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      Measuring the stability of scientific collaboration

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          Most cited references30

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          The Impact of Research Collaboration on Scientific Productivity

          S Lee (2005)
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            Teams in organizations: recent research on performance and effectiveness.

            This review examines recent research on groups and teams, giving special emphasis to research investigating factors that influence the effectiveness of teams at work in organizations. Several performance-relevant factors are considered, including group composition, cohesiveness, and motivation, although certain topics (e.g. composition) have been more actively researched than others in recent years and so are addressed in greater depth. Also actively researched are certain types of teams, including flight crews, computer-supported groups, and various forms of autonomous work groups. Evidence on basic processes in and the performance effectiveness of such groups is reviewed. Also reviewed are findings from studies of organizational redesign involving the implementation of teams. Findings from these studies provide some of the strongest support for the value of teams to organizational effectiveness. The review concludes by briefly considering selected open questions and emerging directions in group research.
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              Group performance and decision making.

              Theory and research on small group performance and decision making is reviewed. Recent trends in group performance research have found that process gains as well as losses are possible, and both are frequently explained by situational and procedural contexts that differentially affect motivation and resource coordination. Research has continued on classic topics (e.g., brainstorming, group goal setting, stress, and group performance) and relatively new areas (e.g., collective induction). Group decision making research has focused on preference combination for continuous response distributions and group information processing. New approaches (e.g., group-level signal detection) and traditional topics (e.g., groupthink) are discussed. New directions, such as nonlinear dynamic systems, evolutionary adaptation, and technological advances, should keep small group research vigorous well into the future.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Scientometrics
                Scientometrics
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0138-9130
                1588-2861
                February 2018
                December 2 2017
                February 2018
                : 114
                : 2
                : 463-479
                Article
                10.1007/s11192-017-2599-0
                899c59a7-7d68-4e97-a3e0-08e9a024c780
                © 2018

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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