黑料专区

Programmes and courses Norsk English
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Employee Profile

Ann-Mari Farsund Lilleløkken

Visiting phd candidate - Department of Leadership and Organizational Behaviour

Publications

Oakley, David A.; Walsh, Eamonn, Lilleløkken, Ann-Mari Farsund, Halligan, Peter W., Mehta, Mitul A. & Deeley, Quinton (2020)

UNITED KINGDOM NORMS FOR THE HARVARD GROUP SCALE OF HYPNOTIC SUSCEPTIBILITY, FORM A

International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 68(1) Doi: -

The Harvard Group Scale of Hypnotic Susceptibility, Form A (HGSHS:A), is widely used as a measure of suggestibility to screen participants for research purposes. To date, there have been a number of normative studies of the HGSHS:A, the majority of which originate from Western countries. The outcomes of these Western studies are summarized, and variations in methodologies are described and discussed. Also reported are the psychometric properties of the HGSHS:A in a large contemporary United Kingdom (UK) sample. Overall, these UK results are consistent with the earlier Western norms studies in terms of response distribution and item difficulty, with only minor differences. The continued use of HGSHS:A as a screening procedure is supported, particularly if corrected for response subjectivity/involuntariness and with revised amnesia scoring. The HGSHS:A is also important as a potential measure of the broader trait of direct verbal suggestibility.

Lilleløkken, Ann-Mari (2021)

Playing the Part and Owning It Too: The Process of Internalising Prosocial Motivation at Work

[Academic lecture]. Recovering from Covid: Responsible Management and Reshaping the Economy.

Lilleløkken, Ann-Mari & Carlsen, Arne (2021)

The Process of Prosocial Motivation at Work: Internalising prosocial motives in elite football

[Academic lecture]. Organizing beyond organizations for the common good: Confronting major societal challenges through process studies.

Lilleløkken, Ann-Mari & Carlsen, Arne (2020)

Organisational Support Practises for Prosocial Work: Internalising Prosocial Motives in Professional Sports Clubs

[Academic lecture]. Conference in the Cloud.

Existing research has highlighted the important role of work context for actors’ motivation to make a positive difference in other’s lives. This paper explores the socially embedded nature of organisational support practises for prosocial work in professional sports clubs in Norway. The investigating questions how this shapes actors’ internalising prosocial motives over time. The prosocial work concerns structured events and activities for good will. The findings illustrate five organisational support practises that form a reiterative and recursive process for shaping the internalising of prosocial motives: (1) internally communicating (2) prepping prosocial experiencing (3) coordinating prosocial working (4) following up valuing (5) practising repeating. This process enables a positive feedback loop that collaboratively surfaces prosocial values as distributed agency through both the opportunity structures and the social environment. Internalising prosocial motives is important because it allows actors to develop affective commitments to beneficiaries and awareness of having a prosocial impact. This paper contributes by developing a framework of the organisational support practises that function as the relational architecture for the positive institutional maintenance of prosocial work.

Lilleløkken, Ann-Mari & Škerlavaj, Miha (2019)

'Good Soldiers' or 'Good Actors': Managing CSR Motives in Organisations

[Academic lecture]. Building and Sustaining High Performance Organisations in Uncertain Times.

We examine Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) practises in organisations, and present a case for why both ‘doing good’ and ‘looking good’ are important for sustaining a system of generalised reciprocity. According to Baker and Bulkley (2014), generalised reciprocity is a way of organising, “an ongoing process of “interlocked behaviours” where one person’s behaviour is contingent on another person’s behaviour, whose behaviour is contingent on yet another person’s behaviour, and so on”. We begin by exploring prosocial and impression management motives, and discuss whether it is actually possible to separate these motivations in CSR practises. At the organisational level, these motives are known as ‘Paying-it-forward’ and ‘Rewarding Reputation’ (Baker and Bulkley, 2014), where one is induced by moral sentiment and the other by reputational rewards. We present a framework that suggests why both of these mechanisms are important, mixed motives in CSR practises enable a system of generalised reciprocity.

Academic Degrees
Year Academic Department Degree
2011 Kings College London MSc Mental Health Studies
2010 Kingston University Bachelor of Science
Work Experience
Year Employer Job Title
2017 - 2021 BI 黑料专区 Business School PhD Candidate
2013 - 2017 BI 黑料专区 Business School Marketing Manager
2012 - 2013 Turning Point Assistant Clinical Psychologist
2011 - 2012 Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London Researcher in Global Mental Health
2011 - 2011 South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust Honourary Assistant Psychologist
2011 - 2010 Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London Research Assistant in Forensic and Neurodevelopmental Sciences