Experiential Learning in Computer Based Simulation Training - Experiences from Research on Team Decision Making

Author(s):  
Helena Maria Granlund
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 106-137
Author(s):  
David C. Chan

I study team decisions among physician trainees. Exploiting a discontinuity in team roles across trainee tenure, I find evidence that teams alter decision-making, concentrating influence in the hands of senior trainees. I also demonstrate little convergence in variation of trainee effects despite intensive training. This general pattern of trainee effects on team decision-making exists in all types of decisions and settings that I examine. In analyses evaluating mechanisms behind this pattern, I find support for the idea that significant experiential learning occurs during training and that teams place more weight on judgments of senior trainees in order to aggregate information. (JEL D83, I11, J44, M53, M54)


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angela Donovan ◽  
Dennis J. Devine ◽  
Paige E. Coulter-Kern ◽  
Aron J. Kale

2018 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 199-226
Author(s):  
Jinyun Duan ◽  
Yue Xu ◽  
M. Lance Frazier

Drawing on social exchange theory, the current research hypothesizes voice climate as a mediator of the relationship between team-member exchange (TMX) and both team decision-making effectiveness and innovative performance. Furthermore, we propose that task interdependence moderates the mediational relationship between TMX, voice climate, team decision-making effectiveness, and innovative performance. Survey results based on 294 members and their leaders from 73 entrepreneur teams demonstrated that TMX is positively related to voice climate and the two outcome variables. In addition, the relationships between TMX and both decision-making effectiveness and innovative performance are mediated by voice climate perceptions, respectively. Task interdependence moderated the relationship between TMX and voice climate, whereas moderated-mediation analyses indicated that the mediational relationship between TMX, voice climate, and both outcomes is stronger when task interdependence is high rather than low.


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