The psychological costs of knowledge specialization in groups: Unique expertise leaves you out of the loop |
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Authors: | Eric E. Jones Janice R. Kelly |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, United States;2. Department of Psychological Sciences, Purdue University, United States |
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Abstract: | Knowledge specialization, such as that present in cross-functional teams, produces both positive and negative outcomes. Our research investigated how unique expertise can lead to feelings of ostracism in the form of being out of the loop. Compared to group members with shared expertise, members with unique expertise felt out of the loop and experienced decreased fulfillment of fundamental needs, particularly when their expertise was to be given less weight in the group’s decision. Possessing unique expertise did not inhibit leadership emergence, even when that expertise should not have been used in the decision-making process. So, although knowledge specialization can have positive consequences for teams and task performance, it also has some negative psychological consequences that need to be understood. |
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Keywords: | Out of the loop Groups Information sharing Cross-functional teams Ostracism |
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