Automatic task slots assignment in Hadoop MapReduce
Kun Wang, Juwei Shi, et al.
PACT 2011
Geographically distributed teams often face challenges in coordination and collaboration, lowering their productivity. Understanding the relationship between team dispersion and productivity is critical for supporting such teams. Extensive prior research has studied these relations in lab settings or using qualitative measures. This paper extends prior work by contributing an empirical case study in a real-world organization, using quantitative measures. We studied 117 new research project teams from the same discipline within an industrial research lab for 6 months. During this time, all teams shared one goal: submitting research papers to the same target conference. We analyzed these teams' dispersion-related characteristics as well as team productivity. Interestingly, we found little statistical evidence that geographic and time differences relate to team productivity. However, organizational and functional distances are predictive of the productivity of the dispersed teams we studied. We discuss the open research questions these findings revealed and their implications for future research.
Kun Wang, Juwei Shi, et al.
PACT 2011
Sheetal K. Agarwal, Nitendra Rajput, et al.
IUI 2011
Dimitrios Christofidellis, Giorgio Giannone, et al.
MRS Spring Meeting 2023
C. Mohan
EDBT 2013