Contact information of Cambridge University Press
Corrections
All material on this site has been provided by the respective publishers and authors. You can help
correct errors and omissions. When requesting a correction, please mention this item's handle: RePEc:cup:inorps. See general information about how to correct material in RePEc.
For technical questions regarding this item, or to correct its authors, title, abstract, bibliographic or download information, contact: Kirk Stebbing (email available below). General contact details of provider: https://www.cambridge.org/iop .
Content
March 2018, Volume 11, Issue 1
- 71-73 The Role of Professional Associations in Promoting Robust Science
by Neuman, Brendan
- 73-80 In Defense of HARKing
by Vancouver, Jeffrey B.
- 81-100 Beyond Blaming the Victim: Toward a More Progressive Understanding of Workplace Mistreatment
by Cortina, Lilia M. & Rabelo, Verónica Caridad & Holland, Kathryn J.
- 101-106 Mistreatment in Organizations: Toward a Perpetrator-Focused Research Agenda
by Dalal, Reeshad S. & Sheng, Zitong
- 107-112 Centering the Target of Mistreatment in Our Measures
by Sasso, Thomas & González-Morales, M. Gloria
- 112-116 Considerations Related to Intentionality and Omissive Acts in the Study of Workplace Aggression and Mistreatment
by Fiset, John & Robinson, Melanie A.
- 116-122 Beyond Victims and Perpetrators
by Thornton-Lugo, Meghan A. & Munjal, Deeksha
- 122-129 Who Is the Wolf and Who Is the Sheep? Toward a More Nuanced Understanding of Workplace Incivility
by Köhler, Tine & González-Morales, M. Gloria & Sojo, Victor E. & Olsen, Jesse E.
- 129-134 A Comprehensive Approach to Empowering Victims and Understanding Perpetrators
by Oliveira, Justina & Pascucci, Tyler M. & Fortin, Michelle
- 134-137 Research Framing, Victim Blaming: Toward an Empirical Examination of Victim Precipitation and Perpetrator Predation Paradigms
by Caleo, Suzette
- 137-141 Victim Precipitation: Let's Not Silence That Voice
by North, Mark A. & Smith, Spencer
- 141-144 It Takes Two to Tango: Victims, Perpetrators, and the Dynamics of Victimization
by Jensen, Jaclyn M. & Raver, Jana L.
- 144-151 Victim Precipitation and the Wage Gap
by Cheng, Shannon & Corrington, Abigail & Hebl, Mikki & Ng, Linnea & Watson, Ivy
- 151-157 Police Shootings and Race in the United States: Why the Perpetrator Predation Perspective Is Essential to I-O Psychology's Role in Ending This Crisis
by Bergman, Mindy E.
- 158-172 Civil Service Mandated Cutoff Scores: Challenges and Practice Recommendations
by Hoffman, Calvin C.
December 2017, Volume 10, Issue 4
- 503-506 From the Editor
by Scott, John C. & Poteet, Mark L.
- 507-557 Most Frequently Cited Sources, Articles, and Authors in Industrial-Organizational Psychology Textbooks: Implications for the Science–Practice Divide, Scholarly Impact, and the Future of the Field
by Aguinis, Herman & Ramani, Ravi S. & Campbell, P. Knight & Bernal-Turnes, Paloma & Drewry, Josiah M. & Edgerton, Brett T.
- 558-569 The Practice and Science Connection: Let's Not Obsess Over Minding the Gap
by Avolio, Bruce J.
- 570-576 Traditional Science–Practice Research in I-O: Are We Missing the Trees for the Forest?
by Kurtessis, James N. & Waters, Shonna D. & Alonso, Alexander & Jones, Joseph A. & Oppler, Scott H.
- 577-584 Voice of a “Seasoned†OB Professor
by Luthans, Fred
- 584-588 “This Is Our House!†Why Are I-O Psychologists Losing at the Gender Disparity Game?
by Huffman, Ann Hergatt & Howes, Satoris S. & Olson, Kristine J.
