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contributor authorMilad Aghililotf
contributor authorAmir Mohammad Ramezanianpour
contributor authorHani Arbabi
contributor authorMojtaba Maghrebi
date accessioned2024-04-27T22:45:15Z
date available2024-04-27T22:45:15Z
date issued2024/01/01
identifier other10.1061-JCEMD4.COENG-13771.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4297414
description abstractDue to the complex and dynamic atmosphere in the construction sector, different types of challenges are faced by project managers (PMs). These challenges potentially have negative impacts on the PM’s managerial performance, which mostly leads to budget and schedule contingencies. In this vein, scrutinizing the main challenges in a construction project and identifying the cause-and-effect relationships among these challenges is a crucially important process. In the literature, a considerable number of papers have tried to determine construction PM challenges, mainly using statistical methods. These methods do not consider the cause-and-effect relationship among variables. To enhance the existing methods, this paper applies social network analysis (SNA) principles in order to rank a group of variables based on cause-and-effect relationships. To demonstrate the proposed idea, a data set is constructed that includes different types of challenges acquired from the literature comprehended with the forward-chaining approach. In total, 49 critical challenges were identified and subsequently categorized into 12 groups. Two questionnaires were designed to assist in ranking the challenges. 108 construction experts and 20 panelists participated in this study, and the acquired data were used to evaluate the proposed SNA-based method. By applying the proposed method to the obtained data, a complex weighted and directed network is constructed and examined by three metrics: weighted in-degree centrality, betweenness centrality, and closeness centrality. The results revealed that poor planning, contractors’/subcontractors’ financial difficulties, and poor decision making are the main challenges that occur in the construction environment. Moreover, it was figured out that considering the cause-and-effect relationship among variables resulted in a highly different ranking of challenges, much closer to the real situation. This model could be used in quantitative-analytical research conducted in the construction project knowledge area in order to obtain more interpretable answers. Due to the complex and dynamic atmosphere in the construction sector, different types of challenges are faced by project managers (PMs). These challenges potentially have negative impacts on the PM’s managerial performance, which mostly lead to time and cost overruns. In this vein, scrutinizing the main challenges in a construction project and identifying the cause-and-effect relationships among these challenges is a crucially important process. In this research, comprehensive scientific efforts were made in order to rank the main PMs’ challenges in the construction sector, especially in developing countries. For this purpose, cause-and-effect relationships among variables were considered. By using different questionnaires as well as forming different focus groups and interviewing different experts, we found that the main top 10 challenges in the construction sector are: poor planning, contractors’/subcontractors’ financial difficulties, poor decision making, time pressure, rework, stressful atmosphere, design alteration (even after execution), workforce turnover, fluctuation rate and economic instability, and inappropriate and unrealistic scheduling.
publisherASCE
titleIdentifying Construction Managers’ Challenges: A Novel Approach Based on Social Network Analysis
typeJournal Article
journal volume150
journal issue1
journal titleJournal of Construction Engineering and Management
identifier doi10.1061/JCEMD4.COENG-13771
journal fristpage04023141-1
journal lastpage04023141-19
page19
treeJournal of Construction Engineering and Management:;2024:;Volume ( 150 ):;issue: 001
contenttypeFulltext


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