AI Article Synopsis

  • A study looked at how MBA students work in diverse teams and how they understand each other.
  • When the students had a positive view of their teammates, having more diversity helped them see each person as unique.
  • On the other hand, if they felt neutral about their teammates, more diversity made them see everyone more the same. The study suggests that helping people feel unique can make the group work better together and be more creative!

Article Abstract

A longitudinal study examined the interplay of identity negotiation processes and diversity in small groups of master's of business administration (MBA) students. When perceivers formed relatively positive impressions of other group members, higher diversity predicted more individuation of targets. When perceivers formed relatively neutral impressions of other group members, however, higher diversity predicted less individuation of targets. Individuation at the outset of the semester predicted self-verification effects several weeks later, and self-verification, in turn, predicted group identification and creative task performance. The authors conclude that contrary to self-categorization theory, fostering individuation and self-verification in diverse groups may maximize group identification and productivity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0146167203256868DOI Listing

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