- 588-594 The Eternal Criterion Problem in the Context of Impact
by Levine, Edward L.
- 594-598 I-O Psychology and Human Resource Development: Yes, and . .Â
by Werner, Jon M.
- 598-602 Not Another “Researcher-Centric†Index: A Cautionary Note
by Yuan, Zhenyu & Brown, Kenneth G.
- 602-605 The Wicked Problem of Scholarly Impact
by Behrend, Tara & Landers, Richard
- 606-610 The Authors Speak: Six I-O Psychology Textbook Authors Discuss How They Decide What to Cite
by Aamodt, Michael G. & Conte, Jeffrey M. & Howes, Satoris S. & Levy, Paul E. & Riggio, Ronald E. & Spector, Paul E.
- 610-616 Citation Counts and More Citation Counts: Useful? Interesting? or Counterproductive?
by Campbell, John P.
- 616-621 Where Has All the Psychology Gone? (Twenty Years Later)
by Zickar, Michael J. & Highhouse, Scott
- 621-626 A Review of the Field or an Articulation of Identity Concerns? Interrogating the Unconscious Biases That Permeate I-O Scholarship
by Hodgkinson, Gerard P. & Haslam, S. Alexander
- 626-633 From Analysis to Evaluation: Brand Management and the Future of I-O Psychology
by Nolan, Kevin P.
- 634-653 A Call for Conceptual Models of Technology in I-O Psychology: An Example From Technology-Based Talent Assessment
by Morelli, Neil & Potosky, Denise & Arthur, Winfred & Tippins, Nancy
- 654-659 Technology Is More Than Just Error
by Grawitch, Matthew J. & Winton, Steven L. & Mudigonda, Srikanth P. & Buerck, John P.
- 659-668 I-O Psychology and Technology: Why Reinvent the Wheel?
by Howard, Matt C. & Travers, Steven D. & Marshall, Chad J. & Cogswell, Joshua E.
- 668-675 When Are Models of Technology in Psychology Most Useful?
by Landers, Richard N. & Behrend, Tara S.
- 676-680 Beyond Empirical Equivalence
by Gibson, Carter & Vaughn, Daly & Hudy, Mike
- 680-687 Integrating Technology Into Models of Response Behavior
by Dalal, Dev K. & Randall, Jason G.
- 687-696 The Big, Gig Picture: We Can't Assume the Same Constructs Matter
by Brawley, Alice M.
- 696-701 The Need for Conceptual Models of Technology in Training and Development: How Immersive Does Training Need to Be?
by Cox, Cody B. & House, Andrew & Lopez, Alex & Pool, Gregory J.
- 702-702 Introduction
by Poteet, Mark L.
- 703-723 The Development, Validation, and Practical Application of an Employee Agility and Resilience Measure to Facilitate Organizational Change
by Braun, Thomas J. & Hayes, Bryan C. & DeMuth, Rachel L. Frautschy & Taran, Olya A.
September 2017, Volume 10, Issue 3
- 327-328 From the Editor
by Scott, John C.
- 329-369 From Handmaidens to POSH Humanitarians: The Case for Making Human Capabilities the Business of I-O Psychology
by Gloss, Alexander & Carr, Stuart C. & Reichman, Walter & Abdul-Nasiru, Inusah & Oestereich, W. Trevor
- 370-376 STRETCH Goals for I-O Psychology
by Olson-Buchanan, Julie B. & Allen, Tammy D.
- 376-379 Workers in Poverty: An Insight Into Informal Workers Around the World
by Saxena, Mahima
- 379-384 Partnering Against Poverty: Fighting POSH Bias Through Increased Interdisciplinary Research and Practice
by Ahmed, Shujaat & Hoffman, Ashley J. & Mullins, Morrie & Sywulak, Laura
- 385-388 Transformative Service Research as an Exemplar for Humanitarian I-O Psychology
by Subramony, Mahesh
- 388-392 Humanistic I-O Psychology: The Value of a Focus on Women
by Saari, Lise
- 392-395 Minimizing the POSH Bias Through Education: Necessity of the “How-To†Component
by Oliveira, Justina M.
