Title
Implicit Coordination Strategies for Effective Team Communication.
Abstract
Objective We investigated implicit communication strategies for anticipatory information sharing during team performance of tasks with varying degrees of complexity. We compared the strategies used by teams with the highest level of performance to those used by the lowest-performing teams to evaluate the frequency and methods of communications used as a function of task structure. Background High-performing teams share information by anticipating the needs of their teammates rather than explicitly requesting the exchange of information. As the complexity of a task increases to involve more interdependence among teammates, the impact of coordination on team performance also increases. This observation motivated us to conduct a study of anticipatory information sharing as a function of task complexity. Method We conducted an experiment in which 13 teams of four people performed collaborative search-and-deliver tasks with varying degrees of complexity in a simulation environment. We elaborated upon prior characterizations of communication as implicit versus explicit by dividing implicit communication into two subtypes: (a) deliberative/goal information and (b) reactive status updates. We then characterized relationships between task structure, implicit communication, and team performance. Results We found that the five teams with the fastest task completion times and lowest idle times exhibited higher rates of deliberative communication versus reactive communication during high-complexity tasks compared with the five teams with the slowest completion times and longest idle times (p = .039). Conclusion Teams in which members proactively communicated information about their next goal to teammates exhibited improved team performance. Application The findings from our work can inform the design of communication strategies for team training to improve performance of complex tasks.
Year
DOI
Venue
2016
10.1177/0018720816639712
HUMAN FACTORS
Keywords
Field
DocType
team collaboration,communication analysis,task complexity,implicit communication,deliberative communication
Social psychology,Simulation,Computer science,Exchange of information,Cooperative behavior,Knowledge management,Implicit communication,Team communication,Communication Analysis,Information sharing
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
58.0
4.0
0018-7208
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
5
0.55
10
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Abhizna Butchibabu150.55
Christopher Sparano-Huiban250.55
Liz Sonenberg3802119.89
Julie A. Shah460657.51