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Journal ArticleDOI

The Mutual Knowledge Problem and Its Consequences for Dispersed Collaboration

Catherine Durnell Cramton
- 01 May 2001 - 
- Vol. 12, Iss: 3, pp 346-371
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TLDR
It is suggested that unrecognized differences in the situations, contexts, and constraints of dispersed collaborators constitute "hidden profiles" that can increase the likelihood of dispositional rather than situational attribution, with consequences for cohesion and learning.
Abstract
This paper proposes that maintaining "mutual knowledge" is a central problem of geographically dispersed collaboration and traces the consequences of failure to do so It presents a model of these processes which is grounded in study of thirteen geographically dispersed teams Five types of problems constituting failures of mutual knowledge are identified: failure to communicate and retain contextual information, unevenly distributed information, difficulty communicating and understanding the salience of information, differences in speed of access to information, and difficulty interpreting the meaning of silence The frequency of occurrence and severity of each problem in the teams are analyzed Attribution theory, the concept of cognitive load, and feedback dynamics are harnessed to explain how dispersed partners are likely to interpret failures of mutual knowledge and the consequences of these interpretations for the integrity of the effort In particular, it is suggested that unrecognized differences in the situations, contexts, and constraints of dispersed collaborators constitute "hidden profiles" that can increase the likelihood of dispositional rather than situational attribution, with consequences for cohesion and learning Moderators and accelerators of these dynamics are identified, and implications for both dispersed and collocated collaboration are discussed

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Transferring, Translating, and Transforming: An Integrative Framework for Managing Knowledge Across Boundaries

TL;DR: The paper examines managing knowledge across boundaries in settings where innovation is desired and how this relates to the common knowledge that actors use to share and assess each other's domain-specific knowledge.
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Work Groups, Structural Diversity, and Knowledge Sharing in a Global Organization

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the value of external knowledge sharing increases when work groups are more structurally diverse, i.e., a group is one in which the members, by virtue of their different organizational affiliations, roles, or positions, expose the group to unique sources of knowledge.
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Virtual teams: a review of current literature and directions for future research

TL;DR: This article provides a review of previously published work and reports on the findings from early virtual team research in an effort to take stock of the current state of the art.
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Social Media Use in Organizations: Exploring the Affordances of Visibility, Editability, Persistence, and Association

TL;DR: The use of social media technologies such as blogs, wikis, social networking sites, social tagging, and micro blogging is proliferating at an incredible pace as mentioned in this paper, and one area of increasing adoption is orga...
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Virtual Teams: What Do We Know and Where Do We Go From Here?

TL;DR: An integrative definition is proposed that suggests that all teams may be defined in terms of their extent of virtualness, and avenues for future research are suggested, including methodological and theoretical considerations that are important to advancing understanding of virtual teams.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Building theories from case study research

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the process of inducting theory using case studies from specifying the research questions to reaching closure, which is a process similar to hypothesis-testing research.
Journal ArticleDOI

The fifth discipline - the art and practice of the learning organization

TL;DR: Senge's Fifth Discipline is a set of principles for building a "learning organization" as discussed by the authors, where people expand their capacity to create the results they truly desire, where new and expansive patterns of thinking are nutured, where collective aspiration is set free, and where people are contually learning together.
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The psychology of interpersonal relations

TL;DR: The psychology of interpersonal relations as mentioned in this paper, The psychology in interpersonal relations, The Psychology of interpersonal relationships, کتابخانه دیجیتال و فن اطلاعات دانشگاه امام صادق(ع)
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Human-Computer Interaction

TL;DR: The human and the design of interactive systems: The myth of the infinitely fast machine, a guide to designing for diversity and the process of design.
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