently. An important example is the ...
Signaling theory has been widely used to explain phenomena in personnel selection processes. The pre...
This paper investigates how employers interpret participation in active labor market programs for hi...
In the past years, several authors have proposed theoretical models of faking at selection. Although...
The personnel selection problem is a classical decision making problem. It refers to the process of ...
This paper examines a hiring logic problem in which all players involved in this game are exposed to...
Some labor markets have recently developed formal signaling mechanisms, e.g. the signaling for inter...
Some labor markets have recently developed formal signalling mechanisms, e.g. the signalling for int...
Might the resource costliness of making signals credible be low or negligible? Using a job market as...
We study competitive equilibria in a signaling economy with heterogeneously informed buyers. In term...
We analyze the Spence education game in experimental markets. We compare a signaling and a screening...
In recent decades many firms offered more discretion to their employees which also provides them wit...
The mission of human resource management (HRM) as an area of scholarship and application is achievin...
Information asymmetries can prevent markets from operating efficiently. An important exampleis the l...
Job applicants and hiring organizations bring a host of goals with them to the staffing process. Thi...
Information asymmetries can prevent markets from operating efficiently. An important example is the ...
Signaling theory has been widely used to explain phenomena in personnel selection processes. The pre...
This paper investigates how employers interpret participation in active labor market programs for hi...
In the past years, several authors have proposed theoretical models of faking at selection. Although...
The personnel selection problem is a classical decision making problem. It refers to the process of ...
This paper examines a hiring logic problem in which all players involved in this game are exposed to...
Some labor markets have recently developed formal signaling mechanisms, e.g. the signaling for inter...
Some labor markets have recently developed formal signalling mechanisms, e.g. the signalling for int...
Might the resource costliness of making signals credible be low or negligible? Using a job market as...
We study competitive equilibria in a signaling economy with heterogeneously informed buyers. In term...
We analyze the Spence education game in experimental markets. We compare a signaling and a screening...
In recent decades many firms offered more discretion to their employees which also provides them wit...
The mission of human resource management (HRM) as an area of scholarship and application is achievin...
Information asymmetries can prevent markets from operating efficiently. An important exampleis the l...
Job applicants and hiring organizations bring a host of goals with them to the staffing process. Thi...
Information asymmetries can prevent markets from operating efficiently. An important example is the ...