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Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork
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Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Dec 28, 2015

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Page 1: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Introduction to knowledge management

Teamwork

Page 2: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Team Production of KnowledgeWuchty et al. 2007, Science

• Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors• Almost all fields increase in team size• Teams more highly cited• Effect is increasing over time• Especially for highly cited papers

Page 3: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.
Page 4: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.
Page 5: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

04/02/2015 5

High Mutual DependenceLow Task Uncertainty

Low Mutual DependenceHigh Task Uncertainty

• Stable, single paradigm; admissible problems highly restricted • Formalized literature review with technical terms• Mainly journal articles• Relevant materials concentrated• Audience variety is low

• Multiple paradigms; uncertainty about intellectual priorities • Literature review based on choice of theory and discourse community; terms subject to multiple interpretations • Books, articles, press• Relevant materials diverse • Audience variety is high; reputation building include both colleagues and “lay” audience

Whitley, Richard. The Social and Intellectual Organization of the Sciences. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1984.

Page 6: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Why deliberation might work?

• Groups as equivalent to their best members – If some of many members suffer from ignorance

or bias, other group member might correct them. “truth wins”

• Aggregation – The whole is equal to the sum of the parts

• Synergy and learning (conditions?) – The whole is greater than the sum of its parts

Page 7: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Common knowledge effect

• Information held by all or most group member has the biggest influence on group judgments, for more than information held by one member or a few.

• Disproportionately little weight was given to valuable information held by one person or a few

• a group’s focus on shared information increases with the size of the group

• It was almost as likely for a shared item to be mentioned twice as it was for an unshared item to be mentioned at all.

Page 8: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Group polarization

• Following the group discussion, Individuals tend to make more extreme decision than when working along.

• Social comparison (Jerry Springer)During group discussion we compare our decision

with the decision of the others in the group Newell et al., p. 52

Page 9: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Confident and unified

• Group members tend to become a lot more confident about their judgments after speaking with one another

• Deliberation usually promotes uniformity by decreasing the range of views within groups

Page 10: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Promote a sense of legitimacy

• An appreciation, by many people, that they have be able to participant in the decision process

• Sometimes what matters most is that many minds accept the decision , not that the decision be correct.

Page 11: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Pragmatic boundary:Semantic boundary:Syntactic boundary:

Knowledge boundary

Knowledge transformationKnowledge translationKnowledge transfer

Knowledge process

Increasing Novelty

Context

Framework for managing knowledge across boundaries

Page 12: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Advantages of team decision-making

• Increased pool of knowledge to draw upon• Increased acceptance and commitment of the

selected decision • Wider range of perspectives taken into

consideration• Novice team members can learn from more

experienced team members (internalization)• Greater understanding of the rationale of the

selected decision

Page 13: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Disadvantages

• Conformity can stifle creativity • Groupthink can override individual judgment• Group polarization can lead to overly risky decision • Diffusion of responsibility leads individuals to avoid

feeling responsible • Satisficing so that the decision is acceptable rather

than optimum

Page 14: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Group polarization

• Following the group discussion, Individuals tend to make more extreme decision than when working along.

• Social comparison (Jerry Springer)During group discussion we compare our decision

with the decision of the others in the group Newell et al., p. 52

Page 15: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Possible causes

• Cohesiveness• Group isolation/insulation• Leader intimidation• An absence of decision-making procedures

Page 16: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Symptoms of groupthink

• Illusion of invulnerability • Collective rationalization • Illusion of morality • Shared stereotypes • Direct pressure • Self-censorship• Mind-guards• Illusion of unanimity

Page 17: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Steps for Minimizing Groupthink

• Group leader encourages thoughtfulness/ criticism• Group leader refrains from expressing own opinion and

views until group has considered all alternatives• Group leader encourages group members to gather

information from outside people• Group leader assigns devil’s advocate • Group leader holds second meeting for important

decisions

Page 18: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Team work: the social dimension

• Trust (see case study )– Companion – Competence – Commitment

• Social intelligence • Cognitive diversity

Page 19: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

• “…although deliberating groups often fail to spread information, they are less likely to neglect unshared information if they believe that there is a demonstrably correct answer to the question they are trying to answer”

Page 20: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Diversity and group success

• Exposure to unfamiliar perspective fosters creativity

Page 21: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Real Social Network

Page 22: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Q and Broadway performance

Page 23: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Q and Broadway performance

Page 24: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Creative abrasion

• Focuses on knowledge building at the work-group level within an enterprise as a result of arguments that occur when people with diverse backgrounds, experiences and skill sets come together to work on real business problems

Page 25: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Empirical testing of brainstorming hypothesis

• Three conditions– No-criticism ground rules– Debate condition– No instruction

– Dissent stimulates new ideas because it encourages us to engage more fully with the work of others and to reassess our viewpoints

Debate > brainstorming > no instruction Debate condition generates nearly 20 percent more ideas

Page 26: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Disadvantages

• Conformity can stifle creativity • Groupthink can override individual judgment• Group polarization can lead to overly risky decision • Diffusion of responsibility leads individuals to avoid

feeling responsible • Satisficing so that the decision is acceptable rather

than optimum

Page 27: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Gigerenzer, p.77

• Everyone on the same plane• Start on equal footing• Daily social gathering • Shared success• Open doors

Page 28: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Groupthink

• The act or practice of reasoning or decision-making by a group, especially when characterized by uncritical acceptance or conformity to prevailing points of view

Page 29: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Possible causes

• Cohesiveness• Group isolation/insulation• Leader intimidation• An absence of decision-making procedures

Page 30: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Symptoms of groupthink

• Illusion of invulnerability • Collective rationalization • Illusion of morality • Shared stereotypes • Direct pressure • Self-censorship• Mind-guards• Illusion of unanimity

Page 31: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Steps for Minimizing Groupthink

• Group leader encourages thoughtfulness/ criticism• Group leader refrains from expressing own opinion and

views until group has considered all alternatives• Group leader encourages group members to gather

information from outside people• Group leader assigns devil’s advocate • Group leader holds second meeting for important

decisions

Page 32: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Collective intelligence: what make a group smart?

Page 33: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Enabling context for knowledge creation

• Mutual trust• Active empathy• Access to help• Leniency in judgment • Courage

Page 34: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Teamwork: the social dimension

• Trust (see case study )– Companion – Competence – Commitment

• Social intelligence • Cognitive diversity– Avoid group think

Page 35: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Trust

• “the willingness of a party to be vulnerable to the actions of another party based on the expectation that the other will perform a particular action important to the trustor, irrespective of the ability to monitor or control that other party”

Page 36: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Advantages of team decision-making

• Increased pool of knowledge to draw upon• Increased acceptance and commitment of the

selected decision • Wider range of perspectives taken into

consideration• Novice team members can learn from more

experienced team members (internalization)• Greater understanding of the rationale of the

selected decision

Page 37: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Advantages of group learning

• 1. Disagreement• 2. Alternative• 3. Explanation• 4. Internalization • 5. Appropriation • 6. Shared load• 7. Regulation • 8. Synchronicity 林東清 p. 175-176

Page 38: Introduction to knowledge management Teamwork. Team Production of Knowledge Wuchty et al. 2007, Science Over the span of 5 decades, no. of authors Almost.

Benefits of group learning