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      A Tale of Two Methods

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      Organizational Research Methods
      SAGE Publications

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          CREATING HYBRID TEAM CULTURES: AN EMPIRICAL TEST OF TRANSNATIONAL TEAM FUNCTIONING.

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            Models of Discovery

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              When what you know is not enough: expertise and gender dynamics in task groups.

              This study investigates how the contribution, identification, and consideration of expertise within groups are affected by gender differences. The authors examined the effects of member expertise and gender on others' perceptions of expertise, actual and own perceptions of influence, and group performance on a decision-making task. The authors' findings are consistent with social role theory and expectation states theory. Women were less influential when they possessed expertise, and having expertise decreased how expert others perceived them to be. Conversely, having expertise was relatively positive for men. These differences were reflected in group performance, as groups with a female expert underperformed groups with a male expert. Thus, contrary to common expectations, possessing expertise did not ameliorate the gender effects often seen in workgroups. The findings are discussed in light of their implications for organizational workgroups in which contribution of expertise is critical to group performance.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Organizational Research Methods
                Organizational Research Methods
                SAGE Publications
                1094-4281
                1552-7425
                June 29 2016
                June 29 2016
                : 9
                : 2
                : 233-244
                Article
                10.1177/1094428105285144
                719ce175-e704-4e08-8541-f0aab45bea26
                © 2016
                History

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