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Social networks and psychological safety: A model of contagion
Author(s) -
André Escórcio Soares,
Miguel Pereira Lopes
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of industrial engineering and management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.385
H-Index - 29
eISSN - 2013-8423
pISSN - 2013-0953
DOI - 10.3926/jiem.1115
Subject(s) - originality , psychological safety , emotional contagion , context (archaeology) , friendship , node (physics) , psychology , social psychology , construct (python library) , value (mathematics) , social network (sociolinguistics) , applied psychology , knowledge management , engineering , computer science , social media , paleontology , structural engineering , machine learning , creativity , world wide web , biology , programming language
Purpose: We attempted to explain how the interactions between members influence the psychological safety of a team using social network analysis by proposing a model based on social contagion in which the psychological safety of the central member has a key role in the psychological safety of the whole team. Design/methodology: We present a theoretical paper which crosses theory about social network analysis, psychological safety and social contagion. Findings: We suggest that there are two groups of variables that mediate this relationship. The first group concerns the characteristics of the node and is composed by the proximity to the node’s personal characteristics and the value of the central member as a source of information. Second, we advance that there are two dimensions at the level of tie properties that mediate the influence of a central member on team psychological safety – tie strength and friendship level. Finally, the interacting opportunities- a variable at context level - is considered to affect the strength of the ties. We also advance some variables that mediate the influence of the psychological safety of a central member on the psychological safety of the team. Originality/value: To the best of our knowledge there is no significant research using social network analysis to explain the process by which a team becomes psychologically safe. On the other hand, because psychological safety tends to be a team construct it is important to understand how team dynamics, evidenced by social network analysis, influence the formation of psychological safety through contagion processesPeer Reviewe

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