Social Networks and the Performance of Individuals and Groups[size=0.833em]+
Author Affiliations- 1Cleveland State University
- 2University of Illinois at Chicago
- 3Cleveland State University
AbstractA field study involving 190 employees in 38 work groups representing five diverse organizations provided evidence that social networks, as defined in terms of both positive and negative relations, are related to both individual and group performance. As hypothesized, individual job performance was positively related to centrality in advice networks and negatively related to centrality in hindrance networks composed of relationships tending to thwart task behaviors. Hindrance network density was significantly and negatively related to group performance.
This Article- doi:10.2307/3069429ACAD MANAGE JDecember 1, 2002vol. 45 no. 6 1137-1148