- 396-398 The “How†Matters as Much as the “Whoâ€
by Hoffman, Ashley J.
- 398-403 Employee Work Ethic in Nine Nonindustrialized Contexts: Some Surprising Non-POSH Findings
by de Voogt, Alex & Lang, Jonas W. B.
- 403-407 Still Too POSH to Push for Structural Change? The Need for a Macropsychology Perspective
by MacLachlan, Malcolm
- 407-410 A Missing Link in Gloss et al. (“From Handmaidens to POSH Humanitarians†)
by Lawrence, John E. S.
- 410-414 Handmaidens to Capitalism
by Gerard, Nathan
- 414-420 Let's Reduce the Human Footprint Before Building Human Capabilities
by Mishra, Paresh
- 421-456 Meta-Analysis and the Myth of Generalizability
by Tett, Robert P. & Hundley, Nathan A. & Christiansen, Neil D.
- 457-459 Treating Uncertainty in Meta-Analytic Results
by Brannick, Michael T.
- 459-464 “Life Doesn't Happen at the Between-Person Level,†or a Cautionary Note on Generating Scientific Inferences Through Meta-Analyses
by Samuelson, Hannah L. & Fernandez, Jessica R. & Grand, James A.
- 465-467 Who Is the Culprit? A Commentary on Moderator Detection
by Markell, Hannah M. & Cortina, Jose M.
- 467-472 Don't Get Too Confident: Uncertainty in SDÏ
by Morris, Scott B. & McAbee, Samuel T. & Landis, Ronald S. & Bauer, Kristina N.
- 472-479 Empirical Benchmarks for Interpreting Effect Size Variability in Meta-Analysis
by Wiernik, Brenton M. & Kostal, Jack W. & Wilmot, Michael P. & Dilchert, Stephan & Ones, Deniz S.
- 479-485 On the Mystery (or Myth) of Challenging Principles and Methods of Validity Generalization (VG) Based on Fragmentary Knowledge and Improper or Outdated Practices of VG
by Oh, In-Sue & Roth, Philip L.
- 485-488 Validity Generalization as a Continuum
by O'Boyle, Ernest H.
- 488-495 A Failed Challenge to Validity Generalization: Addressing a Fundamental Misunderstanding of the Nature of VG
by Schmidt, Frank L. & Viswesvaran, Chockalingam & Ones, Deniz S. & Le, Huy
- 495-501 Generalizability Versus Situational Specificity in Adverse Impact Analysis: Issues in Data Aggregation
by Howard, Elizabeth & Morris, Scott B. & Dunleavy, Eric
June 2017, Volume 10, Issue 2
- 141-143 From the Editor
by Scott, John C.
- 144-181 The Licensure Issue in Consulting and I-O Psychology: A Discussion Paper
by Jelley, R. Blake
- 182-186 Mandating the Licensing of I-O Psychologists Lacks Merit
by Latham, Gary P.
- 186-190 Say No to Licensing: It Is Both Impractical and Immoral
by Locke, Edwin A.
- 190-193 Licensing of I-O Psychologists: Some Potentially Lethal Features
by Campbell, John P.
- 194-199 Whither I-O Psychology and Legislative Restrictions?
by Allen, Tammy D. & Weiss, Howard M.
- 200-204 The Licensure of Industrial and Organizational Psychologists: It's Déjà Vu All Over Again 1
by Kozlowski, Steve W. J. & Chao, Georgia T.
- 204-206 The Licensure Issue in I-O Psychology: Are We Trying to Police the Police?
by Riggio, Ronald E. & Saggi, Karan
- 207-214 Be Careful What You Wish For: An Insider's Perspective on Licensure of I-O Psychologists
by Mueller, Lorin M. & Alonso, Alexander
- 215-217 The Licensure Issue in I-O Psychology: A Canadian Perspective
by Zugec, Lynda & Michela, John L.
