Revise and Resubmit - The Mayukh Show

Mayukh Mukhopadhyay

In Revise and Resubmit, a dynamic AI duo— Nikita and Pavlov — guides you through the fascinating world of academic research. Whether they’re debating emerging trends, revisiting theories, or exploring the latest innovations, their conversational style makes scholarly insights accessible and engaging for academics. Papers chosen by Mayukh. Powered by Google NotebookLM.

  1. Connected to a Sinking Ship? (Hartwell, 2025) | FT50 JoM

    3小时前

    Connected to a Sinking Ship? (Hartwell, 2025) | FT50 JoM

    English Podcast Start at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast Start at 00:17:45 Hindi Podcast Start at 00:39:55 Welcome to Revise and Resubmit 🎙️✨ Today, we set sail on a story of profit, power, and peril. Short waves. Long tides. A calm sea, then a storm. 🌊🚢👑 Our paper: “Connected to a Sinking Ship? Firm Performance in a Besieged Autocracy” by Christopher A. Hartwell. Published online August 28, 2025, in the prestigious Journal of Management—an FT50 journal—by SAGE Publications. 🏛️📈💼 This isn’t just history. It’s a blueprint for risk. For reward. For reckoning.Nineteenth-century tsarist Russia. A full-service steamship firm—Kavkaz i Merkurii (Caucasus and Mercury), known as OKiM—ties itself to the throne. They don’t dabble in politics; they dock there. They invite officials aboard. Even royalty. 👑🖋️ Violence rises. Markets shiver. The firm leans in. And the numbers talk. Event studies whisper what the crowd felt. GARCH models reveal what the market remembered. Spikes. Slumps. Volatility that lingers like fog over water. 📊📉🌫️ Some shocks pay. Fast-suppressed violence? New contracts. Shareholders nod.Other shocks bite. Military demands under market rates? Investors frown. Regime-threatening unrest? Long-run uncertainty surges. The line between state and enterprise blurs; the balance sheet pays the price. ⚔️💸📉 This is authoritarian capitalism: survive by proximity, thrive by connection, risk becoming ballast. Simple sentence. Complex reality. One firm. Many lessons. 🔗⚖️ Before we dive deeper: Subscribe to Revise and Resubmit on Spotify 🎧 Watch the Weekend Researcher on YouTube ▶️ Find us on Amazon Prime and Apple Podcast 📱🛒 Huge thanks to the author, Christopher A. Hartwell, and to SAGE Publications for this remarkable contribution in the esteemed FT50 Journal of Management. 🙏🏽📚 So tell me—if the safest harbor belongs to the state, when does a lifeline become an anchor? ⛓️❓ Reference Hartwell, C. A. (2025). Connected to a Sinking Ship? Firm Performance in a Besieged Autocracy. Journal of Management, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/01492063251359201 ‌ ‌Youtube Channel ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠ Support us on Patreon https://patreon.com/weekendresearcher

    56 分钟
  2. Effect of construal level on the drivers of online-review-helpfulness (Chatterjee, 2025)

    1天前

    Effect of construal level on the drivers of online-review-helpfulness (Chatterjee, 2025)

