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  4. Getting groups to develop good strategies: Effects of reflexivity interventions on team process, team performance, and shared mental models
 
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Getting groups to develop good strategies: Effects of reflexivity interventions on team process, team performance, and shared mental models

Auteur(s)
Gurtner, Andrea
Tschan, Franziska 
Institut de psychologie du travail et des organisations 
Semmer, Norbert
Nägele, Christof
Date de parution
2007
In
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes
Vol.
2
No
102
De la page
127
A la page
142
Mots-clés
  • reflexivity
  • strategy development
  • coordination
  • shared mental models
  • team process
  • team performance
  • DECISION-MAKING GROUPS
  • WORK TEAMS
  • IMPACT
  • INTERDEPENDENCE
  • UNCERTAINTY
  • INFORMATION
  • ADAPTATION
  • MANAGEMENT
  • INNOVATION
  • KNOWLEDGE
  • reflexivity

  • strategy development

  • coordination

  • shared mental models

  • team process

  • team performance

  • DECISION-MAKING GROUP...

  • WORK TEAMS

  • IMPACT

  • INTERDEPENDENCE

  • UNCERTAINTY

  • INFORMATION

  • ADAPTATION

  • MANAGEMENT

  • INNOVATION

  • KNOWLEDGE

Résumé
This study examines the effect of guided reflection on team processes and performance, based on West's (1996, 2000) concept of reflexivity. Communicating via e-mail, 49 hierarchically structured teams (one commander and two specialists) performed seven 15 min shifts of a simulated team-based military air-surveillance task (TAST) in two meetings, a week apart. At the beginning of the second meeting, teams were assigned either to a reflexivity (individual or group) or to a control condition. Results show that reflexivity enhanced performance, the link between reflexivity and team performance being mediated by communication and implementation of strategies as well as by similarity of mental models. Contrary to expectations, individual reflexivity was superior to group reflexivity. Additional analyses suggested that group reflexivity decreased the commanders' active behavior and increased discussion of strategies that were too general to be helpful. Results point to the usefulness of reflexivity as a generic intervention but underscore the importance of focusing on strategies that are task-specific. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/11458
Type de publication
journal article
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