- 217-223 Licensing Organizational Psychologists: The Australian Experience
by O'Gorman, John & Macqueen, Peter
- 223-233 The Role of Values in Professional Licensing: The Resistance to Regulation
by Lefkowitz, Joel
- 234-257 Survey Key Driver Analysis: Are We Driving Down the Right Road?
by Cucina, Jeffrey M. & Walmsley, Philip T. & Gast, Ilene F. & Martin, Nicholas R. & Curtin, Patrick
- 258-264 Let's Keep Looking for Other Roads: Improving Approaches to Identifying and Addressing Key Drivers
by Howard, Matt C.
- 265-268 Does SKDA Make It Too Easy for Survey Practitioners and Clients to Avoid Harder (OD) Challenges?
by Kraut, Allen I.
- 268-277 SKDA in Context
by Macey, William H. & Daum, Diane L.
- 277-283 In Defense of Responsible Survey Key Driver Analysis
by Hyland, Patrick K. & Woo, Vivian A. & Reeves, David W. & Garrad, Lewis
- 283-290 Survey Key Driver Analysis: Perhaps the Right Question Is, “Are We There Yet?â€
by Klein, Cameron & Synovec, Rob & Zhang, Haiyan & Lovato, Chris & Howes, John & Feinzig, Sheri
- 290-298 With the Right Map, Survey Key Driver Analysis Can Help Get Organizations to the Right Destination
by Scherbaum, Charles A. & Black, Justin & Weiner, Sara P.
- 298-305 Best Practice Recommendations for Conducting Key Driver Analyses
by Johnson, Jeff W.
- 306-313 Survey Key Driver Analysis: Our GPS to Navigating Employee Attitudes
by Rotolo, Christopher T. & Price, Bennett A. & Fleck, Christina R. & Smoak, Victoria J. & Jean, Vanessa
- 314-326 Winning the HRM Evidence-Based Impact Award—Lessons Learned: A Conversation With Key Stakeholders to the Process
by Schiemann, William A. & Seibert, Jerry H.
March 2017, Volume 10, Issue 1
- 1-2 From the Editor
by Scott, John C.
- 3-25 Rise of HR—New Mandates for I-O
by Schiemann, William A. & Ulrich, Dave
- 26-31 The Elephant in the Family Room: Work–Family Considerations as Central to Evolving HR and I-O
by Mills, Maura J. & Culbertson, Satoris S.
- 32-38 Enough Already! HR Is Rising (With I-O)
by Alonso, Alexander & Kurtessis, James N. & Waters, Shonna D.
- 39-42 Analytics and Information: A Case for Performance Ratings
by Roch, Sylvia G.
- 42-50 Beyond HR Competencies: Removing Organizational Barriers to Maximize the Strategic Effectiveness of HR Professionals
by Geimer, Jennifer L. & Zolner, Margaret & Allen, Kristin Sanderson
- 51-76 Subtle Discrimination in the Workplace: A Vicious Cycle
by Jones, Kristen P. & Arena, Dave F. & Nittrouer, Christine L. & Alonso, Natalya M. & Lindsey, Alex P.
- 77-82 Does Intentionality Matter? An Exploration of Discrimination With Ambiguous Intent
by Gardner, Danielle M. & Ryan, Ann Marie
- 82-86 The Subtleties of Subtle Discrimination: An Interesting but Incomplete Picture
by Daniels, Shanna R. & Perrewé, Pamela L. & Ferris, Gerald R.
- 87-93 Taking the Ambiguity Out of Subtle and Interpersonal Workplace Discrimination
by Marshburn, Christopher K. & Harrington, Nicole T. & Ruggs, Enrica N.
