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Revisiting the Effects of Gender Diversity in Small Groups on Divergent Thinking: A Large-Scale Study Using Synchronous Electronic Brainstorming

Authors :
Peter, Laurine
Michinov, Nicolas
Besançon, Maud
Michinov, Estelle
Juhel, Jacques
Brown, Genavee
Jamet, Eric
Cherbonnier, Anthony
ProFAN Consortium
Batruch, Anatolia
Butera, Fabrizio
Desrichard, Olivier
Mella-Barraco, Nathalie
Visintin, Emilio Paolo
Bressan, Marco
Poletti, Céline
Régner, Isabelle
Vives, Eva
Bressoux, Pascal
De Place, Anne-Laure
Pansu, Pascal
Riant, Mathilde
Sanrey, Camille
Goron, Luc
Hemon, Brivael
Darnon, Céline
Demolliens, Marie
Huguet, Pascal
Robert, Anais
Stanczak, Arnaud
Bouet, Marinette
Cepeda, Carlos
Ducros, Théo
Martinez, Ruben
Mazenod, Vincent
Petitcollot, Benoit
Toumani, Farouk
Vilmin, Simon
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Frontiers Research Foundation, 2021.

Abstract

Numerous studies have examined the effects of gender diversity in groups on creative performance, and no clear effect has been identified. Findings depend on situational cues making gender diversity more or less salient in groups. A large-scale study on two cohorts (N = 2,261) was conducted among business students to examine the impact of the gender diversity in small groups on divergent thinking in an idea-generation task performed by synchronous electronic brainstorming. Participants were automatically randomized in three- or four-member groups to generate ideas during 10 min on a gendered or neutral task. Then, five categories of groups where the proportion of men/women in groups varied from three/four men to three/four women were compared to examine creative performance on three divergent thinking measures (fluency, flexibility, and originality). A Multivariate Generalized Linear Mixed Model (mGLMM) showed greater fluency in all-women groups than in other groups (except mixed-gender groups composed of two men and two women), and more specifically “solo” groups composed of a single woman/man among a majority of men/women. For flexibility and originality, the superiority of all-women groups was found only in comparison to “solo” groups composed of a single woman. As gender differences are more salient in “solo” groups than in other groups faultlines may appear in groups, leading to a deleterious impact on creative performance.

Subjects

Subjects :
C800

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16641078
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....8ee2a38c9ab04a836015fe92023f292d