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Entrepreneurial Cognition and effect on Neuro entrepreneurship
 
     
     Entrepreneurial Cognition and effect on Neuro entrepreneurship
     


Autor(es):
Heydari, Mohammad
Xiaohu, Zhou
Saeidi, Mahdiye
Lai, Kin Keung
Yuxi, Zheng


Periódico: Turismo: Estudos e Práticas

Fonte: Revista Turismo Estudos e Práticas - RTEP/UERN; No. 3 (2020): Geplat: Caderno Suplementar; 1-27

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Resumo: Cognition research in entrepreneurship is currently very much en vogue – and studies have proliferated at a remarkable rate. A quick search of Google Scholar shows a surge in studies involving entrepreneurial intentions (and also entrepreneurial self-efficacy). Yet we also see a surge of reviews on both topics where the authors ignore excellent prior research and relatively little research that drills down more deeply, e.g., into deeper knowledge structures. In this survey paper, we look at entrepreneurial insight and neuro business enterprise. Enterprise researchers have since quite a while ago snacked around the edges of intellectual science, a large part because to skillfully utilize its theoretical ideas and exact instruments are testing. Consider the main enterprise inquire about the article at any point distributed in Nature was out of the neuroscience labs at Cambridge. Barbara Sahakian's group collaborated with the Judge Institute to contrast top administrators and serial business people on feeling autonomous ('chilly') discernment and feeling subordinate ('hot') cognizance, finding that the business people favored and were better at hot insight. This area has seen the most development and the most fruitful results. The key trigger for this whole approach has been the realization that experts think differently than novices. How experts become experts is reflected in the development of an “expert” scenario. (A scenario is, as its name suggests, a cognitive mechanism that comprises the key elements in a decision situation and the likely ordering of events).