    English Podcast starts at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast starts at 00:14:59 Hindi Podcast starts at 00:32:10 WELCOME to Revise and Resubmit! 🎙️✨ The podcast where we slice open the dense world of academic research to find the juicy, beating heart inside. 🤓❤️ Think about the last time you bought something online. 🛒 Maybe it was a coffee machine. Maybe a hotel room. You scrolled. And you scrolled. Past dozens of reviews. Some long and detailed. Some short and punchy. Some from a "Top 10 Reviewer" and some from a first-timer. What made you stop? What made you nod and say, "Yep, that's a helpful review"? 🤔 It feels random. A gut feeling. But what if it isn't? What if your brain is wired to find different things helpful based on a simple, hidden factor: when you need the item? Buying a jacket for tonight's party is different from planning a ski trip for next winter. Your brain is in a completely different mode. This is the brilliant territory we're exploring today. 🗺️ We're diving into a phenomenal paper from the journal Electronic Commerce Research. And folks, this is a top-tier, prestigious ABDC 'A' journal – the academic equivalent of a blockbuster hit! 🏆 The article is titled: "Effect of construal level on the drivers of online-review-helpfulness". The central idea, based on something called Construal Level Theory, is pure genius. 💡 The research finds that if you're buying something for the immediate future (like ordering food for dinner 🍕), you're in a "low construal" state. You want the nitty-gritty details. The how. The specifics of the review matter most. But if you're planning something for the distant future (like booking that dream vacation ✈️), you're in a "high construal" state. You're thinking about the big picture. The why. And in that state, you care more about who wrote the review. The reviewer's trustworthiness becomes the key. The details become fuzzy. The reputation shines through. Mind-blowing, right? 🤯 This isn't just theory; it has massive real-world implications for how online platforms should be ranking and showing you reviews! A massive round of applause for the author, Swagato Chatterjee, for this incredible piece of research, and a huge thanks to the publisher, Springer Nature, for bringing this work to the world. 🙏 And hey, if you enjoy getting your mind blown by cool research, do us a huge favor! Subscribe to "Revise and Resubmit" on Spotify, Amazon Prime, and Apple Podcast! 🎧 For even more content, including author interviews and research breakdowns, subscribe to our YouTube channel, "Weekend Researcher"! 📺 So, I’ll leave you with this question to ponder... Knowing that your brain prioritizes differently based on timing, does this change how you'll approach writing your own review for a product you just received versus one you bought months ago? 🤔 Reference Chatterjee, S. Effect of construal level on the drivers of online-review-helpfulness. Electron Commer Res 25, 1115–1143 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10660-023-09716-2 ‌Youtube Channel ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠ Support us on Patreon https://patreon.com/weekendresearcher

    48 分钟
  3. Relational Entrepreneurial Perseverance in Extreme Contexts (Muñoz et al 2025) | FT50 ETP

    2天前

    Relational Entrepreneurial Perseverance in Extreme Contexts (Muñoz et al 2025) | FT50 ETP

    English Podcast Start at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast Start at 00:15:36 Hindi Podcast Start at 00:35:22 Welcome to Revise and Resubmit 🎙️, where research gets louder, ideas get braver, and today’s questions refuse to wait for tomorrow’s answers. Tonight’s spotlight: “Relational Entrepreneurial Perseverance in Extreme Contexts,” by Pablo Muñoz, Jonathan Kimmitt, and Nick Williams—fresh from the pages of Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, a prestigious FT50 journal published by SAGE Publications. This isn’t just a paper. It’s a pulse.It’s the rhythm of recovery after crisis, the long-haul heartbeat that keeps communities moving when the ash settles and the headlines fade.Short sentence. Big stakes. Extreme context. Long memory. Collective grit. 🔥🌋 Across the Calbuco Volcano eruptions in Chile, this study traces how perseverance becomes social: descriptive cues that share recovery memories, injunctive cues that socialize a work ethic, and symbolic cues that celebrate legacies. 🧠🤝✨Perseverance doesn’t just live inside the lone entrepreneur—it’s stitched into group principles and community celebration, building recovery legacies that become memory assets for the next hit. 🧵🔁📚 And yes, this conversation arrives from a serious stage: Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice is widely recognized as one of the field’s most influential journals and is included in the Financial Times FT50 list. 🏛️⭐ So, smash that follow and subscribe to Revise and Resubmit on Spotify, and catch deep-dive breakdowns on the YouTube channel Weekend Researcher. 🎧▶️The show is also available on Amazon Prime (via Amazon Music’s podcast access with Prime) and on Apple Podcasts—tune in wherever thinking runs fast and curiosity runs deep. 🍏🛒 Huge thanks to the authors—Pablo Muñoz, Jonathan Kimmitt, and Nick Williams—and to SAGE Publications for advancing this vital conversation from crisis response to community endurance. 🙏 Here’s the curious question to carry forward: when the next crisis arrives, which memory assets will the community reach for first—and what new legacies will begin to form in the ashes. ❓ Reference Muñoz, P., Kimmitt, J., & Williams, N. (2025). Relational Entrepreneurial Perseverance in Extreme Contexts. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/10422587251362898 ‌ ‌Youtube Channel ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠ Support us on Patreon https://patreon.com/weekendresearcher

    52 分钟
  4. Kafka and Organization Studies (Lohmeyer & Schuessler, 2025) | FT50 OS

