Title: Industrial-Organizational Psychology Learning Module Personality and Work
1Industrial-Organizational Psychology Learning
ModulePersonality andWork
Prepared by the Society for Industrial and
Organizational Psychology - SIOP
2Lesson Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you should understand
- What is meant by personality.
- A brief history of personality theory and
research. - The elements of the most commonly accepted model
of personality - the Five-Factor Model (Big
Five or FFM). - How personality has been shown to affect job
performance and other work-related outcomes. - Why and how organizational managers use
personality assessment as a tool in
decision-making. -
Prepared by the Society for Industrial and
Organizational Psychology - SIOP
3What is Personality?
- Internal perspective Processes within an
individual that explain why he or she behaves in
characteristic ways. - Attitudes, emotions, ways of thinking
- Fairly stable across time and situations
- Partly inherited
- External perspective How the individual is
perceived by others that he or she interacts with
(reputation). - She has a great personality!
- Shaped by two fundamental motives related to
social interaction - Getting along with others (cooperation)
- Getting ahead of others (competition)
4Personality Theory and Research
- Allport Cardinal and Central Traits
- Cattell Sixteen Personality Factors
- Eysenck Extraversion, Neuroticism, and
Psychoticism -
Prepared by the Society for Industrial and
Organizational Psychology - SIOP
5Personality, Organizations, and the Organization
of Personality
- Early researchers believed the personality-job
performance relationship was weak. Reasons - Comparatively weak analytic techniques.
- Inappropriate measures (most used psychopathology
inventories, e.g., MMPI). - No theoretical framework on which to base
research findings. - The belief that behavior is determined more by
situations than by traits (Mischel,1968). - Research and theoretical innovations that
rehabilitated personality in late 80s, early
90s. - Meta-analysis A new quantitative method for
summarizing research findings. - The Five-Factor Model A new organizing taxonomy
for personality structure (The Big Five).
6The Five-Factor Model
- Premise Personality can be efficiently described
with five relatively independent trait
dimensions. - Model derived from factor-analytic studies of
much larger sets of traits. - Factor analysis A method for reducing a large
set of data into something interpretable - Allport Odbert (1936) Identified more than
18,000 trait terms in unabridged dictionary - Eventually factor analyzed into five dimensions
- Five-factor model reproduced across many cultures
and languages (Saucier, Hampson, Goldberg,
2000). - Research evidence points to the heritability
(Rowe, 1997) and stability (Costa McCrae, 1997)
of the FFM.
7The Five-Factor Model
- The Five Factors and their Characteristics
- Extraversion Assertive, competitive, positive
emotionality, sociable - Agreeableness Warm, likeable, gentle,
cooperative - Conscientiousness Orderly, dependable,
industrious, disciplined - Emotional Stability Relaxed, free from anxiety,
depression, negative emotionality - Openness to Experience Creative, cultured,
intellectual, perceptive
8The Five-Factor Model and Job Performance
Research Findings
- Summary of meta-analytic findings (Barrick
Mount, 1991) - Conscientiousness and Emotional Stability are the
best personality predictors of job performance
across nearly all jobs. - Extraversion and Agreeableness are important in
jobs requiring a high degree of interpersonal
work - Less consistent evidence for Openness to
Experience - Personality has been shown to predict
- Job performance and results (e.g. sales volume)
- Job satisfaction
- Training performance
- Leadership
- .and many more important job-related behaviors
and attitudes
9How Does Personality Affect Job Performance?
- Theory and research show that Big Five factors
impact motivation, which in turn affects
performance. For example - Thus, personalitys effect on performance may be
fully or partially (dotted line) mediated by
motivation
Self-efficacy
Conscientiousness
Performance
Goals
10Why Should Organizations Test Personality?
- Personality predicts aspects of job performance
that may not be strongly related to knowledge,
skills or abilities. - Incremental validity
- Predicts what a person will do, as opposed to
what they can do. - Contextual job performance (Borman Motowidlo,
1993) - Organizational Citizenship Behaviors Willingness
to go above and beyond the call of duty - Unlike other selection tools, little or no
evidence of adverse impact (different selection
ratios between demographic groups).
11Personality in Selection Decisions A Case Study
- Youve been hired to design a selection system
for customer service workers at McToxic Pizza - Step 1 Conduct a thorough Job Analysis
- You discover that high-performers are friendly,
dependable, and low in imagination - Step 2 Refer worker attributes to a validated
model of personality (e.g., the Big Five) - Friendly Agreeableness Dependable
Conscientiousness Unimaginative (Low) Openness
to Experience. - Step 3 Incorporate a personality test as one
factor guiding selection decisions - DO NOT base selection decisions solely on a
single test score of any kind!!
12Big Five Mini-Marker Exercise
13How Accurately Can You Describe Yourself?