- 94-97 Using Situational Judgment Tests To Study Subtle Discrimination
by Sturdivant, Manasia & Yibass, Semret & Abraham, Elsheba & Hauenstein, Neil M. A.
- 97-100 A Cycle or a Ceiling? The Cumulative Effects of Subtle Discrimination Through the Lens of Performance Management
by Agars, Mark D. & Cazares, Eric J.
- 100-107 Subtle Discrimination in the Service Sector
by Yazejian, Amanda A. & Morganson, Valerie J. & Cornelius, Andrea M.
- 107-111 Wait! What About Customer-Based Subtle Discrimination?
by Madera, Juan M. & Lee, Lindsey & Kapoor, Camille E.
- 111-118 Subtle Discrimination as Natural “Equal Reaction†to Organizational Actions, and Practical Ways To Soften It
by Rabenu, Edna & Chernyak-Hai, Lily
- 118-123 A Broader Perspective for Subtle Discrimination Interventions
by Odeh, Amer & Bruce, Timothy J. & Krenn, Daniel R. & Ran, Shan
- 123-126 A Fruitful Framework: Commentary for a More Integrative Approach
by Klein, Juliana M. & Briggs, Erick P.
- 127-140 Breaking Engagement Apart: The Role of Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation in Engagement Strategies
by Delaney, Molly L. & Royal, Mark A.
December 2016, Volume 9, Issue 4
- 691-692 From the Editor
by Scott, John C. & Poteet, Mark
- 693-715 Qualitative Research in I-O Psychology: Maps, Myths, and Moving Forward
by Pratt, Michael G. & Bonaccio, Silvia
- 716-719 Qualitative Researchers, Heal (and Help) Thyself Too
by Zickar, Michael J.
- 720-726 Why I-O Journals Do Not Publish Qualitative Work
by Fichman, Mark
- 726-732 Journal Guidelines for Qualitative Research? A Balancing Act That Might Be Worth It
by Wilhelmy, Annika
- 732-735 Additional Suggestions for Breaking Barriers Against Qualitative Research in I-O
by Fisher, David M. & Narayan, Anupama
- 735-739 Understanding Deep, Socially Embedded Human Motivations and Aspirations for Work From Whole Person and Interdisciplinary Perspectives
by Rothausen, Teresa J.
- 739-743 Taking Qualitative Methods a Step Further to Team Science
by Solis, Lorena & Aristomene, Theresa & Feitosa, Jennifer & Smith, Ebony
- 744-747 Qualitative I-O Psychology: A View From Europe
by Symon, Gillian & Cassell, Catherine
- 748-753 Integrating Qualitative and Quantitative Methods in Doctoral Education: A Case Study
by Bickmeier, Robert M. & Rogelberg, Steven G. & Berka, Gregory C.
- 753-760 It's Like Doing a Job Analysis: You Know More About Qualitative Methods Than You May Think
by Brawley, Alice M. & Pury, Cynthia L. S.
- 761-794 The Evolution and Devolution of 360° Feedback
by Bracken, David W. & Rose, Dale S. & Church, Allan H.
- 795-799 Don't Give Up on the Self Too Quickly
by Taylor, Scott N.
- 800-806 Comparing Rater Groups: How To Disentangle Rating Reliability From Construct-Level Disagreements
by Viswesvaran, Chockalingam & Ones, Deniz S. & Schmidt, Frank L.
- 806-810 Why the Qualms With Qualitative? Utilizing Qualitative Methods in 360° Feedback
by Kabins, Adam
- 811-813 Holding Leaders Accountable During the 360° Feedback Process
by Young, Stephen F. & Gentry, William A. & Braddy, Phillip W.
- 814-830 I-O Practice in Action: Solving the Leadership Potential Identification Challenge in Organizations
by Silzer, Rob & Church, Allan H. & Rotolo, Christopher T. & Scott, John C.
September 2016, Volume 9, Issue 3
- 523-524 From the Editor
by Scott, John C.
