Abstract
The scarce yet exceptionally productive star inventors are the pivotal human capital of enterprises. Managers emphasize team-level contributions of star inventors over their individual excellence. However, the impact of star inventors on team innovation remains contested with empirical evidence reporting both positive and negative effects. By theoretically analyzing the advantages and limitations of star inventors at different innovation phases, this study endeavors to reconcile the ongoing debate by investigating the dual effects of star inventors on the novelty and impact of team innovation output. Furthermore, by incorporating technological turbulence and internal network cohesion as moderators, this research demonstrates how external and internal contextual factors shape star inventors' influence. The findings reveal that star inventors enhance the technological impact of team innovation but hinder its novelty. Technological turbulence weakens their positive effect on impact while exacerbating their negative effect on novelty. Conversely, internal network cohesion amplifies their beneficial influence on impact and mitigates their adverse effect on novelty. By integrating psychological, knowledge management, and social network theories, this study advances the understanding of star inventors' dual effects and their boundary conditions.