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Personality and Social Psychology Review
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The Study of Groups: Past, Present, and Future

Joseph E. McGrath

Department of Psychology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Holly Arrow

Department of Psychology, University of Oregon

Jennifer L. Berdahl

Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley

A century of research on small groups has yielded bountiful findings about many specific features and processes in groups. Much of that work, in line with a positivist epistemology that emphasizes control and precision and favors the laboratory experiment over other data collection strategies, has also tended to treat groups as though they were simple, isolated, static entities. Recent research trends that treat groups as complex, adaptive, dynamic systems open up new approaches to studying groups. In line with those trends, a theory of groups as complex systems is offered and some methodological and conceptual issues raised by this theory are identified. A 3-pronged research strategy based on theory development, computational modeling, and empirical research that holds promise for illuminating the dynamic processes underlying the emergence of complexity and the ongoing balance of continuity and change in groups is proposed.

Personality and Social Psychology Review, Vol. 4, No. 1, 95-105 (2000)
DOI: 10.1207/S15327957PSPR0401_8


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Journal of Applied Behavioral ScienceHome page
G. R. Bushe and G. H. Coetzer
Group Development and Team Effectiveness: Using Cognitive Representations to Measure Group Development and Predict Task Performance and Group Viability
Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, June 1, 2007; 43(2): 184 - 212.
[Abstract] [PDF]