- 525-547 Baltimore Is Burning: Can I-O Psychologists Help Extinguish the Flames?
by Ruggs, Enrica N. & Hebl, Michelle R. & Rabelo, Verónica Caridad & Weaver, Kayla B. & Kovacs, Joy & Kemp, Andeneshea S.
- 548-550 A Force for Law and Order
by Herndon, James S.
- 550-557 Broadening the Lens of Stereotype and Bias: Perspectives From Charm City
by Farley, Sally D. & Thompson, Rebecca J.
- 558-561 A Plea for Bystander Intervention
by Avery, Derek R.
- 561-564 The Criticality of a Community Perspective
by Hardin, Rebecca S.
- 565-572 Approaching “Baltimore Is Burning†From a Systems Change Perspective: Role of I-O Psychologists as Change Agents
by Chatterjee, Deepshikha (Dia)
- 573-582 Community-Oriented Policing: Hiring in the Spirit of Service
by Hough, Leaetta M.
- 583-590 Alignment Between Antecedents and Interventions: The Critical Role of Implicit Bias
by Tomlin, Kathleen A. & Bradley-Geist, Jill C.
- 590-597 A Simple Solution to Policing Problems: Women!
by Bergman, Mindy E. & Walker, Jessica M. & Jean, Vanessa A.
- 598-604 An Exercise in Fire Safety: Readying Ourselves for the Unintended Consequences of Traditional I-O Approaches to Diversity Management
by Hall, Alison V.
- 604-611 Theoretical Applications of the MODE Model to Law Enforcement Training and Interventions
by Zabel, Keith L. & Zabel, Kevin L. & Olson, Michael A. & Carlson, Jessica H.
- 611-620 Additional Ideas for Putting Out the Flames
by Jacobs, Rick & Phillips, Jean & Gully, Stan
- 621-640 New Talent Signals: Shiny New Objects or a Brave New World?
by Chamorro-Premuzic, Tomas & Winsborough, Dave & Sherman, Ryne A. & Hogan, Robert
- 641-645 In Defense of Practical Theory
by Adler, Seymour & Boyce, Anthony S.
- 645-654 Are We on the Same Wavelength? Four Steps for Moving From Talent Signals to Valid Talent Management Applications
by Church, Allan H. & Silzer, Rob
- 655-660 Meet You at the Peak: How I-Os Should Prepare for New Technologies
by Tuzinski, Kathy & Kantrowitz, Tracy
- 660-666 Reducing the Noise From Scraping Social Media Content: Some Evidence-Based Recommendations
by Lievens, Filip & Van Iddekinge, Chad H.
- 666-671 Don't Forget To Properly Use Your Signal: Driving Down New Roads to Selection Decisions
by Horn, Ryan G. & Kaminsky, Samuel E. & Behrend, Tara S.
- 671-677 Correcting Misconceptions About Gamification of Assessment: More Than SJTs and Badges
by Armstrong, Michael B. & Ferrell, Jared Z. & Collmus, Andrew B. & Landers, Richard N.
- 677-682 Moving Beyond Identification: Using Gamification To Attract and Retain Talent
by Lowman, Graham H.
- 682-689 Legal Trends in Organizational Online Social Media Use
by Schroeder, Amber N. & Lile, Cameron R.
June 2016, Volume 9, Issue 2
- 217-218 From the Editor
by Scott, John C.
- 219-252 Getting Rid of Performance Ratings: Genius or Folly? A Debate
by Adler, Seymour & Campion, Michael & Colquitt, Alan & Grubb, Amy & Murphy, Kevin & Ollander-Krane, Rob & Pulakos, Elaine D.
- 253-260 Aligning Research and the Current Practice of Performance Management
by Ledford, Gerald E. & Benson, George & Lawler, Edward E.
