Journal Article10.1177/0146167295214009
Group Versus Individual Training and Group Performance: The Mediating Role of Transactive Memory
1K
TL;DR: In this paper, the task performance of laboratory work groups whose members were trained together or alone was investigated, and the mediating effects of various cognitive and social factors on the relationship between group training and performance were explored.
read more
Abstract: The task performance of laboratory work groups whose members were trained together or alone was investigated. At an initial training session, subjects were taught to assemble transistor radios. Some were trained in groups, others individually. A week later, subjects were asked to recall the assembly procedure and actually assemble a radio. Everyone performed these tasks in small work groups, each containing three persons of the same gender. Subjects in the group training condition worked in the same groups where they were trained, whereas subjects in the individual training condition worked in newly formed groups. Groups whose members were trained together recalled more about the assembly procedure and produced better-quality radios than groups whose members were trained alone. Through an analysis of videotape data, the mediating effects of various cognitive and social factors on the relationship between group training and performance were explored. The results indicated that group training improved group...
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Conceptualizing Mood Influences on Information Processing in Groups via Dominant Cognitive Processing Strategies
Verlin B. Hinsz,Michael D. Robinson +1 more
TL;DR: Conceptualizing mood influences on information processing in groups via dominant cognitive processing strategies. Positive and negative moods influence information processing through dominant cognitive processing strategies. Positive moods reinforce dominant cognitive processing strategies while negative moods inhibit or revise such strategies.
1
•Posted Content
Labor requirements, organizational practices, and innovation in the digital content industry
TL;DR: In this paper, a logistic regression of the data reveals that the additive index of a set of organizational practices that aim to foster internal labor pool including selective hiring, retention, and R&D investment is a statistically significant predictor of innovative capacity of the digital content firms in Seoul.
1
User-is Partnership And Is Development Success
Jook-Ting Jt Shim
- 01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors view users as one knowledge source and study how knowledge can be coordinated through the co-production process, which has a positive effect on expertise coordination and, in turn, improves teamwork outcomes.
References
The moderator–mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: Conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations.
Reuben M. Baron,David A. Kenny +1 more
TL;DR: This article seeks to make theorists and researchers aware of the importance of not using the terms moderator and mediator interchangeably by carefully elaborating the many ways in which moderators and mediators differ, and delineates the conceptual and strategic implications of making use of such distinctions with regard to a wide range of phenomena.
Organizational Learning and Communities-of-Practice: Toward a Unified View of Working, Learning, and Innovation
John Seely Brown,Paul Duguid +1 more
TL;DR: Work, learning, and innovation in the context of actual communities and actual practices are discussed in this paper, where it is argued that the conventional descriptions of jobs mask not only the ways people work, but also significant learning and innovation generated in the informal communities-of-practice in which they work.
Social Psychology of Intergroup Relations
TL;DR: In this paper, the scope and range of ethnocentrism in group behavior is discussed. But the focus is on the individual and not on the group as a whole, rather than the entire group.
8.1K
A social information processing approach to job attitudes and task design.
TL;DR: The social information processing perspective emphasizes the effects of context and the consequences of past choices, rather than individual predispositions and rational decision-making processes, to explain job attitudes.
5.2K
Developmental sequence in small groups.
TL;DR: In this article, 50 articles dealing with stages of group development over time are separated by group setting: therapy-group studies, T-Group studies, and natural and laboratory group studies.