posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00authored byJonathon Cummings, Sara Kiesler
Multi-university collaborations draw on diverse resources and expertise but they impose
coordination costs for bridging institutional differences and geographic distance. We report a
study of the coordination activities and project outcomes of 491 research collaborations funded
by the US National Science Foundation. Coordination activities, especially division of
responsibility for tasks and knowledge transfer among investigators, predicted project outcomes
(e.g., producing new knowledge, creating new tools, and training students). However, more
universities involved in a collaboration predicted fewer coordination activities and fewer project
outcomes. A statistical mediation analysis showed that insufficient coordination explained the
negative relationship between multi-university collaboration and project outcomes.