- 260-266 Feedback Dynamics Are Critical to Improving Performance Management Systems
by Chawla, Nitya & Gabriel, Allison S. & Dahling, Jason J. & Patel, Kajal
- 266-270 How Will Getting Rid of Performance Ratings Affect Managers?
by Lake, Christopher J. & Luong, Alexandra
- 270-275 Efficiency Ratings and Performance Appraisals in the United States Federal Government
by Stetz, Thomas A. & Chmielewski, Todd L.
- 275-281 Why Performance Appraisal Does Not Lead to Performance Improvement: Excellent Performance as a Function of Uniqueness Instead of Uniformity
by van Woerkom, Marianne & de Bruijn, Maaike
- 281-288 Genius or Folly? It Depends on Whether Performance Ratings Survive the “Psychological Immune Systemâ€
by Neville, Lukas & Roulin, Nicolas
- 288-296 Working With Social Comparisons in the Appraisal and Management of Performance
by Jelley, R. Blake
- 296-304 Rating Performance May Be Difficult, but It Is Also Necessary
by Hunt, Steven T.
- 305-309 Use the Best; Leave the Rest: The Productivity Measurement and Enhancement System (ProMES) for Performance Ratings
by Schmerling, Daniel & Scaduto, Anne
- 310-314 Ratee Reactions Drive Performance Appraisal Success (and Failure)
by Wallace, Lauren E. & Stelman, Samantha A. & Chaffee, Dorey S.
- 314-322 Time To Change the Bathwater: Correcting Misconceptions About Performance Ratings
by Gorman, C. Allen & Cunningham, Christopher J. L. & Bergman, Shawn M. & Meriac, John P.
- 322-328 Beyond Performance Ratings: The Long Road to Effective Performance Management
by Cardy, Robert L. & Munjal, Deeksha
- 329-333 Construct Validity Evidence for Multisource Performance Ratings: Is Interrater Reliability Enough?
by Ock, Jisoo
- 334-337 The Future of Performance Ratings: Collected Thoughts From Six Emerging Scholars
by Bleckman, Andrew M. & Guarino, Sarah N. & Russell, Wesley & Toomey, Eileen C. & Werth, Paul M. & Whitaker, Victoria L. & Rudolph, Cort W.
- 338-341 Performance Management: Embracing Complexity, Evading Reductionism, and Moving to Outcome-Based Approaches
by Waters, Shonna D. & Baughman, Wayne A. & Dorsey, David W.
- 342-343 Eliminating a Quantitative Measure of Performance Means Our Science Is Starting From Square One
by Burlacu, Gabriela
- 343-350 Other Important Questions: When, How, and Why Do Cultural Values Influence Performance Management?
by Cho, Inchul & Payne, Stephanie C.
- 350-356 Disappointing Interventions and Weak Criteria: Carving Out a Solution Is Still Possible
by Tziner, Aharon & Roch, Sylvia G.
- 357-361 Of Babies and Bathwater: Don't Throw the Measure Out With the Application
by Woehr, David J. & Roch, Sylvia G.
- 361-367 The Relationship Between the Number of Raters and the Validity of Performance Ratings
by Howard, Matt C.
- 367-370 Getting Rid of Performance Ratings
by Sorcher, Melvin
- 370-377 Performance Appraisal in a Constantly Changing Work World
by Rabenu, Edna & Tziner, Aharon
- 378-404 How Much Do We Really Know About Employee Resilience?
by Britt, Thomas W. & Shen, Winny & Sinclair, Robert R. & Grossman, Matthew R. & Klieger, David M.
- 405-411 The Untapped Potential in Employee Resilience: Specific Recommendations for Research and Practice
by King, Danielle D.
- 411-415 Emotion Regulation and Resilience: Overlooked Connections
by Kay, Sophie A.
- 416-421 The Role of Self-Regulation in Workplace Resiliency
by Rothstein, Mitchell G. & McLarnon, Matthew J. W. & King, Gillian
- 422-429 Resilience: Distinct Construct or Conglomerate of Existing Traits?
by Fogarty, Gerard J. & Perera, Harsha N.
