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Being distinctive versus being conspicuous: The effects of numeric status and sex-stereotyped tasks on individual performance in groups

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Author Info
Chatman, Jennifer A.
Boisnier, Alicia D.
Spataro, Sandra E.
Anderson, Cameron
Berdahl, Jennifer L.
Abstract

Being in the numeric minority (e.g., being a solo woman in a group of men) influences how well a person performs within a work group. But being the solo member is only one way in which people can be atypical in a group; a person can also represent a social or demographic category that has not typically been associated with the task that the group is working on. Using a design with four categories of group composition (minority, balanced, majority, homogeneous) and two categories of tasks (sex-typical, sex-atypical) we found that the sex composition of the group interacted with the sex typicality of the task to influence both positive deferrals by group members and individual performance in groups. But, rather than consistently reducing performance as prior research has suggested, being numerically atypical enhanced individual performance when the task was typical for that person's sex. Further, positive deferrals mediated between the interaction of numeric composition and task typicality in influencing individual performance suggesting that both majority group members and the solo member affect one another's performance in groups. We conclude by discussing why understanding the interplay between these two sources of stereotyping, numeric composition and task typicality, is important for understanding the social nature of individual performance in groups.

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File URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WP2-4S62Y54-3/2/dbdb39366bed64f9ee3bfaaa04c33c5e
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Publisher Info
Article provided by Elsevier in its journal Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes.

Volume (Year): 107 (2008)
Issue (Month): 2 (November)
Pages: 141-160
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Handle: RePEc:eee:jobhdp:v:107:y:2008:i:2:p:141-160

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Related research
Keywords: Solo status Sex-congruent tasks Diversity Relational demography Gender Groups Teams;

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