Author List: Zigurs, Ilze; A.Kozar, Kenneth;
MIS Quarterly, 1994, Volume 18, Issue 3, Page 277-297.
The emerging technology of group support systems has the potential to enhance the effectiveness of team work in organizations. One critical factor that has received little attention in technology-supported environments is that of the roles participants fill in meetings. This paper develops a theoretical model of roles in computer-supported meetings and examines the impact of a group support system on roles. An exploratory field study of 10 work teams was conducted to investigate the perceptions of participants about their own roles and the roles that the group support system technology might fill. The study found a gap between the role expectations of meeting initiators and meeting participants, as well as between participants' role expectations and actual roles filled. The group support system technology was perceived to fill an unexpectedly large variety of roles. The study also showed that the group support system assumed some of the roles that participants expected to fill, resulting in fewer roles filled by participants.
Keywords: electronic meeting systems; group interaction process.; Group support systems; roles
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#257 0.463 group support groups meeting gdss decision systems meetings technology study electronic ems task process communication computer-supported outcomes quality consensus face-to-face
#218 0.190 role roles gender differences women significant play age men plays sample differ played vary understand critical greater implications relatively offered
#108 0.102 model research data results study using theoretical influence findings theory support implications test collected tested based empirical empirically context paper
#51 0.095 results study research experiment experiments influence implications conducted laboratory field different indicate impact effectiveness future participants evidence test controlled involving