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Converting expertise dissimilarity to creativity

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

Converting expertise dissimilarity to creativity. / He, Wei; Schroeder, Andreas; Fang, Yulin et al.
2016. Paper presented at 76th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, Anaheim, United States.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

He, W, Schroeder, A, Fang, Y & Hsieh, JJPA 2016, 'Converting expertise dissimilarity to creativity', Paper presented at 76th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, Anaheim, United States, 5/08/16 - 9/08/16.

APA

He, W., Schroeder, A., Fang, Y., & Hsieh, J. J. P. A. (2016). Converting expertise dissimilarity to creativity. Paper presented at 76th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, Anaheim, United States.

Vancouver

He W, Schroeder A, Fang Y, Hsieh JJPA. Converting expertise dissimilarity to creativity. 2016. Paper presented at 76th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, Anaheim, United States.

Author

He, Wei ; Schroeder, Andreas ; Fang, Yulin et al. / Converting expertise dissimilarity to creativity. Paper presented at 76th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, Anaheim, United States.6 p.

Bibtex

@conference{dcb4db2a7624474c8e0416cd6a584edf,
title = "Converting expertise dissimilarity to creativity",
abstract = "his study investigates how the transactive memory system (TMS) and geographic dispersion (GD) of an IT project team may impact how an individual member utilizes his or her expertise dissimilarity to stimulate creativity. A cross-level analysis of data from 141 team members and their supervisors in thirty-five IT service project teams revealed that there is a significant three-way interaction between an individual{\textquoteright}s expertise dissimilarity, GD, and TMS on individual creativity. Specifically, TMS is important to all teams, but it is particularly essential to low-GD teams: without the support of a well- developed TMS, individual members who possess highly dissimilar expertise to their peer team members are significantly more disadvantaged in terms of creativity when working in a collocated context than in a dispersed context. Our research mainly contributes to a differentiated understanding of (1) GD as a double-edged sword that creates both restraining but also facilitating effects on the individual team member{\textquoteright}s creativity and of (2) TMS as a vital team capability that helps overcome the obstacles that expertise-dissimilar employees might face in their pursuit of creativity. These findings highlight the importance of developing a cross-level perspective of TMS and incorporating the GD factor to enrich the current research.",
keywords = "Creativity, geographical dispersion, transactive memory system",
author = "Wei He and Andreas Schroeder and Yulin Fang and Hsieh, {J. J.Po An}",
year = "2016",
month = jan,
day = "1",
language = "English",
note = "76th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, AOM 2016 ; Conference date: 05-08-2016 Through 09-08-2016",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Converting expertise dissimilarity to creativity

AU - He, Wei

AU - Schroeder, Andreas

AU - Fang, Yulin

AU - Hsieh, J. J.Po An

PY - 2016/1/1

Y1 - 2016/1/1

N2 - his study investigates how the transactive memory system (TMS) and geographic dispersion (GD) of an IT project team may impact how an individual member utilizes his or her expertise dissimilarity to stimulate creativity. A cross-level analysis of data from 141 team members and their supervisors in thirty-five IT service project teams revealed that there is a significant three-way interaction between an individual’s expertise dissimilarity, GD, and TMS on individual creativity. Specifically, TMS is important to all teams, but it is particularly essential to low-GD teams: without the support of a well- developed TMS, individual members who possess highly dissimilar expertise to their peer team members are significantly more disadvantaged in terms of creativity when working in a collocated context than in a dispersed context. Our research mainly contributes to a differentiated understanding of (1) GD as a double-edged sword that creates both restraining but also facilitating effects on the individual team member’s creativity and of (2) TMS as a vital team capability that helps overcome the obstacles that expertise-dissimilar employees might face in their pursuit of creativity. These findings highlight the importance of developing a cross-level perspective of TMS and incorporating the GD factor to enrich the current research.

AB - his study investigates how the transactive memory system (TMS) and geographic dispersion (GD) of an IT project team may impact how an individual member utilizes his or her expertise dissimilarity to stimulate creativity. A cross-level analysis of data from 141 team members and their supervisors in thirty-five IT service project teams revealed that there is a significant three-way interaction between an individual’s expertise dissimilarity, GD, and TMS on individual creativity. Specifically, TMS is important to all teams, but it is particularly essential to low-GD teams: without the support of a well- developed TMS, individual members who possess highly dissimilar expertise to their peer team members are significantly more disadvantaged in terms of creativity when working in a collocated context than in a dispersed context. Our research mainly contributes to a differentiated understanding of (1) GD as a double-edged sword that creates both restraining but also facilitating effects on the individual team member’s creativity and of (2) TMS as a vital team capability that helps overcome the obstacles that expertise-dissimilar employees might face in their pursuit of creativity. These findings highlight the importance of developing a cross-level perspective of TMS and incorporating the GD factor to enrich the current research.

KW - Creativity

KW - geographical dispersion

KW - transactive memory system

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - 76th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management

Y2 - 5 August 2016 through 9 August 2016

ER -