Organizational learning with forgetting: Reconsidering the exploration-exploitation tradeoff
Authored by Kent D Miller, Dirk Martignoni
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1177/1476127015608337
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Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Prior exploration-exploitation models of organizational learning
generally neglect forgetting. This study models organizational learning
with forgetting and derives some novel implications. Most noteworthy, our findings point out limits to the contention that promoting rapid
learning undermines long-run knowledge. Slower learning is not always
better. When agents are subject to forgetting, raising the rate of
interpersonal learning often enhances the diversity of beliefs within an
organization, as well as the number and range of aspects of the
environment that organizational members come to know. The rate of
learning that maximizes organizational knowledge or diversity varies
with the rate of forgetting. Organizations need not sacrifice diversity
as they gain knowledge. Analyses of our model indicate that knowledge
and diversity are positively correlated across organizations.
Implications of forgetting redirect theorists, empirical researchers, and managers toward alternatives to some conclusions from prior
exploration-exploitation modeling studies.
Tags
Performance
knowledge
Network Structure
Memory
rationality
perspective
Antecedents
Information distortion
Ambidexterity
Routines