@inproceedings{discovery1466466,
           month = {September},
          volume = {2016},
       booktitle = {Proceedings of COBRA 2016},
       publisher = {Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors},
         address = {Toronto, Canada},
           title = {The Influence of Communication Network Centrality on Individual Popularity},
            year = {2016},
          series = {COBRA},
            note = {This version is the version of record. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher's terms and conditions.},
        keywords = {Centrality, individual popularity, social-network analysis (SNA), communication networks, construction project},
          author = {Badi, SM and Li, M and Pryke, S},
        abstract = {Individual popularity has been found to have a positive impact on individual performance, group performance and job satisfaction; however, there remains a limited understanding of the concept and its antecedents in construction projects. In this research study, we propose that the position an individual occupies in the project social network will influence his/her popularity. Although different types of networks exist in project environments (e.g., informal friendship networks), we focus on project-related information-exchange networks to capture individuals' recurrent patterns of work-related communication. That is, our goal was to consider individuals' structural positions within the project's relatively formal, work-related communication network, rather than the more casual and less work-significant friendship network. A single-case study approach was adopted examining a road construction project in Baoshan City in China. Data collection involved the completion of a questionnaire by project participants, identifying their communication with, and their perception of the popularity of, other project actors. Analysis was based upon actor centrality (degree, betweenness, and closeness) within the communication and popularity networks. The findings supported the proposition and showed that communication network centrality is positively associated with popularity, such that individuals who are more central in the project communication network also assumed central positions in the popularity network. Degree centrality in the project communication network was found to be particularly salient in predicting popularity, underlying the social dominance of the 'prominent disseminators' who control a large amount of information resources.},
             url = {http://www.rics.org/uk/knowledge/research/conference-papers/the-influence-of-communication-network-centrality-on-individual-popularity/},
            issn = {2398-8614}
}