Interpersonal networks can be conceptualized not only as actual social structures surrounding individuals, but also as cognitive social structures stemming from individuals' perceptions of those relationships. Yet, most work on social networks adopts either a structural or a perceptual perspective. In this paper, I blend these two traditions examining how actual and perceptual brokerage jointly determine innovation performance. I hypothesize that while actual brokerage benefits individuals by exposing them to nonredundant information, socially perceived brokerage—being perceived to bridge across groups irrespective of one's actual network configuration—may trigger skepticism of brokers' motives that could impinge on their ability to innovat...
In this paper we explore the mechanisms underpinning returns to brokerage positions by considering t...
Integrating insights from cognitive psychology into current network theory on the social capital of ...
The apparent stability of social network structures may mask considerable change and adjustment in t...
Interpersonal networks can be conceptualized not only as actual social structures surrounding indivi...
As an important organizational phenomenon, brokerage is common in any group of three or more. A rece...
Although brokers who span structural holes have been shown to occupy a valuable position in organiza...
A key question in the study of organizations is why some individuals perform better than others. Und...
Adjunct to the preceding excerpt from Structural Holes, this chapter’s goal is to provide a capstone...
We renovate a classic experiment to define a research platform that provides data on network behavio...
Occupying a brokerage network position provides the focal actor with structural opportunities to acc...
Through exposure to heterogeneous sources of knowledge, actors who broker between unconnected contac...
We introduce the concept of the network architect to extend theory explaining how brokers create and...
This work is about the co-evolution of intra-organizational networks and organizational structures a...
Brokerage – occupying a social network position that spans two otherwise disconnected alters – is a ...
Integrating insights from cognitive psychology into current network theory on the social capital of ...
In this paper we explore the mechanisms underpinning returns to brokerage positions by considering t...
Integrating insights from cognitive psychology into current network theory on the social capital of ...
The apparent stability of social network structures may mask considerable change and adjustment in t...
Interpersonal networks can be conceptualized not only as actual social structures surrounding indivi...
As an important organizational phenomenon, brokerage is common in any group of three or more. A rece...
Although brokers who span structural holes have been shown to occupy a valuable position in organiza...
A key question in the study of organizations is why some individuals perform better than others. Und...
Adjunct to the preceding excerpt from Structural Holes, this chapter’s goal is to provide a capstone...
We renovate a classic experiment to define a research platform that provides data on network behavio...
Occupying a brokerage network position provides the focal actor with structural opportunities to acc...
Through exposure to heterogeneous sources of knowledge, actors who broker between unconnected contac...
We introduce the concept of the network architect to extend theory explaining how brokers create and...
This work is about the co-evolution of intra-organizational networks and organizational structures a...
Brokerage – occupying a social network position that spans two otherwise disconnected alters – is a ...
Integrating insights from cognitive psychology into current network theory on the social capital of ...
In this paper we explore the mechanisms underpinning returns to brokerage positions by considering t...
Integrating insights from cognitive psychology into current network theory on the social capital of ...
The apparent stability of social network structures may mask considerable change and adjustment in t...