Identifying the impact of artifacts-based exploration and exploitation on routines’ formation dynamics: An agent-based model

Authors: Gao, D. and Yang, Y.

Journal: JASSS

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/38436/

Source: Manual

Identifying the impact of artifacts-based exploration and exploitation on routines’ formation dynamics: An agent-based model

Authors: Gao, D. and Yang, Y.

Journal: Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation

Volume: 26

Issue: 3

ISSN: 1460-7425

Abstract:

Abstract: Organizational routines are at the core in capturing the typical way of how organizations accomplish their tasks. This paper primarily summarizes the development of scholars’ understanding of the crucial role that artifacts and the materiality play during the course of routines. We then focus on the material artifacts-based exploration and exploitation carried out by multiple human actors, and create a link between individual situated actions at the micro-level and the collective outcome as patterned routines. This deciphers the fundamental reasoning behind how human actors balance exploration and exploitation of material artifacts. It also considers the ‘(re)framing-overflowing’ interaction loop amidst routine performances and artifacts as artifactual representations (D’Adderio, 2008; 2011). Subsequently, this study used an agent-based model to construct routines formation dynamics from the ‘bottom-up’. The results of our simulation highlighted the relationships between the three crucial aspects. These are the interdependences between situated-actions within and between organizational tasks, artifacts-based explorative and exploitative activities carried out by multiple human actors, and organizational structures or the power asymmetry on interpersonal relationships within the routine system. The research work theoretically enriches people’s understanding of routines formation dynamics over time, provides indications for managers in designing routine performances via the artifacts.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/38436/

https://www.jasss.org/26/3/5.html

Source: BURO EPrints