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Michaéla C. Schippers

Researcher at Erasmus University Rotterdam

Publications -  82
Citations -  7568

Michaéla C. Schippers is an academic researcher from Erasmus University Rotterdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Reflexivity & Team composition. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 76 publications receiving 6524 citations.

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Work Group Diversity

TL;DR: The 1997-2005 literature on work group diversity is reviewed to assess the state of the art and to identify key issues for future research, which points to the need for more complex conceptualizations of diversity and for more empirical attention to the processes that are assumed to underlie the effects of diversity.

Work group diversity

TL;DR: Work group diversity, the degree to which there are differences between group members, may affect group process and performance positively as well as negatively as discussed by the authors, however, much is still unclear about the effects of diversity.
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Transformational and transactional leadership and innovative behavior : The moderating role of psychological empowerment

TL;DR: In this article, a field study with 230 employees of a government agency in the Netherlands combining multisource ratings was conducted, and it was shown that transformational leadership is positively related to innovative behavior only when psychological empowerment is high, whereas transactional leadership has a negative relationship with innovative behavior.
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Diversity and team outcomes: the moderating effects of outcome interdependence and group longevity and the mediating effect of reflexivity

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the effect of team composition on reflexivity, satisfaction, and performance of 54 work teams from 13 different organizations and found that reflexivity mediates these relationships.
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Network churn: The effects of self-monitoring personality on brokerage dynamics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use longitudinal data on friendship relations from a radiology department located in the Netherlands to test the idea that the characteristics of this "network churn" and the resultant brokerage dynamics are traceable to individual differences in self-monitoring personality.