Publication | Open Access
Surface-Level Diversity and Decision-Making in Groups: When Does Deep-Level Similarity Help?
272
Citations
64
References
2006
Year
Surface-level Homogeneous GroupsSocial CategorizationOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologyDeep-level Similarity HelpCultural DiversityManagementSurface-level DiversityDiversity SensitivityCollective CognitionSocial IdentityCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesGroup MembersGroup EvolutionSocial CognitionOrganizational CommunicationDecision ScienceGenerational DiversitySmall Group Research
We examined how surface-level diversity (based on race) and deep-level similarities influenced three-person decision-making groups on a hidden-profile task. Surface-level homogeneous groups perceived their information to be less unique and spent less time on the task than surface-level diverse groups. When the groups were given the opportunity to learn about their deep-level similarities prior to the task, group members felt more similar to one another and reported greater perceived attraction, but this was more true for surface-level homogeneous than surface-level diverse groups. Surface-level homogeneous groups performed slightly better after discovering deep-level similarities, but discovering deep-level similarities was not helpful for surface-level diverse groups, who otherwise outperformed surface-level homogeneous groups. We discuss the implications of this research for managing diversity in the workplace.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1