1 2 3 4
5 Inaccurate Slightly Neither
Slightly Accurate
Inaccurate Accurate
1. Bashful 15. Harsh 29. Sloppy 2. Bold 16.
Imaginative 30. Sympathetic 3. Careless 17.
Inefficient 31. Systematic 4. Cold 18.
Intellectual 32. Talkative 5. Complex 19.
Jealous 33. Temperamental 6. Cooperative 20.
Kind 34. Touchy 7. Creative 21. Moody 35.
Uncreative 8. Deep 22. Organized 36.
Unenvious 9. Disorganized 23. Philosophical 37.
Unintellectual 10. Efficient 24. Practical 38.
Unsympathetic 11. Energetic 25. Quiet 39.
Warm 12. Envious 26. Relaxed 40. Withdrawn 13.
Extraverted 27. Rude 14. Fretful 28. Shy
14Reverse score items 1, 3, 4, 9, 12, 14, 15, 17,
19, 21, 25, 27, 28, 29,33, 34, 35, 37, 38, 40 1
5 2 4 3 3 4 2 5 1
Sum items 1, 2, 11, 13, 25, 28, 32, 40 Factor
I 12, 14, 19, 21, 26, 33, 34, 36 Factor II 4,
6, 15, 20, 27, 30, 38, 39 Factor III 3, 9, 10,
17, 22, 24, 29, 31 Factor IV 5, 7, 8, 16, 18,
23, 35, 37 Factor V
15Extraversion (Factor I)
1. Bashful 15. Harsh 29. Sloppy 2. Bold 16.
Imaginative 30. Sympathetic 3. Careless 17.
Inefficient 31. Systematic 4. Cold 18.
Intellectual 32. Talkative 5. Complex 19.
Jealous 33. Temperamental 6. Cooperative 20.
Kind 34. Touchy 7. Creative 21. Moody 35.
Uncreative 8. Deep 22. Organized 36.
Unenvious 9. Disorganized 23. Philosophical 37.
Unintellectual 10. Efficient 24. Practical 38.
Unsympathetic 11. Energetic 25. Quiet 39.
Warm 12. Envious 26. Relaxed 40. Withdrawn 13.
Extraverted 27. Rude 14. Fretful 28. Shy
16Emotional Stability (Factor II)
1. Bashful 15. Harsh 29. Sloppy 2. Bold 16.
Imaginative 30. Sympathetic 3. Careless 17.
Inefficient 31. Systematic 4. Cold 18.
Intellectual 32. Talkative 5. Complex 19.
Jealous 33. Temperamental 6. Cooperative 20.
Kind 34. Touchy 7. Creative 21. Moody 35.
Uncreative 8. Deep 22. Organized 36.
Unenvious 9. Disorganized 23. Philosophical 37.
Unintellectual 10. Efficient 24. Practical 38.
Unsympathetic 11. Energetic 25. Quiet 39.
Warm 12. Envious 26. Relaxed 40. Withdrawn 13.
Extraverted 27. Rude 14. Fretful 28. Shy
17Agreeableness (Factor III)
1. Bashful 15. Harsh 29. Sloppy 2. Bold 16.
Imaginative 30. Sympathetic 3. Careless 17.
Inefficient 31. Systematic 4. Cold 18.
Intellectual 32. Talkative 5. Complex 19.
Jealous 33. Temperamental 6. Cooperative 20.
Kind 34. Touchy 7. Creative 21. Moody 35.
Uncreative 8. Deep 22. Organized 36.
Unenvious 9. Disorganized 23. Philosophical 37.
Unintellectual 10. Efficient 24. Practical 38.
Unsympathetic 11. Energetic 25. Quiet 39.
Warm 12. Envious 26. Relaxed 40. Withdrawn 13.
Extraverted 27. Rude 14. Fretful 28. Shy
18Conscientiousness (Factor IV)
1. Bashful 15. Harsh 29. Sloppy 2. Bold 16.
Imaginative 30. Sympathetic 3. Careless 17.
Inefficient 31. Systematic 4. Cold 18.
Intellectual 32. Talkative 5. Complex 19.
Jealous 33. Temperamental 6. Cooperative 20.
Kind 34. Touchy 7. Creative 21. Moody 35.
Uncreative 8. Deep 22. Organized 36.
Unenvious 9. Disorganized 23. Philosophical 37.
Unintellectual 10. Efficient 24. Practical 38.
Unsympathetic 11. Energetic 25. Quiet 39.
Warm 12. Envious 26. Relaxed 40. Withdrawn 13.
Extraverted 27. Rude 14. Fretful 28. Shy
19Openness to Experience (Factor V)
1. Bashful 15. Harsh 29. Sloppy 2. Bold 16.
Imaginative 30. Sympathetic 3. Careless 17.
