Apr 16, 2018 // Features research by Adam Kleinbaum exploring how neural activity can predict friendships.
View at The New York Times
Apr 10, 2018 // Features Adam Kleinbaum in an article about the rise of professional networking apps such as Shapr. Kleinbaum says research shows that people with diverse and far-reaching networks get promoted faster and evaluated more favorably.
View at BBC Capital
Mar 14, 2018 // Highlights research by Adam Kleinbaum and coauthors Carolyn Parkinson and Thalia Wheatley exploring how neural activity can be used to predict friendships. In the study, the brain activity of 42 students was observed while they watched a variety of videos meant to stimulate certain emotions.
View at The Star Online
Feb 13, 2018 // Continued coverage of new research from Adam Kleinbaum and coauthors Carolyn Parkinson and Thalia Wheatley, exploring the connection between neural activity and friendships.
View at Valley News
Feb 06, 2018 // Continued coverage of new research from Adam Kleinbaum, associate professor of business administration, and coauthors Carolyn Parkinson and Thalia Wheatley exploring how neural activity can be used to predict friendships.
View at Qatar Tribune
Jan 31, 2018 // Quotes Adam Kleinbaum in continued coverage of new research from Kleinbaum and coauthors Carolyn Parkinson and Thalia Wheatley exploring how neural activity can predict friendships. Kleinbaum says it's not clear whether people are seeking out friends whose brains are already like theirs, or if friends change the ways e
View at Business Insider
Jan 13, 2018 // Features new research from Adam Kleinbaum and coauthors Carolyn Parkinson and Thalia Wheatley that explores how brain activity can be used to predict friendships. The authors found that for each one-unit increase in neural similarity, there was a 47 percent increase in the odds that the two participants were friends.
View at Los Angeles Times
Oct 02, 2017 // People’s social networks tend to be full of extroverts. This leads to a “systematic network extroversion bias,” where people’s social networks are overpopulated with extroverts, and therefore under-populated by introverts relative to the general population.
View at Fast Company
Apr 20, 2017 // Highlights recent research by Adam Kleinbaum and co-authors that shows how social networks have become so important that the human brain has evolved to encode and recognize the position of others within a social group at a precognitive level.
View at Scientific American
Apr 13, 2016 // Adam Kleinbaum, associate professor of business administration, was named one of Poets and Quants' 2016 Best 40 Under 40 Professors.
View at Poets & Quants
Apr 15, 2015 // Continued coverage of a recent study co-authored by Adam Kleinbaum, associate professor of business administration, which found that extroverts are over-represented in real-world networks, and that the effect is more pronounced in the networks of socially outgoing people.
View at Yahoo! Health
Apr 15, 2015 // Continued coverage of a recent study co-authored by Adam Kleinbaum, associate professor of business administration, which found that extroverts are over-represented in real-world networks, and that the effect is more pronounced in the networks of socially outgoing people.
View at Fast Company
Apr 08, 2015 // Continued coverage of the recent study co-authored by Adam Kleinbaum, associate professor of business administration, which found that most social networks are overpopulated with extroverts.
View at New York Magazine
Apr 08, 2015 // Continued coverage of the study co-authored by Adam Kleinbaum, associate professor of business administration, published in Psychological Science.
View at Sydney Morning Herald
Apr 07, 2015 // Highlights research co-authored by Adam Kleinbaum, associate professor of business administration, that found extroverts were more likely to make friends with many other extroverts, while introverts were more likely to have other introverts in their smaller social networks.
View at Huffington Post Canada
Apr 07, 2015 // Cites research co-authored by Adam Kleinbaum, associate professor of business administration, in an article about the friendship paradox—a perceived notion that individuals tend to have more extroverts in their friend group than introverts.
View at Mic
Apr 07, 2015 // Highlights a study co-conducted by Adam Kleinbaum, associate professor of business administration, that found that extroverts and introverts perceive the world in different ways—with introverts being far more perceptive and in touch with reality.
View at Elite Daily
Mar 12, 2015 // Cites research by Adam Kleinbaum, associate professor of business administration, that found that individuals who follow atypical career trajectories in their organization ultimately gain access to more valuable brokerage opportunities.
View at Forbes