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Journal Article
Structural balance emerges and explains performance in risky decision-making
Nature Communications
Author(s)
Polarization affects many forms of social organization. A key issue focuses on which affective relationships are prone to change and how their change relates to performance. In this study, we analyze a financial institutional over a two-year period that employed 66 day traders, focusing on links between changes in affective relations and trading performance. Traders’ affective relations were inferred from their IMs (>2 million messages) and trading performance was measured from profit and loss statements (>1 million trades). Here, we find that triads of relationships, the building blocks of larger social structures, have a propensity towards affective balance, but one unbalanced configuration resists change. Further, balance is positively related to performance. Traders with balanced networks have the “hot handâ€, showing streaks of high performance. Research implications focus on how changes in polarization relate to performance and polarized states can depolarize.
Date Published:
2019
Citations:
Askarisichani, Omid, Jacqueline Ng Lane, Francesco Bullo, Noah Friedkin, Singh Ambuj, Brian Uzzi. 2019. Structural balance emerges and explains performance in risky decision-making. Nature Communications.