Journal Article10.1177/0018726707087787
David against Goliath? Group size and bystander effects in virtual knowledge sharing
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide empirical support for the bystander effect in virtual knowledge sharing environments and show that the negative impact of social inhibition might decrease again in very large groups.
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Abstract: Knowledge management has been identified as a key factor for sustaining a competitive advantage in today's corporate world. A fundamental aspect of knowledge management in a global economy is the sharing of information in online groups. Most researchers and practitioners have so far assumed that a large knowledge sharing group increases response rates, velocity of receiving a response and quality. However, psychological research under the umbrella of the so-called bystander effect suggests counter-intuitively that, with an increase in group size, the likelihood of helping decreases. This study provides empirical support for the fact that a) the bystander effect is also present in virtual (knowledge sharing) environments, b) that group size influences response quality and c) that the negative impact of social inhibition might decrease again in very large groups. The practical trade-offs that managers have to take into account when designing knowledge sharing forums are discussed.
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Citations
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The knowledge-creating company
郁次郎 野中
- 01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: Nonaka and Takeuchi as discussed by the authors argue that there are two types of knowledge: explicit knowledge, contained in manuals and procedures, and tacit knowledge, learned only by experience, and communicated only indirectly, through metaphor and analogy.
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TL;DR: This meta-analysis integrates the bystander literature from the 1960s to 2010, provides statistical tests of potential moderators, and presents new theoretical and empirical perspectives on the novel finding of non-negative bystander effects in certain dangerous emergencies as well as situations where bystanders are a source of physical support for the potentially intervening individual.
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Crowdfunding creative ideas: the dynamics of project backers in kickstarter
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TL;DR: This article studied the role of social information in the dynamic behavior of project backers and found that additional backer support is negatively related to its past backer support, while the diffusion of responsibility effects diminish as the project funding cycle approaches its closing date.
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TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of knowledge sharing on innovation and ambidexterity in organizations were explored, with the aim to explore the effects that knowledge sharing has on innovation.
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References
•Journal Article
Understanding Knowledge‑Sharing in Online Communities of Practice
Mark W. Sharratt,Abel Usoro +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss existing research and develop a theoretical model of factors that affect knowledge sharing in online communities, and increase our understanding of the antecedents to knowledge sharing.
321
Avoiding Competence Substitution Through Knowledge Sharing
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors suggest that firms can manage this tension by identifying the causes of superior performance and using this knowledge to make their commitments to key stakeholders more credible, which allows a firm to influence its stakeholders and thereby simultaneously delay substitution and control the threat of imitation.
244
The communal resource and information systems
TL;DR: This paper discusses the problem of knowledge sharing in organizations and proposes a concept ‘communal resource’ to overcome this problem and implications for information systems are discussed.
193
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