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The Effects of Problem Structure and Team Diversity on Brainstorming Effectiveness
2009
Management science
Since Osborn's Applied Imagination book in 1953, the effectiveness of brainstorming has been widely debated. While some researchers and practitioners consider it the standard idea generation and problem-solving method in organizations, part of the social science literature has argued in favor of nominal groups, i.e., the same number of individuals generating solutions in isolation. In this paper, we revisit this debate, and we explore the implications that the underlying problem structure and
doi:10.1287/mnsc.1090.1079
fatcat:2zcm537rqbfcnf4zz77lxos2oi