About this Research Topic
The aim of the Research Topic is to collect original studies on the workers’ job search behaviors and employers’ recruiting and hiring practices. Our goal is to assemble new insights on the role of personalities, preferences, noncognitive skills, heuristics and biases in the search and matching process, and how these factors differentially workers and employers. We hope that these insights will inform both policies aimed at job seekers as well as human resource managers.
We welcome submissions investigating the behaviors of job seekers or employers in the matching process using experimental or observational data. Papers investigating the behaviors of firms in recruitment, screening, and hiring are particularly encouraged. Potential topics might include:
-How employers use algorithmic screening in hiring and/or the effects of algorithmic screening on hiring outcomes
-How employers use social media and heuristic decision-rules during the recruitment process
-Whether employers use job design, work environments, or compensation practices to attract workers with particular preferences or traits, particularly when a worker’s fit in the larger context of the workforce is important
-The strategic considerations influencing the information revealed by employers and job seekers in the matching process
-The effects of overconfidence, reference-dependence, patience, other noncognitive skills and preferences on search
-How non-cognitive skills influence job seekers use of technology
-The effects of nudges and interventions in job search
Submissions on topics not listed above that fit within the scope of the Research Topic will be given full consideration.
Keywords: job search, matching, recruiting, screening, hiring, personality, non-cognitive skills
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.