麻豆淫院


Unsociable networks

Unsociable networks
Twitter network visualizations. Credit: Mark Smith from Flickr

Innovation and high-tech "clusters" inspired by the success of Silicon Valley in the United States are, ironically, struggling to get much social networking out of the scientists who inhabit them, a new study suggests.

Research into the "Silicon Fen", a collection of high-tech businesses around Cambridge named in direct homage to the Californian that spawned sites like and , has found that real-life among the people who work there rarely takes place.

The findings are a direct contradiction of much of the reasoning behind creating such knowledge hubs in the first place. Policy-makers and theorists have long argued that wherever firms working in related industries are clustered together, people will start to share ideas across company boundaries as they socialize and meet.

This is supposed to result in a 鈥渟pillover鈥 effect, turning the area into a vibrant nerve centre that stimulates the local economy as news, gossip, rumours and recommendations about what different businesses are up to spreads. Many countries have sought to create and tech clusters as a result; in the UK, other examples include the M4 corridor, and the so-called 鈥淪ilicon Glen鈥 in Scotland鈥檚 central belt.

While the knowledge spillover theory sounds convincing, however, it has never been properly tested, until now. When University of Cambridge Gates Scholar Franz Huber decided to do so, he discovered that it doesn鈥檛 really work.

Writing in the Journal of Economic Geography, Huber reports that, far from developing the informal social networks that are supposed to stimulate knowledge exchange, most people working in the Cambridge cluster don鈥檛 feel that they need to, and don鈥檛 have the time.

His study, of 105 people from 46 different hardware and software companies revealed that many of them feel that they work in too closely-specialised a field to benefit from casual ideas-swapping outside the workplace. Often, when they do share knowledge or test ideas, they do it online with other specialists, who are just as likely to live in California as Cambridge.

鈥淐ambridge has one of the most prominent and successful IT clusters in Europe, but many people working there don鈥檛 feel that they benefit professionally from being located within it,鈥 Huber said. 鈥淭he advantage of being there seems to have more to do with the labor market opportunities it offers, and the benefits of having their company associated with the global reputation of Cambridge.鈥

鈥淲e need to rethink the assumption that tech clusters automatically lead to spillovers and knowledge sharing. Most of the people who took part in this research, in particular the engineers, don鈥檛 feel that they need to have personal contact outside of their firms to be successful. 鈥

Huber interviewed a mixture of research and development workers, technology officers and managing directors. Using a standardised set of questions, he investigated their day-to-day working habits, the mechanisms by which they form social relationships, their interactions with people from other companies and the perceived advantages and disadvantages of working in the Cambridge cluster.

He found that, particularly below management level, very few participants felt that being there affected their ability to do their jobs. At one stage they were asked: 鈥淭o what extent is it beneficial for your work in your current firm to have many innovative firms / research institutions located in the Cambridge region?鈥 Participants were asked to respond on a scale of 1 to 7 where 1 meant 鈥渧ery much鈥 and 7 鈥渘ot at all鈥. The most popular response was 7, and almost two-thirds of technical engineers put down a 5, 6, or 7.

The most common explanation for this given by the interviewees was that there is no need for interaction in order for them to be able to do their jobs. Many of the companies in the cluster have a global focus, meaning that when they need to recruit or source information, they use the internet to share knowledge with other firms around the world.

Their perceived benefits of working in Cambridge were very different. Most interviewees wanted to work in the area because if they lost their job or decided to move, they felt that there would be a good chance of finding other work nearby, which meant that they wouldn鈥檛 have to uproot their family and move. Many also felt that being near to Cambridge and the University was of benefit, because it reflected positively on their firm鈥檚 image.

Interestingly, some of the participants had worked in and referred to its more sociable culture. 鈥淭here seems to be a different environment there, where people are much more talkative,鈥 Huber said.

His paper concludes that tech clusters can still be of benefit to a regional or national economy 鈥 but only if they are created for the right reasons.

鈥淜nowledge Networking just doesn鈥檛 drive these sectors as much as we might think,鈥 Huber added. 鈥淭he idea that putting all these people in one place will enable knowledge to flow sounds good on paper, but it doesn鈥檛 take into account people鈥檚 individual behaviour. We should be careful about our belief that encouraging networking will drive these industries 鈥 nobody is going to use a network, however convenient and local it is, if they don鈥檛 feel it鈥檚 relevant to their job.鈥

Citation: Unsociable networks (2011, August 18) retrieved 18 August 2025 from /news/2011-08-unsociable-networks.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Preventing online relationships from blossoming into affairs

0 shares

Feedback to editors