Network position determines output. Strategic complementarities through connections. Lower initial overlap → larger gains (Paper 2) mirrors centrality advantage (Paper 1). Both show feedback between individual structure and collective outcomes. Perfect match!
An agent's position in a collaboration network determines their productivity. Higher network centrality increases output through strategic complementarities with connected agents. Activity in one domain (scientific) enhances productivity in another domain (technological), but this effect is asymmetric - the reverse direction shows no detectable influence.
view paper→Individual semantic network topology determines ideational breadth. When agents exchange ideation traces, lower initial overlap predicts larger stimulation gains. Shared inspiration sources create network-level redundancy, forming feedback between individual cognitive structure and collective outcomes.
view paper→