To Share or Not to Share? Knowledge Convergence and Divergence in Cross-Disciplinary Collaboration

Authors

  • Susan Mohammed The Pennsylvania State University
  • Katherine Hamilton The Pennsylvania State University
  • Jacqueline Marhefka ICF
  • Bruce Tirrell The Pennsylvania State University
  • Carri Davis Austin Peay State University
  • Howard Hong New York University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33423/jop.v23i3.6485

Keywords:

organizational psychology, team cognition, knowledge convergence, knowledge divergence, cross-disciplinary teams, interdisciplinary teams, team mental models

Abstract

For cross-disciplinary teams to be effective, what knowledge should be shared and what knowledge should remain unique to individual team members? We adopted a mixed-method approach using a sample of grant-funded teams composed of principal and co-principal investigators of diverse disciplines. Interviewees and survey respondents especially favored knowledge similarity over uniqueness for team vision and teamwork, but less preference for convergence emerged for research outcomes and research content (theory, operational details of methodology, analysis). Moreover, more team knowledge convergence was associated with higher perceived collaboration satisfaction and trended in the direction of more grants, publications, and conference presentations.

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Published

2023-09-28

How to Cite

Mohammed, S., Hamilton, K., Marhefka, J., Tirrell, B., Davis, C., & Hong, H. (2023). To Share or Not to Share? Knowledge Convergence and Divergence in Cross-Disciplinary Collaboration. Journal of Organizational Psychology, 23(3). https://doi.org/10.33423/jop.v23i3.6485

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Articles