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Showing papers by "Sigal G. Barsade published in 2012"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors reviewed and synthesized the research literature examining group affect and its consequences, focusing on groups who interact together to accomplish a task and used a definition of group affect that incorporates the mutual influence of a group's affective context and affective composition (the amalgamation of group members' state and trait affect).
Abstract: We review and synthesize the research literature examining group affect and its consequences, focusing on groups who interact together to accomplish a task. We use a definition of group affect that incorporates the mutual influence of a group’s affective context and affective composition (the amalgamation of group members’ state and trait affect). Our focus is on the influence of group affect on individual members’ behaviors and attitudes and on group-level outcomes. We call for more research in this area, including the study of more specific discrete group emotions and a broadening of the types of groups studied in this research area.

269 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In a recent special issue as mentioned in this paper, the early promise of cross-disciplinary research in organizational networks has been renewed, and the authors encourage authors to explore research linking psychology and organizational networks that extends beyond this list.
Abstract: This special issue aims to renew the early promise of cross-disciplinary research in organizational networks. We encourage submissions that marry, extend, challenge, and reconcile sociological and psychological theories and methods to break new ground into our understanding of the emergence, structuration, and consequences of organizational networks. We welcome studies of interpersonal networks within and between groups and organizations, as well as studies of how individual perceptions of network structure influence organizational phenomena. Submissions may use a variety of methodologies and data (e.g., field, laboratory, qualitative, and quantitative). Possible topics for submissions include, but are not limited to, the following: • How do group network structures and group members’ affective states co-evolve? • How do social categories and schemas affect the perception of organizational networks? • How do individual actors’ positions in the organizational network influence how they are perceived by other group members? • How do particular relational events or reactions to actor behavior shift actors’ positions in the organizational network? What are the implications of these position shifts? • What network configurations operate as antecedents or consequences of pro-social and counterproductive behavior in organizations? What are the boundary conditions for such structural effects? • Are interorganizational networks affected by how influential organizational decision makers perceive the network of relationships among organizations in their field of activity? • What are the social encoding and memory processes that underlie network perception and its accuracy? • Given the multitude of personality traits with potential relevance to network configuration, what are the defining features of theories of personality and social structure? • How do employee emotions, attitudes, cognitions, or behaviors diffuse through networks? What factors moderate these diffusions? • What is the causal role of negative and positive affective states or traits in the emergence of organizational networks? What are the relevant mediating mechanisms involved? • How do deliberate changes to organizational networks alter group processes and performance? The above list is only meant to be suggestive—we encourage authors to explore research linking psychology and organizational networks that extends beyond this list.

2 citations