The perceived dimensions of jobs: a multidimensional scaling approach

Recent research has revealed ambiguous evidence for the validity of the cognitive complexity (CC) construct. Some authors (Bieri, Atkins, Briar, Leaman, Miller, & Tripodi, 1966; Scott, Osgood, & Peterson, 1979) have suggested that a potentially useful method for examining CC is multidimensio...

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Main Author: Welch, Kathryn A.
Other Authors: Psychology
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/54806
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-548062020-12-11T05:31:38Z The perceived dimensions of jobs: a multidimensional scaling approach Welch, Kathryn A. Psychology LD5655.V856 1989.W453 Cognitive psychology -- Research Recent research has revealed ambiguous evidence for the validity of the cognitive complexity (CC) construct. Some authors (Bieri, Atkins, Briar, Leaman, Miller, & Tripodi, 1966; Scott, Osgood, & Peterson, 1979) have suggested that a potentially useful method for examining CC is multidimensional scaling. The present study examined such an operational definition. The present study also examined the perceptual dimensions that underlie individuals' perceptions of jobs. Three hundred and five subjects rated the similarity of pairs of job titles, completed the Role Construct Repertory Test (REP), and later rated videotaped vignettes in a performance appraisal simulation. Multidimensional scaling extracted the subjects’ dimensionality. Due to an unstable solution, the study’s first three hypotheses (that dimensionality would predict rater accuracy, that dimensionality would predict rater accuracy better than the traditional Role Construct Repertory test, and that dimensionality and the REP would be correlated) were untestable. Multidimensional scaling was not a useful approach in this context. The fourth hypothesis stated that the present data would replicate the three-dimensional job characteristics model of Stone and Gueutal (1985). Results indicated that the Stone and Gueutal configuration was not supported. Thus, job design efforts predicated on their model appear premature. Ph. D. 2015-07-28T19:21:24Z 2015-07-28T19:21:24Z 1989 Dissertation Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/54806 en_US OCLC# 20664866 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ x, 221 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V856 1989.W453
Cognitive psychology -- Research
spellingShingle LD5655.V856 1989.W453
Cognitive psychology -- Research
Welch, Kathryn A.
The perceived dimensions of jobs: a multidimensional scaling approach
description Recent research has revealed ambiguous evidence for the validity of the cognitive complexity (CC) construct. Some authors (Bieri, Atkins, Briar, Leaman, Miller, & Tripodi, 1966; Scott, Osgood, & Peterson, 1979) have suggested that a potentially useful method for examining CC is multidimensional scaling. The present study examined such an operational definition. The present study also examined the perceptual dimensions that underlie individuals' perceptions of jobs. Three hundred and five subjects rated the similarity of pairs of job titles, completed the Role Construct Repertory Test (REP), and later rated videotaped vignettes in a performance appraisal simulation. Multidimensional scaling extracted the subjects’ dimensionality. Due to an unstable solution, the study’s first three hypotheses (that dimensionality would predict rater accuracy, that dimensionality would predict rater accuracy better than the traditional Role Construct Repertory test, and that dimensionality and the REP would be correlated) were untestable. Multidimensional scaling was not a useful approach in this context. The fourth hypothesis stated that the present data would replicate the three-dimensional job characteristics model of Stone and Gueutal (1985). Results indicated that the Stone and Gueutal configuration was not supported. Thus, job design efforts predicated on their model appear premature. === Ph. D.
author2 Psychology
author_facet Psychology
Welch, Kathryn A.
author Welch, Kathryn A.
author_sort Welch, Kathryn A.
title The perceived dimensions of jobs: a multidimensional scaling approach
title_short The perceived dimensions of jobs: a multidimensional scaling approach
title_full The perceived dimensions of jobs: a multidimensional scaling approach
title_fullStr The perceived dimensions of jobs: a multidimensional scaling approach
title_full_unstemmed The perceived dimensions of jobs: a multidimensional scaling approach
title_sort perceived dimensions of jobs: a multidimensional scaling approach
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/54806
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