    3天前

    Kafka and Organization Studies (Lohmeyer & Schuessler, 2025) | FT50 OS

    English Podcast Start at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast Start at 00:16:39 Hindi Podcast Start at 00:35:48 Welcome into the podcast Revise and Resubmit 🎙️✨. Today we dive into Kafka and Organization Studies by Nora Lohmeyer and Elke Schuessler, published online on July 20, 2025 in the prestigious Organization Studies journal from SAGE Publications 📚. Here is the headline that matters first: Organization Studies is an FT50 journal, a benchmark list that signals elite standards and wide impact in management research 🏆. That prestige sets the stage for a piece that revisits Kafka not only as the patron saint of bureaucracy’s night terrors but as a surprising guide to resilience, reform, and the strange clarity inside modern systems 🏢🧭. The essay spotlights Kafka’s often overlooked “office writings” from his day job as an accident insurance lawyer, inviting organization scholars to see the file, the form, and the memo as instruments that can protect as much as they constrain 📄🛠️. From there it stretches into today’s world, where uncertainty is constant and organizing is both futile and necessary, both a maze and a map 🌪️🗺️. It lingers where algorithms hum and platforms sprawl, studying enigmatic, inescapable organizations that feel increasingly digital and deeply human at once 🤖🔍. Along the way it uncovers acts of resistance and repair, using bureaucratic institutions to push against injustice and to channel fairness through the very pipes that often clog 🚦✊. Nora Lohmeyer and Elke Schuessler craft an argument that is crisp, careful, and timely, reconnecting Kafka’s life and literature to the most urgent debates in organizing and democracy today 🧩📖. Their essay belongs in Organization Studies, published by SAGE, where conversations about organizations meet the public stakes of our digital age 📈🌍. If this kind of inquiry sparks thought, subscribe to Revise and Resubmit on Spotify and catch more deep dives on the YouTube channel Weekend Researcher, and yes the show is available on Amazon Prime and Apple Podcast too 🎧💬✨. Many thanks to the authors Nora Lohmeyer and Elke Schuessler, and to the publisher SAGE Publications, for bringing this work into one of the world’s FT50 venues 🙏🏅. So here is the question to carry into the week: when an organization feels Kafkaesque, what small practice could turn the same machinery that confuses into a machinery that clarifies 🤔🌀? Reference Lohmeyer, N., & Schuessler, E. (2025). Kafka and Organization Studies. Organization Studies, 0(ja). https://doi.org/10.1177/01708406251362926 ‌ ‌Youtube Channel ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠ Support us on Patreon https://patreon.com/weekendresearcher

    54 分钟
  5. Online Isha Upa Yoga for student mental health (Chang et al 2022)

    4天前

    Online Isha Upa Yoga for student mental health (Chang et al 2022)

    English Podcast Start at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast Start at 00:19:32 Hindi Podcast Start at 00:42:54 Welcome to Revise and Resubmit 🎙️✨ Today, a tale of breath and bandwidth: how a few minutes of calm could travel across screens and soften the noise of a pandemic semester 📡🧠 We’re opening the book to “Online Isha Upa Yoga for student mental health and well-being during COVID-19: A randomized control trial,” a study tuned to the heartbeat of undergraduates under strain 📖💓 Authored by Tracy F. H. Chang, Barbara L. Ley, Triya T. Ramburn, Sangeetha Srinivasan, Sepideh Hariri, Pradeep Purandare, and Balachundhar Subramaniam—voices harmonizing across campuses and clinics 🎓🧪 Published in Applied Psychology: Health and Well-Being, Volume 14, Issue 4 (Nov 2022), first online Jan 22, 2022—where method meets meaning and findings find form 🗞️📅 This randomized control trial with a waitlist crossover followed 679 students learning brief online Isha Upa Yoga modules over 12 weeks—small daily moves in a large uncertain world 🧘‍♀️🌐 Four weeks in, stress down; well-being up; and by the end, anxiety eased, depression dimmed, positives rose, negatives fell—little hinges swinging heavy doors 📈🔧 The data hums in clear notes: p = .009 for stress, p = .002 for well-being, and many p .001 at the finish line—numbers that don’t shout, they persuade 🔬🎯 But beyond p-values lies practice: simple sequences, steady breath, and a ritual that turns scattered attention into steady presence 🌬️🧩 That’s today’s rhythm—how an online practice scaled through screens reached nervous systems on edge and made room for relief 🎧🌱 Lean in, get curious, and listen for the moment where an ancient toolkit meets a modern trial and becomes a habit worth keeping 🔍🕰️ If twelve weeks of small daily practice can change the shape of a semester, what might a semester of small daily questions change in a life 🤔✨ Deep thanks to the authors—Tracy F. H. Chang, Barbara L. Ley, Triya T. Ramburn, Sangeetha Srinivasan, Sepideh Hariri, Pradeep Purandare, and Balachundhar Subramaniam—and to the publishers, The International Association of Applied Psychology and Wiley 🙏🏽📚 Before heading out, subscribe to Revise and Resubmit on Spotify, hit the YouTube “Weekend Researcher” channel, and find the show on Amazon Prime and Apple Podcast—every follow fuels the next great idea 🔔▶️🌟 Reference Chang, T. F. H., Ley, B. L., Ramburn, T. T., Srinivasan, S., Hariri, S., Purandare, P., & Subramaniam, B. (2022). Online Isha Upa Yoga for student mental health and well-being during COVID-19: A randomized control trial. Applied psychology. Health and well-being, 14(4), 1408–1428. https://doi.org/10.1111/aphw.12341 ‌Youtube Channel ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠ Support us on Patreon https://patreon.com/weekendresearcher

