Author
Listed:
- Marco Tonellato
(University of Trento, 38122 Trento TN, Italy; LMU Munich, 80539 Munich, Germany)
- Stefano Tasselli
(University of Exeter, Exeter EX4 4PY, United Kingdom; Erasmus University, 3062 PA Rotterdam, Netherlands; École supérieure de Commerce Rennes School of Business, 35065 Rennes, France)
- Guido Conaldi
(University of Greenwich, London SE10 9LS, United Kingdom)
- Jürgen Lerner
(University of Konstanz, 78464 Konstanz, Germany)
- Alessandro Lomi
(Università della Svizzera italiana, 6900 Lugano, Switzerland)
Abstract
A recent line of inquiry investigates new forms of organizing as bundles of novel solutions to universal problems of resource allocation and coordination: how to allocate organizational problems to organizational participants and how to integrate participants’ resulting efforts. We contribute to this line of inquiry by reframing organizational attention as the outcome of a concatenation of self-organizing, microstructural mechanisms linking multiple participants to multiple problems, thus giving rise to an emergent attention network. We argue that, when managerial hierarchies are absent and authority is decentralized, observable acts of attention allocation produce interpretable signals that help participants to direct their attention and share information on how to coordinate and integrate their individual efforts. We theorize that the observed structure of an organizational attention network is generated by the concatenation of four interdependent micromechanisms: focusing, reinforcing, mixing, and clustering. In a statistical analysis of organizational problem solving within a large open-source software project, we find support for our hypotheses about the self-organizing dynamics of the observed attention network connecting organizational problems (software bugs) to organizational participants (volunteer contributors). We discuss the implications of attention networks for theory and practice by emphasizing the self-organizing character of organizational problem solving. We discuss the generalizability of our theory to a wider set of organizations in which participants can freely allocate their attention to problems and the outcomes of their allocation are publicly observable without cost.
Suggested Citation
Marco Tonellato & Stefano Tasselli & Guido Conaldi & Jürgen Lerner & Alessandro Lomi, 2024.
"A Microstructural Approach to Self-Organizing: The Emergence of Attention Networks,"
Organization Science, INFORMS, vol. 35(2), pages 496-524, March.
Handle:
RePEc:inm:ororsc:v:35:y:2024:i:2:p:496-524
DOI: 10.1287/orsc.2023.1674
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