Team problem solving and motivation under disorganization an agent-based modeling approach
Authored by Dinuka Herath, Joyce Costello, Fabian Homberg
Date Published: 2017
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Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims at simulating on how ``disorganization{''} affects team
problem solving. The prime objective is to determine how team problem
solving varies between an organized and disorganized environment also
considering motivational aspects.
Design methodology approach
Using agent-based modeling, the authors use a real-world data set from
226 volunteers at five different types of non-profit organizations in
Southwest England to define some attributes of the agents. The authors
introduce the concepts of natural, structural and functional
disorganization while operationalizing natural and functional
disorganization.
Findings
The simulations show that ``disorganization{''} is more conducive for
problem solving efficiency than ``organization{''} given enough
flexibility (range) to search and acquire resources. The findings
further demonstrate that teams with resources above their hierarchical
level (access to better quality resources) tend to perform better than
teams that have only limited access to resources.
Originality/value
The nuanced categories of ``(dis-)organization{''} allow us to compare
between various structural limitations, thus generating insights for
improving the way managers structure teams for better problem solving.
Tags
behavior
Performance
Organization
Public-service motivation
Employees