    1 小时 9 分钟
  6. Manipulation (Noggle, 2025) - Weekend Book Review

    5天前

    Manipulation (Noggle, 2025) - Weekend Book Review

    English Podcast starts at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast Starts at 01:08:18 Hindi Podcast Starts at 01:31:49 Welcome into the podcast Revise and Resubmit, this is Weekend Book Review 🎙️📚.Tonight we crack open Manipulation: Its Nature, Mechanisms, and Moral Status by Robert Noggle, a sharp new hardcover from Oxford University Press.Published on 27 March 2025, this is a book review with teeth and tenderness, ready to test the stories told about influence. Gaslighting, flattery, misdirection, nagging, emotional blackmail, charm offensives, and playing on emotions swagger through these pages like suspects in a lineup, and the book asks what unites them.Noggle’s answer is the Mistake Account, the claim that manipulation is the kind of influence that works by introducing a mistake into a target’s mental states or processes.It pulls levers in our minds, from cognitive and decision biases to the lure of the lesser good that sits within easy reach while the greater good waits a little farther away 🧠🔍.Morally, manipulation is presumptively wrong, though in extreme cases the book allows that justification can appear, and the worst cases corrode well-being and autonomy.By the end, the Mistake Account is applied to priming, conditioning, nudges, advertising, sales, and the online currents that tug at attention every day ✨. Robert Noggle is Professor of Philosophy at Central Michigan University, and his work circles the ethics of influence, moral theory, and questions about children and autonomy.Across his career he has probed persuasion and manipulation with an eye for where reasoning falters and where responsibility should step in.This volume joins the New Topics in Applied Philosophy series and reads like a seminar that moves from clear definitions to lived dilemmas, from sharpened concepts to everyday choices. Thanks to Robert Noggle for the scholarship and to Oxford University Press for the publication 🚀🙏.Subscribe on Spotify and on the YouTube channel Weekend Researcher, and find this show on Amazon Prime Music and Apple Podcast so the next review lands right where listening happens 🎧✨.If manipulation so often feels like clarity while sowing a small, decisive mistake, what habit of mind should be practiced this weekend to catch the next subtle nudge before it catches us ❓ Reference Noggle, R. (2025). Manipulation: Its Nature, Mechanisms, and Moral Status. Oxford University Press. https://global.oup.com/academic/product/manipulation-9780198924890 ‌Youtube channel link https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher Support us on Patreon https://patreon.com/weekendresearcher

