An Agent-Based Model of Leader Emergence and Leadership Perception within a Collective

Abstract

Effective teamwork in an initially leaderless group requires a high level of collective leadership emerging from dynamic interactions among group members. Leader emergence is a crucial topic in collective leadership, yet it is challenging to investigate as the problem context is typically highly complex and dynamic. Here, we explore leadership emergence and leadership perception by means of computational simulations whose assumptions and parameters were informed by empirical research and human-subject experiments. Our agent-based model describes the process of group planning. Each agent is assigned with three key attributes: talkativeness, intelligence, and credibility. An agent can propose a suggestion to modify the group plan as a speaker or respond and evaluate others’ suggestions and leadership as a listener. Simulation results suggested that agents with high values of talkativeness, intelligence, and credibility tended to be perceived as leaders by their peers. Results also showed that talkativeness may be the most significant and instantaneous predictor for leader emergence of the three investigated attributes: talkativeness, intelligence, and credibility. In terms of group performance, smaller groups may outperform larger groups regarding their problem-solving ability in the beginning, but their performance tends to be of no significant difference in a long run. These results match the empirical literature and offer a mechanistic, operationalized description of the collective leadership processes.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Apr 28, 2020
Source ID
10.1155/2020/6857891

Entities

People

  • Colleen J. Standish
  • Francis J. Yammarino
  • Gregory A. Ruark
  • Hiroki Sayama
  • Michael D. Mumford
  • Neil G. MacLaren
  • Robert Martin
  • Samantha England
  • Shane Connelly
  • Shelley D. Dionne
  • Shun Cao
  • Tanner R. Newbold
  • Yiding Cao
  • Yingjun Dong

Organizations

  • Binghamton University
  • U.S. Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences
  • United States Army
  • University of Oklahoma
  • Waseda University

Tags

Readers

  • Agent-Based Social Robotics and Mobile-Assisted Learning in Virtual Environments.
  • Organizational Psychology.
  • Systems Analysis and Design