An important concept in organisational behaviour is how hierarchy affects the voice of individuals, whereby members of a given organisation exhibit differing power relations based on their hierarchical position. Although there have been prior studies of the relationship between hierarchy and voice, they tend to focus on more qualitative small-scale methods and do not account for structural aspects of the organisation. This paper develops large-scale computational techniques utilising temporal network analysis to measure the effect that organisational hierarchy has on communication patterns within an organisation, focusing on the structure of pairwise interactions between individuals. We focus on one major organisation as a case study - the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) - a major technical standards development organisation for the Internet. A particularly useful feature of the IETF is a transparent hierarchy, where participants take on explicit roles (e.g. Area Directors, Working Group Chairs). Its processes are also open, so we have visibility into the communication of people at different hierarchy levels over a long time period. We utilise a temporal network dataset of 989,911 email interactions among 23,741 participants to study how hierarchy impacts communication patterns. We show that the middle levels of the IETF are growing in terms of their dominance in communications. Higher levels consistently experience a higher proportion of incoming communication than lower levels, with higher levels initiating more communications too. We find that communication tends to flow "up" the hierarchy more than "down". Finally, we find that communication with higher-levels is associated with future communication more than for lower-levels, which we interpret as "facilitation". We conclude by discussing the implications this has on patterns within the wider IETF and for other organisations.
Year
2024
URL
Abstract
Summary
This paper is an in depth look at the email communications of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). It creates the graph of email communications as a temporal network and uses novel statistics we call mobility, neighbour mobility, philanthropy and community to look at the influence of hierarchy members. We look at the roles of Working Group Chairs and Area Directors. We show in the IETF the working group chairs enable communications with members and members who interact with chairs tend to communicate more in subsequent years. We also show that the IETF tends to communicate "up" hierarchy with chairs and ADs tending to be net "receivers" of communications.
Venue
ICWSM (18th International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media)