    1 小时 51 分钟
  7. Creating Shared Value (Porter & Kramer 2011) - Weekend Classics

    6天前

    Creating Shared Value (Porter & Kramer 2011) - Weekend Classics

    English Podcast Start at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast Start at 00:13:46 Hindi Podcast Start at 00:38:13 Welcome to Revise and Resubmit — Weekend Classics 🎙️✨ Tonight’s chat dives into Creating Shared Value by Michael E. Porter and Mark R. Kramer, first published in Harvard Business Review’s Jan–Feb 2011 issue 🧠📚 Business feels under siege, trust is thin, and the old playbook of short-term wins is running out of pages—so this episode asks what happens when profit meets purpose and stays for the long haul 🔄💡 Shared value says: make money in ways that solve real problems, link company success to social progress, and treat community challenges as strategy, not charity 🌍📈 How do firms do it? Reconceive products and markets, redefine productivity in the value chain, and build stronger local clusters where they operate—three doors, one key 🗝️🔧 From supply chains to storefronts, examples from global giants showed that when yields rise and waste falls, communities grow stronger and companies grow surer 🌱🏭 And yes, this appeared in a prestigious FT50-listed journal—Harvard Business Review—where ideas shape leaders and leaders shape markets ⭐🏆 So settle in: short beats, long lines, ideas that sprint, then stroll, then sprint again—because cadence changes how knowledge lands 🎧🎶 Hit that subscribe on Revise and Resubmit on Spotify, and join the YouTube channel Weekend Researcher for deep dives and smart takes 🔔▶️ Also streaming on Amazon Prime and Apple Podcast—wherever thinking people find thinking audio 🎛️📲 Huge thanks to Michael E. Porter and Mark R. Kramer, and to Harvard Business School for publishing this landmark piece 🙏🏽📖 Here’s the big, curious question to carry forward: if companies truly commit to shared value, which unmet need becomes tomorrow’s breakout market—and who gets there first? 🤔🚀 Reference Porter, Michael E., and Mark R. Kramer. "Creating Shared Value." Harvard Business Review 89, nos. 1-2 (January–February 2011): 62–77. https://hbr.org/2011/01/the-big-idea-creating-shared-value ‌ ‌Youtube Channel ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠ Support us on Patreon https://patreon.com/weekendresearcher

    58 分钟
  8. To Act or Not to Act (Griffin et al 2025) | FT50 JBE

    8月28日

    To Act or Not to Act (Griffin et al 2025) | FT50 JBE

    English Podcast Start at 00:00:00 Bengali Podcast Start at 00:17:06 Hindi Podcast Start at 00:38:37 Welcome, researchers and curious minds, to Revise and Resubmit! 🎙️✨ Companies talk. They talk a lot. They talk about sustainability, about being green, about saving our precious planet one recycled cup at a time. ♻️ They release glossy reports and run beautiful ads. But the planet isn't listening. 🌡️ The disconnect between corporate promises and ecological reality is massive. A gaping chasm. 🌍➡️💔 So, what really happens behind the scenes when a company messes up environmentally? Do they act? Or do they just... not? This is the very puzzle tackled in a brilliant new paper hot off the press, published today, August 28th, 2025. It's called "To Act or Not to Act: The Effects of Firm Size on Inaction, Eco-friendly, and Compensatory Actions". The authors, Jennifer J. Griffin, Andrew Bryant, and Vanessa G. Perry, dig into this corporate paradox. They look at big firms. They look at small firms. And they found a fascinating twist. 🧐 Big, hulking corporations—the ones constantly in the spotlight—are more likely to take some action after a misdeed. They have to save face. But the real shock? When smaller, more nimble firms decide to act, they often do more. They go bigger with their eco-friendly fixes. 💥 But here's the scariest part of their discovery. The most common response? The action most companies take after an environmental screw-up? It’s nothing. Crickets. 🦗 A big, fat zero. This leads us to a truly unsettling question... When it comes to healing the planet, what’s more dangerous: a corporate giant taking one tiny, performative step to get good press, or a thousand small companies doing absolutely nothing at all? 🤔 We're about to find out. Don't forget to hit that subscribe button for "Revise and Resubmit" on Spotify 🎧, Amazon Prime, and Apple Podcast! And for more academic deep dives, follow our YouTube channel, "Weekend Researcher" 💻. Trust us, you won't want to miss a thing. A huge thank you to the authors Jennifer J. Griffin, Andrew Bryant, and Vanessa G. Perry for their incredible work, and to the publisher INFORMS. This research was published in the Journal of Business Ethics, one of the most prestigious academic outlets in the world and a member of the elite FT50 journal list. 🏆 Now, let's get into it. Reference Griffin, J.J., Bryant, A. & Perry, V.G. To Act or Not to Act: The Effects of Firm Size on Inaction, Eco-friendly, and Compensatory Actions. J Bus Ethics (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-025-06095-6 ‌Youtube Channel ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠ Support us on Patreon https://patreon.com/weekendresearcher

    59 分钟

关于

In Revise and Resubmit, a dynamic AI duo— Nikita and Pavlov — guides you through the fascinating world of academic research. Whether they’re debating emerging trends, revisiting theories, or exploring the latest innovations, their conversational style makes scholarly insights accessible and engaging for academics. Papers chosen by Mayukh. Powered by Google NotebookLM.