Interpersonal Networks in Organizations

Interpersonal Networks in Organizations

Author: Martin Kilduff

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2008-09-01

Total Pages: 310

ISBN-13: 1139474103

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This book brings a social networks perspective to bear on topics of leadership, decision-making, turnover, organizational crises, organizational culture, and other major organizational behavior topics. It offers a new direction for organizational behavior theory and research by drawing from social network ideas. Across diverse research topics, the authors pursue an integrated focus on social ties both as they are represented in the cognitions of individuals and as they operate as constraints and opportunities in organizational settings. The authors bring their 20 years worth of research experience together to provide a programmatic social network approach to understanding the internal functioning of organizations. By focusing a distinctive research lens on interpersonal networks, they attempt to discover the keys to the whole realm of organizational behavior through the social network approach.


Social Networks and Organizations

Social Networks and Organizations

Author: Martin Kilduff

Publisher: SAGE

Published: 2003-09-08

Total Pages: 180

ISBN-13: 9780761969570

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'Social Networks and Organizations' provides a compact introduction to major concepts in the area of organizational social networks.


Organizational Communication

Organizational Communication

Author: Cynthia Stohl

Publisher: SAGE Publications

Published: 1995-04-05

Total Pages: 224

ISBN-13: 145224586X

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Recipient of the 1995 Best Book Award from the Organizational Communication division of the Speech Communication Association "I have just finished reading Organizational Communication. This is a magnificent piece of work bringing together current and past scholarship to form a persuasive argument for awareness. I will bring this work to the attention of a graduate class I′m teaching on organizational change and team building. . . . Above all, I recommend it to instructors of organizational communication." --William Gorden, Kent State University The lines between our personal and professional lives are blurred--naturally, one affects the other. Organizational Communication is the first book on the subject to take into account the personal context we bring into an organization. In addition to the connections between home life, social life, and professional activities, author Cynthia Stohl asserts that we must pay close attention to the linkages that individuals develop and maintain within their organizational contexts. Each chapter illustrates the ways in which today′s changing social patterns, the increasing diversity of the workforce, the introduction of new communication technologies, and the challenges of global integration and competition create organizational and interpersonal networks that are intricately interwoven and complex. By reframing the network metaphor, the author challenges us to examine the ways in which organizational communication is always embedded in, and influenced by, overlapping systems of relationships. Organizational Communication is the ideal text for courses in organizational communication that focus on the organization as an integrated aspect of our lives, our culture, and our global society.


Opportunities and Challenges for Computational Social Science Methods

Opportunities and Challenges for Computational Social Science Methods

Author: Abanoz, Enes

Publisher: IGI Global

Published: 2022-03-18

Total Pages: 277

ISBN-13: 1799885550

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We are living in a digital era in which most of our daily activities take place online. This has created a big data phenomenon that has been subject to scientific research with increasingly available tools and processing power. As a result, a growing number of social science scholars are using computational methods for analyzing social behavior. To further the area, these evolving methods must be made known to sociological research scholars. Opportunities and Challenges for Computational Social Science Methods focuses on the implementation of social science methods and the opportunities and challenges of these methods. This book sheds light on the infrastructure that should be built to gain required skillsets, the tools used in computational social sciences, and the methods developed and applied into computational social sciences. Covering topics like computational communication, ecological cognition, and natural language processing, this book is an essential resource for researchers, data scientists, scholars, students, professors, sociologists, and academicians.


Structure, Content and Meaning of Organizational Networks

Structure, Content and Meaning of Organizational Networks

Author: Peter Groenewegen

Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing

Published: 2017-10-12

Total Pages: 253

ISBN-13: 1787149293

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This volume explores recent advances in network research, strengthening theorizing on social structures and meaning in and between organizational networks. The volume will interest researchers seeking to explain organizational phenomena through the analysis of communications and information from archival/secondary electronic sources.


Organizational Networks

Organizational Networks

Author: Martin Kilduff

Publisher: SAGE Publications Limited

Published: 2011-08-09

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780857025593

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Drawing on the wealth of insights into organizational life accumulated over the past few decades, this collection takes stock of the foundations of research in this area, examines the status of the current work and identifies future directions for the field. Topics covered include theoretical and methodological foundations; social capital; strong ties, weak ties and structural holes; small worlds/network structures; centrality and power; social networks of entrepreneurship; identity, cognition and individual differences in social networks; and network dynamics.


When Hubs Forget, Lie, and Play Favorites

When Hubs Forget, Lie, and Play Favorites

Author: Melissa A. Schilling

Publisher:

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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The interpersonal network structure of an organization directly influences the diffusion and recombination of ideas, and can thus facilitate or impede organizational learning. Most interpersonal networks have “hubs” - individuals that have significantly more connections than does the average member. This raises important questions about how hubs influence organizational learning outcomes. Does the presence of hubs improve or impair performance? What happens if hubs forget or misrepresent information that is transmitted through the network? Using simulation models, we find that moderately hubby networks outperform both very hubby and democratic networks. We also find that moderate amounts of information omission or misrepresentation can be surprisingly beneficial to performance, though the patterns of their effects are strikingly different.