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1.
J Appl Psychol ; 104(3): 321-340, 2019 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30058814

ABSTRACT

In today's organizations, employees are often assigned as members of multiple teams simultaneously (i.e., multiple team membership), and yet we know little about important leadership and employee phenomena in such settings. Using a scenario-based experiment and 2 field studies of leaders and their employees in the People's Republic of China and the United States, we examined how empowering leadership exhibited by 2 different team leaders toward a single employee working on 2 different teams can spillover to affect that employee's psychological empowerment and subsequent proactivity across teams. Consistent across all 3 studies, we found that each of the team leaders' empowering leadership uniquely and positively influenced an employee's psychological empowerment and subsequent proactive behaviors. In the field studies, we further found that empowering leadership exhibited by one team leader influenced the psychological empowerment and proactive behaviors of their team member not only in that leader's team but also in the other team outside of that leader's stewardship. Finally, across studies, we found that empowering leadership exhibited on one team can substitute for lower levels of empowering leadership experienced in a different team led by a distinct leader. We discuss our contributions to the motivation, teams, and leadership literatures and provide practical guidance for leaders charged with managing employees that have multiple team memberships. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Cooperative Behavior , Employment/psychology , Group Processes , Leadership , Power, Psychological , Adult , Female , Humans , Male
2.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull ; 44(3): 304-317, 2018 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29191084

ABSTRACT

In three studies, we examined the relationship between free will beliefs and job satisfaction over time and across cultures. Study 1 examined 252 Taiwanese real-estate agents over a 3-months period. Study 2 examined job satisfaction for 137 American workers on an online labor market over a 6-months period. Study 3 extended to a large sample of 14,062 employees from 16 countries and examined country-level moderators. We found a consistent positive relationship between the belief in free will and job satisfaction. The relationship was above and beyond other agency constructs (Study 2), mediated by perceived autonomy (Studies 2-3), and stronger in countries with a higher national endorsement of the belief in free will (Study 3). We conclude that free-will beliefs predict outcomes over time and across cultures beyond other agency constructs. We call for more cross-cultural and longitudinal studies examining free-will beliefs as predictors of real-life outcomes.


Subject(s)
Job Satisfaction , Personal Autonomy , Adult , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Female , Humans , Male , Surveys and Questionnaires , Taiwan , United States
3.
J Appl Psychol ; 98(6): 1018-27, 2013 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23565898

ABSTRACT

Integrating theories of proactive motivation, team innovation climate, and motivation in teams, we developed and tested a multilevel model of motivators of innovative performance in teams. Analyses of multisource data from 428 members of 95 research and development (R&D) teams across 33 Chinese firms indicated that team-level support for innovation climate captured motivational mechanisms that mediated between transformational leadership and team innovative performance, whereas members' motivational states (role-breadth self-efficacy and intrinsic motivation) mediated between proactive personality and individual innovative performance. Furthermore, individual motivational states and team support for innovation climate uniquely promoted individual innovative performance, and, in turn, individual innovative performance linked team support for innovation climate to team innovative performance.


Subject(s)
Group Processes , Motivation/physiology , Research , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Organizational Culture , Organizational Innovation , Task Performance and Analysis
4.
J Appl Psychol ; 96(3): 541-57, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21171730

ABSTRACT

Using cross-cultural laboratory and field studies with samples of leaders, employees, and students from the United States and the People's Republic of China, we examined how team-level stimuli, including empowering leadership and relationship conflict, combine to influence individual members' motivational states of psychological empowerment and affective commitment. As predicted, we found that these motivational states are individually and jointly influenced by teams' level of empowering leadership and relationship conflict and that these motivational states mediate the relationships between team stimuli and team members' innovative and teamwork behaviors and turnover intentions. In addition, results held despite controlling for team members' nationality and collectivism. We discuss contributions of our study to the team motivation, conflict, and stress literatures.


Subject(s)
Conflict, Psychological , Group Processes , Leadership , Motivation , Power, Psychological , China , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Humans , United States
5.
J Appl Psychol ; 95(6): 1173-80, 2010 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20718515

ABSTRACT

Bridging the task conflict, team creativity, and project team development literatures, we present a contingency model in which the relationship between task conflict and team creativity depends on the level of conflict and when it occurs in the life cycle of a project team. In a study of 71 information technology project teams in the greater China region, we found that task conflict had a curvilinear effect on team creativity, such that creativity was highest at moderate levels of task conflict. Additionally, we found this relationship to be moderated by team phase, such that the curvilinear effect was strongest at an early phase. In contrast, at later phases of the team life cycle, task conflict was found to be unrelated to team creativity.


Subject(s)
Conflict, Psychological , Creativity , Group Processes , Adult , China , Employment , Female , Humans , Information Management , Institutional Management Teams , Male , Task Performance and Analysis
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