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Excited to Disagree? A Study of Emotions in Team Conflict

Excited to Disagree? A Study of Emotions in Team Conflict. Laurie R. Weingart Tepper School of Business Carnegie Mellon University (in collaboration with Julia Bear and Gergana Todorova). Virtual Humans USC. RESEARCH PRODUCTS. Implementation CMU. Computational Models CMU, USC.

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Excited to Disagree? A Study of Emotions in Team Conflict

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  1. Excited to Disagree?A Study of Emotions in Team Conflict Laurie R. Weingart Tepper School of Business Carnegie Mellon University (in collaboration with Julia Bear and Gergana Todorova)

  2. Virtual Humans USC RESEARCH PRODUCTS Implementation CMU Computational Models CMU, USC Validated Theories Models Modeling Tools Briefing Materials Scenarios Training Simulations validation Identify Cultural Factors CUNY, Georgetown, CMU validation Theory Formation validation Surveys & Interviews CUNY, CMU, U Mich, Georgetown Data Analysis CUNY, Georgetown, U Pitt, CMU Cross-Cultural Interactions U Pitt, CMU Common task Subgroup task

  3. Teams And Team Outcomes • Team • Small group • Task focused • Common goal • Interdependent, collaborative, actions • Interdependent outcomes • Team Outcomes • Performance • Attitudes • Learning

  4. Conflict in Teams • Conflict = active discussion of disagreements • Conflict and team performance • Positive – constructive debate • Negative – escalation • Conflict Types • Task - conflict about the task itself: how to perform the task, what needs to be done, etc. • Process - conflict about how to get a task done: managing deadlines, who should do what, etc • Interpersonal - conflict while working that is more personal in nature: about personal preferences, personalities, non-work related issues, etc

  5. Emotion in Conflict • Why study emotion? • Emotion has a strong influence on subsequent behavior • Different types of conflict elicit different levels of emotion. • What is emotion? • Subjective experience of affect that is short-term, discrete and has an attributed cause (Barry, 1999; Frijda, 1993) • Not = mood

  6. Negative Emotions • What do we know? • Team conflict (overall) is associated with high levels of negative emotions (Greer & Jehn, 2007; Jehn, 1995) • Interpersonal conflict is largely defined by the experience of negative emotions (Jehn, 1995; Jehn & Mannix, 2001) • However… • very little empirical research in this area • Task and process conflict may also invoke negative emotions (Cronin & Bezrukova, 2006; Greer & Jehn, 2007) • Some conflict may invoke positive emotion

  7. Example of Circumplex Models of Emotion active Frustrated, anxious, angry, annoyed, tense Attentive, active, interested, alert, energetic positive negative Dissatisfied, tired, irritated, worn out, exhausted Calm, content, at ease, quiet, sympathetic passive (e.g., Feldman & Russell, 1998; Larson & Deiner, 1992; Russell, 1980; Watson & Tellegen, 1985)

  8. Stream of Research • Measurement development pretest • Study 1: How do team members experience conflict? • Both positive and negative emotions? • Both active and passive emotions? • Different emotions during task, process, and interpersonal conflict? • Study 2: What role do conflict emotions play in team collaboration and performance? • Study 3: How does the process differ across cultures and when people from different cultures interact?

  9. Measurement Development Pretest • Procedure: • Identified 10 representative emotions from each category • Determined face validity in conflict setting using a sample of MBA students enrolled in Groups and Teams course (n = 25) • Ranked each set “in terms of how likely team members involved in conflict are likely to experience them” • Selected top 5 from each category • Results: • Positive Active: Attentive, active, interested, alert, energetic • Positive Passive: Calm, content, at ease, quiet, sympathetic • Negative Active: Frustrated, anxious, angry, annoyed, tense • Negative Passive: Dissatisfied, tired, irritated, worn out, exhausted

  10. Study 1: Exploratory Online Survey • Sample • Markettools – marketing research firm • Selection criteria – significant experience working in teams (“worked regularly on an important task for more than 1 month in duration”) • Sample size: 86 respondents met our criteria • Sample description: majority were18-34 years old, 4 year college degree, white, employed, management experience • Procedure • Retrospective Study: recall experiences and report on emotions • Defined conflict type (task, process, interpersonal) • Asked participants to report how they felt when engaged in each type of conflict • Self-report Likert-type scales • 5 items for each type of emotion

  11. Findings • Repeated-measures (2 X 2 X 3) ANOVA • Main effects: • emotion valence, F (1, 85)=15.35, p<.0001 • emotion activation, F (1, 85)=65.61, p<.0001 • conflict type, F(1,85)=.24, ns • 2-way interactions: • between conflict type and emotion valence, F (2, 84) = 9.72, p<.0001 • between emotion valence and activation, F (1, 85) = 56.44, p<.0001 • 3-way interactions: • between conflict type, emotion valence, and emotion activation, F (2, 84) =10.11, p<.0001

  12. Active > passive Negative active > positive passive

  13. Summary of Findings Positive-active emotions are the most prevalent in team conflict situations Different emotional profiles for different types of conflict (task, process vs. interpersonal) Enough evidence to begin studying effects of conflict emotion on team performance across types of conflict

  14. Progress in Research Stream • Study 1: How do team members experience conflict? • Both positive and negative emotions? YES • Both active and passive emotions? YES • Different emotions during task, process, and interpersonal conflict? YES • Study 2: What role do conflict emotions play in collaboration and performance? • Currently collecting data • student multidisciplinary software/product development teams • Continuing care facility (independent living through nursing home) • Study 3: How does the process differ across cultures and when people from different cultures interact? • Design and conduct this study in the next 18 months

  15. Next Steps:Conflict Emotions and Culture Does the circumplex hold across cultures? Do emotions cluster according to pleasantness and activation the same way in other cultures? What are the links between conflict types and emotions in other cultures? How do conflict and emotions interact to influence collaboration, cooperation, and team performance within and across cultures? What are the dynamics of emotion in conflicts?

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