COB web page for Simon Rodan
Publications | Vitae |
| Research
overview |
COB Home
Contact Information
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Phone: |
(408) 924 3415 |
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Office: |
BT 457 |
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E-mail: |
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Home page |
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Courses
Business
169A Honors Seminar in Organization Theory (offered in the fall only)
Business
161B Organizational Design and Change (typically the spring semester)
Business
189 - Strategic Management (fall and spring)
Research
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My central research interest is in knowledge and the social
processes involved in its application and transfer. I have developed an
allied interest in social network theory particularly as it impacts knowledge
flows, learning and innovation. Knowledge recombination, the subject of my
paper with Galunic (1998),
deals with the question of the knowledge associated with a firm's
competencies, and in particular, how this knowledge may be recombined to
create novel and potentially income generating new competencies. My
dissertation research sought to understand from a network perspective how the
distribution of knowledge in a social network influences managerial
performance and innovativeness. The results suggest that knowledge
heterogeneity leads to both higher managerial performance and greater
innovativeness (Rodan
& Galunic 2004). I am currently at work on another paper using the
same data in which I show that innovation and creativity rather than
arbitrage or competition are at the root of the performance-network structure
relationship found in prior studies and that innovation and creativity fully mediate
the structure performance relationship. Knowledge flows and the impact of both individual and firm
level attributes was the subject of my simulation work extending March's 1991
model of organizational learning (Rodan
2005). I am also working on simulations exploring the behavioral implications
of structural holes theory on organizational learning; the first paper in
this area appeared in Computational and Mathematical Sociology in 2008. My simulation
work with McFarland (Sociology of Education, forthcoming) investigates the
relative contribution of institutional, social and cognitive process in
career decision-making in schools, the results of which are compared to
observed mobility patterns. |
