Abstract

PurposeThis study aims to examine the associations of social networks with the sense of community (SOC) construct and spatial colocation or having an office. The study site was an institute for health-care policy research formed in 2011 by bringing together scientists from more than 20 different university units. Only 30% of the scientists were had an office or physical presence at the institute. Therefore, the institute was an ideal site to examine whether SOC was correlated with different dimensions of network position – connectedness, reachability and brokerage – even when the authors account for the lack of spatial colocation for the off-site scientists.Design/methodology/approachA two-part (sociometric and workplace) internet survey instrument was administered in 2014 to the institute’s population of 411 individuals. The sociometric data were used to create an undirected interaction network and the following dependent variables (DVs) or network centralities: normalized degree to measure connectedness; average reciprocal distance to capture reachability; and normalized betweenness to proxy brokerage. Separate node-level network regressions were then run with random permutations (N = 10,000) and listwise deletion for each of the DVs with SOC and spatial colocation as the independent variables, and variables that controlled for gender, organizational affiliation and job category.FindingsSOC and spatial colocation are both positively and significantly correlated with network connectedness and reachability. The results suggest that both SOC and spatial colocation have a larger impact on reachability than connectedness. However, neither SOC nor spatial colocation are significantly associated with network brokerage. Finally, the findings show that SOC and spatial colocation are more reliable predictors of network connectedness and reachability than are key individual- and unit-level control variables, specifically the individual’s sex, job category and organizational affiliation. The controls were not significantly associated with any of the three network centralities, namely, connectedness, reachability and brokerage.Originality/valueThis exploratory study used social network analysis and node-level network regressions to examine the associations from SOC and spatial colocation to dimensions of network position. SOC is positively and significantly associated with network connectedness and reachability, suggesting that SOC is an important consideration when individuals are disadvantaged from the absence of spatial colocation. The findings have implications for work in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic as they imply that interventions based on the SOC construct could potentially lessen the negative effects of remote work on workplace social networks due to factors such as the reduction of social contacts.

Highlights

  • The physical workplace has long been understood as the stage upon which social encounters and interactions in organizations translate to important outcomes related to communication, collaboration and team science (Olson and Olson, 2000; Olson et al, 2002; Serrato and Wineman, 1999; Wineman et al, 2009; Peponis et al, 2007)

  • The results suggest that both sense of community (SOC) and spatial colocation have a larger impact on reachability than connectedness

  • This paper presents the results of a study of the relations between spatial colocation and sense of community (SOC), and three different dimensions of network position or centrality corresponding to an individual’s connectedness to others, reachability to and from others across the network and ability to stand in brokerage between others in the network

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Summary

Introduction

The physical workplace has long been understood as the stage upon which social encounters and interactions in organizations translate to important outcomes related to communication, collaboration and team science (Olson and Olson, 2000; Olson et al, 2002; Serrato and Wineman, 1999; Wineman et al, 2009; Peponis et al, 2007). There has been a dramatic increase in the use of technology-mediated communication platforms, such as Zoom and Skype especially starting in early 2020 when many governments introduced workplace shutdowns as a means of controlling the coronavirus (Gilbert, 2020; Sherr, 2020). It is still unclear what these trends mean for organizations as the importance of communications between employees is not diminished by the pandemic, and as there is no evidence that we no longer need face-to-face interactions in the workplace with respect to collaboration, team science and innovation. This paper presents the results of a study of the relations between spatial colocation and sense of community (SOC), and three different dimensions of network position or centrality corresponding to an individual’s connectedness to others, reachability to and from others across the network and ability to stand in brokerage between others in the network

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