Inefficient 31. Systematic 4. Cold 18.
Intellectual 32. Talkative 5. Complex 19.
Jealous 33. Temperamental 6. Cooperative 20.
Kind 34. Touchy 7. Creative 21. Moody 35.
Uncreative 8. Deep 22. Organized 36.
Unenvious 9. Disorganized 23. Philosophical 37.
Unintellectual 10. Efficient 24. Practical 38.
Unsympathetic 11. Energetic 25. Quiet 39.
Warm 12. Envious 26. Relaxed 40. Withdrawn 13.
Extraverted 27. Rude 14. Fretful 28. Shy
20Caveats and Future Research Directions
- Is the Big Five the best model?
- Its a model of personality, not a theory
- Some research suggests that 3, 7, or 9 factor
models best represent human personality - Studies have shown greater predictive validity
for finer-grained facets of personality - measure
predictors and criteria at the same level. - Are self-report personality tests accurate?
- Personality test-takers can distort responses
when instructed to do so - Most research suggests that distortion does not
undermine validity of personality tests - Again How does personality affect performance?
- Are there other mechanisms besides motivation?
21References
- General overview
- Barrick, M.R., Ryan, A.M. (Eds.). (2003).
Personality and work Reconsidering the role of
personality in organizations. San Francisco
Jossey Bass. - Roberts, B.W., Hogan, R. (Eds.). (2001).
Personality psychology in the workplace.
Washington, D.C. American Psychological
Association. - Hogan, R. (1991). Personality and personality
measurement. In M.D. Dunnette L.M. Hough
(Eds.), Handbook of industrial and organizational
psychology (Vol 2). Palo Alto, CA Consulting
Psychologists Press. - Hogan, R., Hogan, J., Roberts, B.W. (1996).
Personality measurement and employment decisions.
American Psychologist, 51, 469-477. - Meta-analyses
- Barrick, M.R., Mount, M.K. (1991). The Big
Five personality dimensions and job performance
A meta-analysis. Personnel Psychology, 44, 1-26. - Hough, L.M., Eaton, N.L., Dunnette, M.D., Kamp,
J.D., McCloy, R.A. (1990). Criterion-related
validities of personality constructs and the
effect of response distortion on those
validities. Journal of Applied Psychology, 75,
581-595. - The Five-Factor Model
- Wiggins, J.S. (Ed.) (1996). The Five-Factor Model
of personality. New York Guilford. - Saucier, G., Hampson, S.E., Goldberg, L.R.
(2000). Cross-language studies of lexical
personality factors. In S.E. Hampson (Ed.),
Advances in personality psychology (Vol. 1).
Philadelphia Taylor Francis. - Costa, P.T., McCrae, R.R. (1997). Longitudinal
stability in adult personality. In R. Hogan, J.
Johnson, S. Briggs (Eds.), Handbook of
personality psychology. San Diego Academic
Press. - Rowe, D.C. (1997). Genetics, Temperament, and
personality. In R. Hogan, J. Johnson, S. Briggs
(Eds.), Handbook of personality psychology. San
Diego Academic Press.
22 References (cont)
- Personality, Motivation, and Performance
- Kanfer, R., Ackerman, P.L. (2000). Individual
differences in work motivation Further
explorations of a trait framework. Applied
Psychology An International Review, 49, 470-482. - Judge, T.A., Ilies, R. (2002). Relationship of
personality to performance motivation A
meta-analytic review. Journal of Applied
Psychology, 87, 797-807. - Barrick, M.R., Mount, M.K., Strauss, J.P.
(1993). Conscientiousness and performance of
sales representatives Test of the mediating
effects of goal-setting. Journal of Applied
Psychology, 78, 715-722. - Contextual Performance/OCBs
- Borman, W.C., Motowidlo, S.J. (1993).
Expanding the criterion domain to include
elements of contextual performance. In N.
Schmitt W.C. Borman (Eds.), Personnel selection
in organizations. San Francisco Jossey Bass. - Alternatives to the Big Five
- Block, J. (1995). A contrarian view of the
five-factor approach to personality description.
Psychological Bulletin, 117, 187-215. - Schneider, R.J., Hough, L.M., Dunnette, M.D.
(1996). Broadsided by broad traits How to sink
science in five dimensions or less. Journal of
Organizational Behavior, 17, 639-655. - Incremental validity for facets
- Stewart, G.L. (1999). Trait bandwidth and stages
of job performance Assessing differential
effects for conscientiousness and its subtraits.
Journal of Applied Psychology, 84, 959-968. - Distortion
- Hough, L.M. (1998). Effects of intentional
distortion in personality measurement and
evaluation of suggested palliatives. Human
Performance, 11, 209-244.