Title :
The Effect of Personal Disclosure within Teams: Can Faultlines in Geographically-Dispersed Teams Be Bridged?
Author :
Chiu, Yi-Te ; Staples, Sandy
Abstract :
Differences between members within teams can align to create potential faultlines. Faultlines have the potential to significantly disrupt performance due to the creation of intergroup bias. In geographically-dispersed teams, due to dispersed locations and other diversity characteristics, potential intergroup bias could be a major issue in Global Virtual Teams (GVT´s) that needs to be more fully understood. This study examines whether public self-disclosure via weblogs can alleviate intergroup bias in geographically-dispersed teams by enabling the development of personal relationships. An experimental study of 34 4-person student teams found that public self-disclosure does not have a direct effect on reducing intergroup bias but has a mediated effect through social attraction. That is, as team members disclose their personal information and out-group team members are attracted to such disclosure, perceived in-group and out-group differences are diminished. Overall, findings support the common in-group identity model and highlight the potential benefits of socialization via weblogs in dispersed teams.
Keywords :
social networking (online); virtual enterprises; Weblogs; geographically-dispersed teams; global virtual teams; personal information; socialization; team personal disclosure; Atmospheric measurements; Cultural differences; Diversity reception; IEEE Potentials; Media; Particle measurements; Social network services;
Conference_Titel :
System Sciences (HICSS), 2011 44th Hawaii International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Kauai, HI
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-9618-1
DOI :
10.1109/HICSS.2011.409