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Is Out of Sight, Out of Mind? An Empirical Study of Social Loafing in Technology-Supported Groups

Laku Chidambaram () and Lai Lai Tung ()
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Laku Chidambaram: Michael F. Price College of Business, University of Oklahoma, 307 West Brooks, Suite 30, Norman, Oklahoma 73019
Lai Lai Tung: Nanyang Business School, Nanyang Technological University, Nanyang Avenue, Singapore 639798

Information Systems Research, 2005, vol. 16, issue 2, 149-168

Abstract: Research on group behavior has identified social loafing, i.e., the tendency of members to do less than their potential, as a particularly serious problem plaguing groups. Social Impact Theory (SIT) helps explain social loafing in terms of two theoretical dimensions—the dilution effect (where an individual feels submerged in the group) and the immediacy gap (where an individual feels isolated from the group). In this study, which employed a controlled experiment, we investigated these dimensions of social loafing in the context of group decision making, using collocated and distributed teams of varying sizes. Our results—in line with SIT—indicate that small groups, signifying a small dilution effect, had increased individual contributions and better group outcomes compared to their larger counterparts. However, support for SIT's arguments about the immediacy gap was mixed: Members contributed visibly more when they were collocated, but no significant differences in group outcomes were evident. Regardless of dimension, the quality of the input (ideas generated) determined the quality of the output (decisions made). Also, contrary to the literature on brainstorming, having more ideas to work with resulted in poorer-quality decisions. This apparent paradox is explained using the notion of integrative complexity, which challenges conventional wisdom regarding the relationship between individual inputs and group outputs. The implications of these results for practice and research are examined.

Keywords: computer-supported group work; distributed group decision making; group size; social loafing; integrative complexity; collaborative technologies; virtual teams; group performance (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2005
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (25)

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