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Dream
teams thrive on mix of old and new blood
EVANSTON, Ill.
(May 2005) --- When the Boston Red Sox won their first World Series
title since 1918 last year, the team had some new blood, including
key players Curt Schilling, Orlando Cabrera and Doug Mientkiewicz,
to mix with the old and help the team achieve the pinnacle of
baseball success.
In a paper published on April 29 in the
journal Science, Northwestern University researchers turned to a
different type of team -- creative teams in the arts and sciences --
to determine a team's recipe for success. They discovered that the
composition of a great team is the same whether you are working on
Broadway or in economics.
The researchers studied data on
Broadway musicals since 1877 as well as thousands of journal
publications in four fields of science and found that successful
teams had a diverse membership -- not of race and gender but of old
blood and new. New team members clearly added creative spark and
critical links to the experience of the entire industry.
Unsuccessful teams were isolated from each other whereas the members
of successful teams were interconnected, much like the Kevin Bacon
game, across a giant cluster of artists or scientists.
“Do
people go out of their way to collaborate with new people?” said
Luís A. Nunes Amaral, associate professor of chemical and biological
engineering and the corresponding author on the paper. “Do they take
this risk?
“We found that teams that achieved success -- by
producing musicals on Broadway or publishing academic papers in good
journals -- were fundamentally assembled in the same way, by
bringing in some experienced people who had not worked together
before. The unsuccessful teams repeated the same collaborations over
and over again.”
Amaral, a physicist with expertise in
computer-based modeling, found a new collaborator only 500 yards
away across campus: sociologist Brian Uzzi, associate professor of
management and organizations at the Kellogg School of Management.
Uzzi is one of the paper's authors, along with Roger Guimerà, a
postdoctoral fellow in Amaral's lab, and Jarrett Spiro, a former
undergraduate research assistant of Uzzi's who is now a Ph.D.
student at Stanford University.
Uzzi and Amaral, who share
an interest in creativity and network theory, met through their
involvement in the University's new Northwestern Institute on
Complex Systems (NICO), which was created expressly to facilitate
new collaborations between researchers in diverse scientific areas.
“When Luís discussed his work at a NICO event I knew
immediately that we had to work together,” said Uzzi, who had been
studying creativity and the network of big and successful Broadway
musicals. “We discovered that assembling a successful team depends
on choosing the right balance of diversity and cohesion -- achieving
the bliss point intersection of the two.” Diversity represents new
collaborations while cohesion comes from repeat collaborations.
Uzzi points to “West Side Story” as an example of a
successful collaboration that mixed these two variables well.
Producer and director Harold Prince and lyricist Stephen Sondheim
had worked together before, on “Pajama Game;” choreographer Jerome
Robbins was experienced in the industry but hadn't worked with
Prince or Sondheim before; and classical musical composer Leonard
Bernstein was a newcomer to the Broadway scene. Since its stage
debut in 1957, the impact of this creative alliance continues to be
felt around the world.
Amaral and his co-authors took Uzzi's
Broadway data about team formation and produced an estimate of the
structure of the entire systemic network of a field -- the ties
among all the artists in the industry. The team then extended the
work to scientific teams publishing in the fields of social
psychology, economics, ecology and astronomy. Because each journal
has an “impact factor” associated with it, the researchers could
determine if teams were publishing high or low impact papers.
“The entire network looks different when you compare a
successful team with an unsuccessful team,” said Amaral. “The teams
that publish in bad journals form a network broken into small,
unconnected clusters while the teams that publish in good journals
give rise to a giant, connected cluster. A strong correlation
clearly exists between team assembly and the quality of the team's
creations. You need someone new to get the creative juices going so
you don't get trapped in the same ideas over and over again.”
Uzzi added, “If your systemic network has teams with only
incumbents, and especially incumbents who have worked together
repeatedly, your field tends to have low impact scores. The fact
that we found this across fields with equally powerful minds
suggests that how the brain power of a field is organized into
different kinds of networks determines the field's success.”
The research was supported by the National Institutes of
Health under grant 5-K25-GM069546.
CONTACT: Peggy
King, Kellogg School of Management, at (847) 491-2112 or mailto:peggy-king@kellogg.northwestern.eduor
Megan Fellman, Northwestern Univeristy, at (847) 491-3115 or fellman@northwestern.edu
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