- 429-435 (Mis)Steps for Attracting High Resilience Workers
by Eschleman, Kevin J. & Wright, Chris W.
- 436-442 Bouncing Back to the Future: A Look at the Road Ahead for the Assessment of Resilience
by Harms, P. D. & Wood, Dustin
- 442-446 How Much Do We Really Know About Employee Resilience? More, If We Include the Sport Psychology Resilience Research
by Shoenfelt, Elizabeth L.
- 447-452 Exploring Workplace Resilience Through a Personality Strength Lens
by Green, Jennifer P. & Wallace, David M. & Hargrove, Amber K.
- 452-456 Advancing Employee Resilience Research: Additional Thoughts
by Wolfson, Natalie E. & Mulqueen, Casey
- 456-462 Resilient Employees in Resilient Organizations: Flourishing Beyond Adversity
by Kuntz, Joana R. C. & Näswall, Katharina & Malinen, Sanna
- 462-466 Integrating Multiple Perspectives Into the Study of Resilience
by January, Samantha C.
- 466-475 Extending the Conversation: Employee Resilience at the Team Level
by Kennedy, Deanna M. & Landon, Lauren Blackwell & Maynard, M. Travis
- 475-479 Resilience Practices
by Yost, Paul R.
- 480-485 Employee Resilience: A Faceted Analytical Approach
by Rabenu, Edna & Tziner, Aharon
- 486-490 Opponent Process Theory Can Help Explain Some Effects of Resilience
by Bowling, Nathan A. & Beehr, Terry A.
- 491-497 Looking Backward, Moving Forward: Exploring Theoretical Foundations for Understanding Employee Resilience
by Conley, Kate M. & Clark, Malissa A. & Griek, Olivia H. Vande & Mancini, Jay A.
- 497-502 Elaborating on the Conceptual Underpinnings of Resilience
by Estrada, Armando X. & Severt, Jamie B. & Jiménez-RodrÃguez, Miliani
- 503-508 Profiles as a Way of Learning More About Resilience
by Becker, Thomas E. & Ferry, Diane L.
- 509-516 A Nonlinear Paradigm for Resilience, Workload, Performance, and Clinical Phenomena
by Guastello, Stephen J.
- 517-522 Taking Time Seriously as a Component of Employee Resilience
by Palmer, David K.
March 2016, Volume 9, Issue 1
- 1-2 From the Editor
by Scott, John C.
- 3-22 Situational Judgment Tests: From Measures of Situational Judgment to Measures of General Domain Knowledge
by Lievens, Filip & Motowidlo, Stephan J.
- 23-28 In Defense of the Situation: An Interactionist Explanation for Performance on Situational Judgment Tests
by Harris, Alexandra M. & Siedor, Lane E. & Fan, Yi & Listyg, Benjamin & Carter, Nathan T.
- 29-34 Why Situational Judgment Is a Missing Component in the Theory of SJTs
by Melchers, Klaus G. & Kleinmann, Martin
- 34-38 Clearly Defined Constructs and Specific Situations Are the Currency of SJTs
by Chen, Lijun & Fan, Jinyan & Zheng, Lu & Hack, Elissa
- 38-42 Reinvigorating the Concept of a Situation in Situational Judgment Tests
by Brown, Nicolas A. & Jones, Ashley Bell & Serfass, David G. & Sherman, Ryne A.
- 43-47 Both General Domain Knowledge and Situation Assessment Are Needed To Better Understand How SJTs Work
by Fan, Jinyan & Stuhlman, Melissa & Chen, Lijun & Weng, Qingxiong
- 47-51 The “Hot Mess†of Situational Judgment Test Construct Validity and Other Issues
by McDaniel, Michael A. & List, Sheila K. & Kepes, Sven
- 51-55 It's Time To Examine the Nomological Net of Job Knowledge
by Torres, W. Jackeline & Beier, Margaret E.
- 55-59 Further Considerations in SJT Development
by Borneman, Matthew J.